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Do you mind sharing your story and how you did it in more details? So I can copy and do the same later.


Hey, can we chat about this in more details? I'm in a situation where I'm looking for a job from a US or EU company, would be really helpful to have your input as you already did it.


Sure. I don’t mind keeping it async and public in this thread. But if you prefer to do it privately, let me know and I ping you on the email you have on your profile.


Fine by me. My first question is about salary. I don't know if you OK talking about that publicly or even privately, and if not can you give a ballpark compared to a US dev living in the us for example? My expectation are low, if any company would want to hire me for $27.000 I would sign without any hesitation given I'm qualified enough. Second one was about Jrs but I saw you answered that already. Lastly, any tips on getting that first job and be more marketable? What stacks hires the most? What are the exceptions towards a junior dev these days?


About salary. I earned $12k/year on my first dev job in a big startup in Brazil (it was a decent salary in 2017 for a junior dev in Brazil). Then I moved to the US and earned $67k/year working onsite on a small startup in LA as a junior with 1.5 year of experience. Then, still a junior position, but now with 2.5 yoe, I earned $115k/year working remote for a medium-sized company (but with a small engineering team). I was still living in the US, and I know being there and having work permit helped get the job. During that job I moved back to Brazil. Then, they started planning for IPO and fired me because they didn’t want international contractors working fulltime anymore. Then, living in Brazil, I got a job at an American startup, but fully globally remote from the start (team in US, Netherlands, Russia) as a mid-level software engineer earning $120k/year. All of this total compensation without any benefits (as I am a contractor).

$120k a year without any benefits is stellar salary in Brazil. I am top 1% income here. But I think those FAANG jobs paying $200k+ are out of reach for me.

About first job. First job as a junior I would actually recommend getting a local, ideally onsite, job on a company with several senior engineers and a culture of good mentoring for junior people. Well worth the investment of two years for the knowledge. Then go remote and global. If you can find such a company that’s remote and paying in a strong currency from the start, great too.

About stacks. If frontend, definitely React (but strong fundamentals in CSS and JavaScript are more important than React). Backend I would say Rails, Python or Node.

For being more marketable, create a portfolio of projects that you 1) created yourself, not just copied from a tutorial; you thought yourself and built it and 2) deployed. Websites or webapps that are actually deployed in a domain and are functional. It could be anything, but go all the way with them.

Then apply to A LOT of positions and learn along the way how to improve yourself, your portfolio, your communication, your interview skills, etc. I applied to ~250 positions to get my first dev job (keep in mind that all of them were for junior frontend developers, which I was).


Well done mate, you're an inspiration. In a few years you'll get that FAANG job if you want it, finger crossed.

The problem for me in getting a local job, is I have to go back home (I'm from a poor African country, there are no jobs there and if there are the pay is "shit"). I live in France right now, they are not so so keen on the remote thing, plus the fact that they still really care about degrees, mine is in business. What hires the most, back or front end? I'm leaning more toward back end stuff as I find it more fun, but I would change if it affects my chance of getting a job.

What's your background by the way? STEM or completely unrelated? How hard is it for them to hire a contractor? Does it involve a lot of paperwork? An on my side, what do I have to do? How about part-time jobs?

PS: Shoot me an e-mail, I'd like to stay in contact with you if that's ok.


If you live in France a “local job” means get a job in France. I did not mean to get a job where you were born. Also, I do think an onsite first job is better than remote anyway.

I have a degree in Economics. I worked in the social sector for seven years, then in marketing for about six years. I learned to code when I was 37yo to change careers.

If you prefer backend, study backend. It matters a lot that you are studying what you like more. And, between back and front, there is no difference in what hires more. Maybe backend hires more, but both hire a lot.

It is very easy for an American company to hire an international contractor. Much less paperwork than hire a local fulltime employee. But most large companies don’t want to do it for potential labor law issues. If they hire someone as contractor that works fulltime and has the same work relationship as a regular employee, the companies risk an expensive lawsuit. The risk is much lower for intentional ones I believe. Anyway, this is decided before you apply. If they accept hiring globally remote means they accept international contractors.

On your side you just sign a contract and send very simple invoices that you can create your self on Word or Excel.

I’ll email you.


Can you get employed by an American company, without an American working visa, as long as you're remote?


Yes. And as long as I am not staying too much time in the US. One week for meeting the team is ok. 3 months not ok, you need a work visa.

Also, I am a contractor. If they wanted to hire me as a full time employee with typical benefits they would have to establish a branch here.


The Foundations of Mathematics - Ian Stewart.

I wouldn't say it taught me the most, but more like it opened the door so I could learn the most out of everything after it.


A part-time remote job from a developed country. It would enable me to do what a I really want, it's just a step towards my real goal. So what do I really want? Well: taking care of my vegetable garden, code random useless stuff but somehow it brings me joy, just messing around with computers, spend more time with my fiancee like we used to do in college days.


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