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8 good reasons to become a software developerby@flaviocopes
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8 good reasons to become a software developer

by Flavio CopesJuly 22nd, 2018
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I don’t know a single developer that’s good and without a job or something to do. Good developers are in high demand. You might not find a job for a top or famous company, but local companies are desperate to find talent. You don’t have to move to Silicon Valley to find a job as a developer, especially as a Web Developer, one of the professions that is more open to remote working.

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I don’t know a single developer that’s good and without a job or something to do. Good developers are in high demand. You might not find a job for a top or famous company, but local companies are desperate to find talent. You don’t have to move to Silicon Valley to find a job as a developer, especially as a Web Developer, one of the professions that is more open to remote working.

There’s no shortage of opportunities in the foreseeable future, too. On the contrary, there will likely be more demand for developers in the future, to develop new software or maintain an existing one.

Being able to work remotely

Remote working, even for just a few days a week, makes for a good work/life balance.

It’s not allowed in all the environments, but remote working is a perk that’s very well suited to software development.

No need to waste time commuting, having the problem of finding something good to eat during the day, being forced by office politics and rules to leave at some specific time of day, or — worse — waiting until people decide it’s time for leaving to avoid being the first out and sending the “wrong message”.

All you need is a good internet connection and some quiet place in your house (a dedicated room is highly recommended) and you can sit there, do your best work, and take time off as needed. Maybe you like walking the dog at 11:00 AM, and in some places, that’s totally allowed to pick your own hours, as long as you perform the job you’re expected to do.

Good pay and economic benefits

Software development is one of the jobs that generally comes with a good pay.

As a remote employee, you can choose to work for a richer country and take advantage of the economic benefits of doing so. Of course, this depends a lot on the options available to you.

If you choose to be a freelancer, that’s another field where companies are willing to spend good money on talent.

You have the option to go indie

Say you work 10 years for a company and one day you “go crazy” and decide to leave your job because it does not satisfy you anymore. Or you get laid off, or the company closes down.

Most professions require someone to hire you, but software development has this nice thing called indie development, where you basically go on your own, build something, and sell it to the world.

It can be a SAAS (Software as a Service — aka Web App), a mobile app a desktop app, even an ebook on the subject you’re the most expert about. You can leverage years of experience into a new venture, and you get a new experience you can offer to future employers as well.

It’s a creative outlet

It’s not painting or design, but programming is a highly creative profession.

Any time you set out to write a program you’re creating something new, much like when you were playing Lego as a child.

Many times you experiment with technologies, only to find that’s not a good way, so you choose a different path. Every time you write a new program, you learn something new.

It’s never boring (unless your job is boring in the first place, but the craft of programming in itself should not be boring — otherwise you always have the option to look for a non-boring job)

Coding is social

Even if one might spend 10 hours a day sitting alone with a computer, saying programming is social is perfectly right.

We use software built by people, people wrote the manuals and guides to using that software, we rely on Open Source software, interact with people on forums to discuss and learn more about programming, and finally, we make the software for people.

You work with a team, that might be distributed or local to your office. You have stakeholders, people are waiting for your fixes.

Programmers like to go to conferences, the bravest even speak at them, and we like to rant, comment or share things on Twitter.

We star projects on GitHub, open issues, submit a pull request to improve the work of someone else.

All of this is a social activity, and the best thing is that you can go at your own pace, and be as social as you want.

You will learn every day

Every day you’ll be presented with new challenges. You’re an engineer working on potentially very complex problems.

You need to know how to figure things out, and if you don’t, you need to learn it on the job.

You are expected to be learning every day, and this is awesome as you’re not stagnating in the job market but building up lots of experience as the time passes. Valuable experience for your company, other companies if you decide to switch jobs, or even for yourself if you want to try going indie.

It’s up to you

Everyone has the same opportunities. We have access to the most powerful servers and services in the world. Your phone is thousands of times more powerful than the computer the NASA used to send people to the moon.

A person in Siberia can have the same hardware someone in Silicon Valley uses.

You have access to millions of books online. All it takes is time, dedication and perseverance, and you will learn all you need to learn to perform any kind of job.

The barriers are lowering every day. 10 years ago the landscape was completely different, and imagine 10 years from now.

You can make an app and sell it worldwide in very little time and upfront investment.

Interested in learning JavaScript? Get my free ebook at jshandbook.com

Originally published at flaviocopes.com.