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Businesses Programming The Almighty Buck

Top Coders Tell Agents, "Show Me the Money!" 288

theodp writes "So, you're a 10x developer or a 25x programmer, but not getting paid like one? Keep your chin up! BusinessWeek reports that Silicon Valley is going Hollywood and top software developers can now get their very own agent through 10x Management, which bills itself as 'the talent agency for the technology industry.'"
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Top Coders Tell Agents, "Show Me the Money!"

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  • How's that... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by TWX ( 665546 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @06:35PM (#43427885)
    ...10x unemployment line looking?

    In all seriousness, working for someone else sometimes sucks. Being in management and already having to deal with headhunters on top of all of the bloated resumes sucks. Adding in another agent is just one more thing that those trying to hire doesn't need to deal with.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 11, 2013 @06:43PM (#43427945)

    ...to sell my services as a professional Slashdot spam article submitter instead.

  • by femtobyte ( 710429 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @06:46PM (#43427973)

    Want "Hollywood" money? How about programmers banding together and insisting on the protections that stop Hollywood management from moving every aspect of production to the cheapest outsourced labor: Unions. Writers, actors, makeup, costume, camera --- they've all got unions, so their jobs aren't competing with $9/hour H1-B labor.

  • by undeadbill ( 2490070 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @06:52PM (#43428025)

    15% is a very reasonable cut to do basic business management and cold calling for freelancers. It is much better than what a lot of "recruiters" (aka pimps) take as a cut for their "consulting agencies", which can be as high as 80% of the hourly rate. Even using something like TriNet to handle most of the business stuff still doesn't compare because you still have to either find someone with business contacts or do all the calling yourself on unpaid time (which you then need to charge for later as part of your bill rate, or starve).

    I really hope this practice starts putting some downward pressure on the pimps and time wasters who populate the IT recruiting market to start doing better work for a more reasonable rate. Nobody deserves 80% of a developer's pay just because they made a few phone calls. I would definitely consider working for or with a group of freelancers if someone was handling the business side at 15%.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @06:57PM (#43428063)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by femtobyte ( 710429 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @06:58PM (#43428067)

    Actors, gaffers, electricians, focus pullers, you name it. Do you think the typical Hollywood studio exec pays the folks who man the lights a living wage out of the goodness of his generous heart? Hell, no; they're greedy bastards just like the folks who run every other industry into a race-for-the-bottom cash-grab. Thanks to unions (a large variety of unions supporting each other in solidarity, so the actors don't say "screw cameramen, pay them less and us more"), the whole working class gets enough money to support their families and live with dignity (even in an expensive part of the country). And behold: having the "burden" of all those unions doesn't seem to make Hollywood a terribly unprofitable place, or prevent top talent from earning megabucks, or drive away the industry to some labor-hating hellhole of an anti-union town.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @07:20PM (#43428235)
    seriously. Can we? You're not a star. You're not special. You're a cog, and you will be replaced by an Indian or Malaysian or some other *-ian that makes less than you do because they don't have indoor plumbing and clean air/water.

    If you want a good life you need to start protecting it. That means Unions + a strong Federal Gov't (states are too weak to stand up to corps).
  • by femtobyte ( 710429 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @07:23PM (#43428257)

    Right, because there's no demand for programmers that speak American English natively, or for folks to make American-specific games, American-specific websites, provide software for American unionized companies, so unions are hopeless. It's not like scads of top technology companies all tend to cluster in tight geographic regions, as though there was some benefit to being in particular American locations. Nope, if all the American programmers walked off the job right now on strike, no one in the tech industry would even notice.

    Oh, wait, none of the preceding is true --- if American programmers got their act together and pooled resources to fight back against the Zuckerbergs of the world, they could bring the entire US IT industry to a grinding halt, and get basically whatever concessions they asked for.

    Now, this might not always be true in the future, so if you don't want to wait until you're really powerless (already entirely replaced by a crew in India), then you'd better start organizing *now* while you've still got a chance.

