this post was submitted on 28 Oct 2023
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I’ve been a SWE for more than 8 years now. It was so easy getting jobs 2-3 years ago. Now it’s like a never-ending battle if you’re trying to land a job in this market right now. Especially with AI on the rise, many companies and businesses are skeptical to hire software engineer who are not unicorns (many years in FAANG companies).

I’ve worked in corporate, startup environments, and i’ve failed now twice trying to make my own business.

In theory, if I was a unicorn in my craft (SWE) I should be able to create an application that gets alot of traffic and revenue. My point is, maybe it’s not the app/idea/software itself. It’s just who you know and how you can sell.

So SWE’s are pointless now pretty much? Go use wordpress with an experienced business guy and you already closer to being successful than a unicorn SWE.

Thoughts?

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[–] XIVMagnus@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

As long as systems that automate are being built, there’s always demand for a SWE.

SWE are definitely in high demand, it’s just shifted.

I think you’re only seeing it through the lens of an employee. Where you’re blindly applying to jobs, build a micro SaaS and promote it on TikTok. Watch how quickly your perspective changes

[–] BackendSpecialist@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

This logic makes no sense to me.

I’m assuming this is just sprouting from you being down on yourself rn.

[–] Rymasq@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

being a software engineer is a commodity. To make it you have to come up with a good business idea

[–] evermore88@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (5 children)

I don't think what you said make sense....

why is a SWE craft is making an application that gets a lot of traffic and revenue ?

the whole point of SWE is to make custom software dictate by business

the business person is the one with the idea that attracts revenue and traffic

if SWE field is over saturated then you should be able to hire any decent engineer at cheap price ? according to your assertion of over supply of SWE this would mean prices for SWE would crater.

your last statement makes me really question your 8 year of exp in various fields as you stated. Apparently everything can be build in word press and plugs in now a day ? why do we need anyone to write custom code, every single idea is can be made by some combination of word press and plug ins right ? ( seriously ? )

For a lot of things, sure! But one day a vendor or client needs you to fork their project and create custom features in an iframe. Without some swes already in house, it would take some time and a lot of money to ramp new people up. We got some gnarly code out there, my friend.

[–] Liizam@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

I mean idk why I would hire a software engineer for basic websites. Maybe op needs to apply to bizz positions instead

[–] mtlredditor@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The very fact that OP mentioned WordPress being part of his stack completely destroyed his credibility for me.

I mean, my gf is a primary school teacher and I think wp is part of her stack.

There is no oversaturarion. There is work for much more than just unicorns.

But yes, incompetant people pretending to be SWE because they know WordPress, in the actual conjoncture, will have a harder time finding work.

Source: I am a SWE and WordPress is not part of my stack, geez.

[–] Dick_Lazer@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Not seeing where he said Wordpress was “part of his stack”. Seems like he was saying he feels more advanced skills aren’t as desired/necessary when people are making bank off Wordpress sites.

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[–] Cryptoknight12@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Because the only thing he’s ever done is update the theme on Wordpress

[–] Historical_Flow4296@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

OP has 8, 1 year experiences

[–] Pika_Pug@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Comparing SWEs to Wordpress sites… lol cmon

[–] StevenJang_@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think he wanted to say that SWE is not essential to early-stage startups or tech-based start-ups. WordPress can replace SWE in some cases for sure.

[–] reop-direct-1@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Even powerpoint

[–] akmalhot@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Probably why 2 businesses failed. Doesn't even know what swe do

[–] AvgAIbot@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I mean it’s totally about how you sell it, especially these days with any online business being saturated AF.

I also think software engineers is oversaturated now. For years now, especially since covid, you’ve had all these boot camps and influencers constantly bombarding the general public with “become a coder or data analyst and make bank while working from home”.

Now the entry level market has so many people from self taught and boot camps.

Plus AI can be a legitimate concern for entry level devs. It’s pretty good now from what I hear for simple coding or tasks. Imagine in a few years, hell 10-20 years from now.

