Fri
10
May 2019
Every programmer these days receives lots of job offers from recruiters, especially if having profile on LinkedIn. Some people make fun of it. I used to ignore or reject them, telling that “sorry, I’m not looking for a new job at the moment, I’m happy with my current one”. For some time I started to do something different - I tell them that I’m not interested in relocation to California/London/Germany/Iceland/South Korea/wherever and ask if I can work remotely. The answer is usually “no”.
This is contrary to a popular belief that programmers can often work from home. I have a remote job now, but this one is unique and I know such job is hard to find. Maybe it’s more frequent when someone develops web pages, mobile apps, or other small programs that a single person can make. A freelancer hunting for specific projects and tasks may have an opportunity to work from anywhere in the world. But if you want to work in a team of many programmers developing a large and complex project, they usually expect you to be full time on site.
You can come from any place in the world and have a great coding talent. You can study solid computer science at your local university or even learn by yourself from the Internet. But it’s unlikely you can make a world-class career or take part in state-of-the-art, innovative projects while staying in your small home town. For that you have to move to one of these technology hubs, like Silicon Valley. This is despite the developments in telecoferencing, Skype, Slack, etc.
Here are screenshots of 12 chats I had with recruiters on LinkedIn since the beginning of this year. I told them I don’t want to relocate and asked them if I could work remotely. 11 of them said “no”. Only 1 said it’s possible.