  • Re:Zuckerberg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by genkernel ( 1761338 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @07:52PM (#43428491)

    A 40-hour work week pays for our current standard of living. A 20-hour work week would reduce that standard of living.

    There are some people, and a considerable number of them, for whom that doesn't really matter. Cheap house, cheap car, decent food, good computer, good internet. I don't need that many luxury goods. I just wish I had more time to make use of what I have.

    More importantly, if people are becoming more efficient (since machines and computers can assist with or even take over some tasks that humans used to do), but don't work less, then we must find more to do. Finally and perhaps more interestingly, working less may make people more efficient, which should presumably increase the standard of living.

  • by dristoph ( 1207920 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @08:34PM (#43428739)

    I'm probably one of the guys who gets paid the big bucks to fix the code you write in the drudgery that you call your career. Seriously, if that's your attitude toward the craft, then you can't possibly be very good at it. I don't doubt for a second that it would be easy to replace you with anyone from any country ever. There are all kinds of problems with outsourcing development work, but they don't stack up to nearly the same problem as a developer putting code into production without a drop of passion or pride for his/her work.

  • by Anonymous Brave Guy ( 457657 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @08:54PM (#43428843)

    ...do what I did, go where the money is.

    I would, but I'm not sure I could ever make enough working in the financial markets to buy back my soul...

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @09:19PM (#43428963) Journal
    Programmers are wary of unions for a few unions:

    1) We see in other industries they make it hard to fire incompetents. Do you really want to have it impossible to get rid of lousy coders? Unions tend to be based on seniority, which is only somewhat related to skill.
    2) We see in other industries that unions slow everything down. That's basically the opposite of Agile and Extreme. Do you really want yet another bureaucracy to deal with?
    3) It's not clear what benefit a union will provide. If a union doesn't promise to provide me with something tangible, why support it?
  • Re:can I get (Score:2, Insightful)

    by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @09:22PM (#43428977) Homepage Journal
    Nice try, 10x management CEO
  • by Required Snark ( 1702878 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @10:34PM (#43429337)
    I'm sure this will catch on, but my cynical self knows it's almost complete bullshit.

    It's a case of the Golden Child vs. the Goat. I've seen this stupidity in action for decades.

    Take two coders of roughly the same skill. One has flash and a high reputation, the other is plain spoken and just says what works and what doesn't. Management gives them both a task that has an unexpected issue and delivery is delayed. When the Golden Child has trouble management goes "that was much harder then we thought, lucky we had our ace working on it, or things would have have been much worse." When The Goat is late it's "so-and-so is just average, it's not a surprise they can't get the job done in time."

    Now add in the cost and visibility of the 10x or 25x parachute in super coder who is so extra special they have an agent!!! No matter what happen management is going to conclude that they made a good investment in the high priced person. If they say otherwise then it would reflect badly on them. Any internal dissent by existing staff will be seen as sour grapes/incompetence. If there is a failure it will be laid at the feet of anyone but the Golden Child. No manager is ever going to admit they made that kind of mistake.

    I wish I had understood this better earlier in my career. I could be sitting on my yacht right now if I had understood how much you can get for the right kind of hype.

  • by Anonymous Brave Guy ( 457657 ) on Thursday April 11, 2013 @11:57PM (#43429711)

    I have never worked 40+ hour weeks for extended periods in my whole career, as an employee, freelance contractor/consultant, or running my own "real business". I think I can honestly say that my contribution was still valued everywhere I've ever worked, I've never suffered for not putting in a bunch of unpaid overtime on a regular basis just to be seen, and the businesses I started are doing OK so far. Of course, I was also lucky in the sense that the guys I worked for and with as an employee were all decent people and more interested in getting a good job done than stereotypical poor middle management.

    Then again, if you're any good as a coder then you can choose not to work for silly people, at least not for long. It's just a shame how many professionals in the field don't realise that and allow themselves to be exploited for years until hopefully they learn better. Listening to an enthusiastic 25-year-old talking about how great it is that he works 60 hour weeks writing code because his employer brings in pizza if they're still there at 19:30 and buys lunch as well on weekends is like listening to a documentary about Stockholm syndrome.

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