[–] PlumpyGorishki@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Coder != engineer

[–] Whole-Spiritual@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Quality SWEs are of value IMO, but how do you stand out from the herd?

My company markets a larger dev shop that has a digital agency as part of it. A big thing that works is focus, showing case studies where you’ve nailed specific types of work that can be re marketed / replicated. A targeted, replicatable use case lets you hone in and be more surgical with outbound and with selling.

[–] willslater99@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Hello there, quick bit about me, I run a marketing agency that exclusively works with B2B saas startups. I don't say that to promote, I say that to give context that I meet and work with alot of founders and developers. I also was formerly a full stack developer.

There are still plenty of people paying for software engineers, the difference I've seen is the barrier on the work.

There are really a few points to consider here.

  1. AI. I'll be honest, AI has made an impact everywhere, but probably not on the scale you might think. AI is nowhere near advanced enough to replace the developer, I'm mainly just seeing it be used by the developers. You can't give a non-technical founder GPT and expect him to piece together his own SaaS with it.
  2. No Code builders. A weird one. Technically a non-developer can build an app with one of these, but definitely not a traditional business person, I know millionaires who have paid me to help them setup zapier connections between their Lead gen ads and their CRM. I think smart developers are learning how to use Bubble and Retool for projects to deliver projects quicker, and I think technical founders are using them to build their own apps, but there's not a huge market of people who were going to spend 50k on an app, and then decided 'nah I'll build it myself'.
  3. The self-cannibalisation of the industry. A huge number of apps are made to provide a service that previously would have needed to be custom. Imagine that 1000 wealth management businesses a year go to developers to get their own internal tool made for customer interaction. Then a saas startup decides to build a tool for this job that can cover 99% of these companies. The next year, 990 of them sign up for this SaaS and 10 get a custom tool made. The developer who made the app has taken 990 development jobs off the market by doing this.
  4. Web developer doesn't mean what it used to. Developers are an inherent part of the industry I work in, but what they're required for has changed over the years. Web developers used to build the front end websites, nowadays me and my people do that with Wordpress, Webflow and Framer. Some people do it themselves with Wix and Squarespace.
  5. Like you said about wordpress setups, I do know a guy who runs a fairly successful niche social media site. 20 years ago, that was an extremely custom job. Now, he runs it on a 200 dollar customised wordpress theme, but I would say this is the rarity.

Technology, outsourcing and the quantity of people in the software dev space has lowered the bar, and honestly it's part of why I switched to marketing, because generating interest, leads and customers has become the far harder part of the equation nowadays, but that doesn't mean the role of a SWE is dead, just gotta change your focus.

I know a guy who runs a Bubble development agency, his company is making alot of money, because yeah they charge a lower upfront fee than most developers would, but they need half the man-hours to achieve the same result, and they charge the exact same ongoing monthly maintenance and support fee that other agencies charge.

I also know a guy who runs a dev agency that doesn't use any no-low code builders, but he's niched down on advanced difficult topics. Their most recent project is built around using Lidar functionality in the new Iphone models to capture accurate measurements of property for asset management. As you'd guess, their charging a bomb.

SWE's are gonna be needed for a long time, but the focus will change. Hell, half of what I do in marketing is based on software that didn't exist 10-15 years ago. A client recently joined my agency because we 'seemed the most confident on integrating Threads into our social media strategy', a social network which didn't exist 4 months ago.

Just gotta keep pivoting.

[–] wulfcastle17@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Excellent reply!

[–] redstonekilobyte@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

So SWE’s are pointless now pretty much? Go use wordpress with an experienced business guy and you already closer to being successful than a unicorn SWE.

Depends on what business you're making. If you're doing something with a very low barrier to entry like a ChatGPT wrapper or dropshipping you can get away with no code/low-code knowledge and create a functional product.

However, many of the success stories I see are SaaS products, which require more complicated development and therefore good SWEs.

[–] SaleLore@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

It's like all industries. Good ones, no

[–] reddit1337420@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago
[–] jennyagatinei@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

I am someone who’s trying to understand the technical side on all of these ideas in my head, but it’s hard, because my strength exactly lies where your weaknesses are.. and vice versa.

[–] Kundrew1@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

It’s like that for every job in tech right now

[–] SharkFuji@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

It's supply and demand. Doctors get paid a lot because the demand is high and supply is low. There's still going to he a demand for top tier engineers and specialized engineers. An engineer that can save a corporation 10 million a year by making data pipelines extremely efficient is always going to be as valuable as a neurosurgeon and they would get paid accordingly. But nevertheless, we'll probably see a million new engineers in the next 5 years. The fields going to become extremely saturated and the only way salaries drop is if the demand grows much much slower than the supply. We might even be in the golden age of engineering before things start taking a downturn, who knows.

[–] Mefilius@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Software engineers are in huge demand. This post doesn't make much sense. Maybe you are overestimating your abilities.

If you're talking about web dev that has gotten split between UI/UX designers (also in big demand right now) and back end developers.

SWE isn't drying up any time soon. Least of all to AI right now, it produces bad code so often. Remember it takes more time to fix bad code than to write good code the first time.

[–] FullMetalTroyzan@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

If SE’s are in huge demand, what do you recommend for new cs grads and how they should tailor their resumes if they wanna get a job in this market?

[–] inphinitfx@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

This is probably gonna come across as offensive, but particularly based on the implied equivolence to using wordpress, I'd suggest you may somehow have spent 8 years not really being a software engineer.

Good, experienced SWEs are still, imo, in demand. It's the juniors who are likely having trouble atm, as fewer orgs are willing or able to train them on the job in the current environment.

But we're past the 'omg hire anyone who can type!' phase where orgs were massively overhiring regardless of actual ability.

But being an entrepreneur requires more than just being a good SWE - in fact, it doesn't even need that. It's about execution, promotion, amd delivery of value to users imo. If thats being a great marketer who hires others to build, cool. If that's building something neat and finding a way to get it in front or your target audience, neat.

[–] lw727@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Based on what you said it is hard to believe that you have been a swe for 8 years.

[–] StevenJang_@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Hiring full-time SWE became a luxury rather than an essential to early-stage startups.

[–] Massive-Rabbit448@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I have no answer but would low code and no code applications or opportunities affect this too?

[–] ronakkaria01@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Definitely not. Low code and no code applications are highly shitty and are opinionated and will drain your money only to find out your business idea needs a custom solution

[–] coder-conversations@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Yes, the industry is oversaturated right now, despite what some may try to tell you. There are tons of layoffs in tech, even at those coveted FAANG companies and they are competing for the few openings out there.

The tech market is in a downturn right now and it's hard to find a job when you're competing with FAANG engineers. Things will eventually pick up, but as of the current moment, it is NOT easy to get a job in tech even with years of experience.

[–] wisegirl1@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Honestly, you can make multiple six figures building WordPress sites as a freelancer, so that's not a bad idea 😄

[–] OneNineSevenNine@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I recently made the transition from Developer to Business Analyst because the industry is so hard right now.

300 applications spread across 3 roles (BA, Developer and Team Lead).

80% of the Applications were Developer. I had a friend who was in the same situation, 250 applications. Another friend, easily one of the best developers I know: 100.

The industry is brutal right now.

[–] mikels_burner@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Going thru the same shit. Any suggestions to stand out or cope?

[–] OneNineSevenNine@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Here’s some of the things I did:

  • Keep resume short (2 page maximum)
  • Condense your points using key words, use ChatGPT
  • I like Applying in “waves” so that I don’t miss out on an opportunity that I think is good. So, one week I do 50 resume. Then I send like 10 the next.
  • Use ChatGPT to interview you or have a friend in the industry interview you
  • Some side project work can help keep your skills fresh.
  • (This may not be for everyone) Be prepared to sit down and look at Transferable Skills. You might have to start applying outside your domain.
  • Give yourself some grace. You’re not bad at this, the market is competitive. We all struggle and we’re all deserving of love and kindness. Especially to love of ourselves.

It’s a grind. I ended up getting a Business Analyst position. Because tech simply wasn’t hiring.

I’m happy where I am. But it was hard. A lot of stress.

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[–] reop-direct-1@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

"In theory, if I was a unicorn in my craft (SWE) I should be able to create an application that gets alot of traffic and revenue."

I think your flaw lies in this assumption. The more important skill isn't in building magical products, but in finding the right people to sell them to and selling them. I.e. finding product market fit. That's business, not technical ability. So being a unicorn in your domain won't help at all with this in my opinion. You might as well be trying to sell a powerpoint deck with all the magical features outlined and it's still not easy. You might as well do that because it's way faster to edit a powerpoint based on people's feedback than to commit new code.

[–] ronakkaria01@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

I'm gonna say only one thing. If you want to make a bank at a job then learn low level programming.

I think OP doesn't understand what a SWE does and compares it to WP guys.

SWE isn't just building a website like what WP does.

It includes building complex web applications that can do pretty much everything at scale which is easier to maintain and has a smaller codebase.

With WP and its increasing reliability on external plugins as a project grows it's not always the best idea to go for.

This is of course for businesses that have 7+ figures in income that have hundreds of thousands of users using the site everyday and the site itself offers some really complex functionality.

Other than that WP is a really good option to start with an e-commerce store. It's enough if business sells basic products at scale

[–] MaleficentSurround34@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

As someone still in university working on my CS degree I feel like there is no point anymore.

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[–] Born_Cash_4210@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Can u share the websites of products which u built that reduced employee work by 4-5 hrs per month

Everyone is a SWE.

And everyone expects 200k+ base salary plus equity.

You tell me what that means.

[–] ali-ashraf-@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

In terms of website building yes you may be right But SWE is much more than that. Consider web applications, there’s nothing out there that can make them without a good SWE. Also, I might suggest learning new things that interests you and get out of this rat race of building websites. Consider AI, DevOps, cross platform mobile apps on RN (if you are good with JS). Options are plenty. Almost as many as there are SWE

[–] Asafk@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

AI can already build a website in 30 seconds.

It's already automating software processes, until it will program anything alone.

The combination of AI & robots will take every job except those which require human touch like social work and of course all research.

My best advice right now is try to make money from AI before it takes over everything.

If you've got an idea ping me in few weeks and I'll help you.

Best of luck🙂

[–] rwiman@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

The illogical structure of your post makes me question if you’re really an SWE

[–] cphh85@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

You can’t just make an app and try to sell.. better try to solve a problem.

A lot of folks think they have to shape a product ready to role the dice, but more important is, get it production ready to an extend it solves a problem, than iterate it while doing funding.

Investors want to multiply money, you want to be on your own feet and customers want a helping hand for their problem.

[–] PrimaxAUS@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Big dunning kreuger energy here.

Just because you might be a good SWE doesn't mean you know shit about entrepreneurship or management.

[–] oli-g@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

What if I told you there are good cooks who don't own a successful restaurant business, and also successful restaurant owners that cannot cook?

[–] Hot-Luck-3228@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

It isn’t. People who call this oversaturated are not aware of what other industries look like. The demand is just much less severe that’s it.

[–] rammutroll@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

With the rise of work from home and more and more Indians eating up the IT market. We have way more competition now.

So you have to really standout and be one of the best so they pick you.

I find that the 0-5years experience IT professionals probably have way more competition. Anybody who had 10-15+ years will have eyes on them and recruiters connecting with them.

I also found that a lot of recruiters now a days just send you a message and make it sound like you are the perfect fit. Once you reply and send your CV they ghost. So I think they mass email to gather CVs or who knows collect info on people. It’s usually emails that i receive cuz I put my cv online somewhere.

So long story short. I don’t wanna say India but they are a major reason why the market is where it’s at right now in terms of supply.

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