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Submission: On July 24 via api from US — Scanned from GB
Effective URL: https://www.entrepreneur.com/starting-a-business/how-to-find-the-right-programmers-a-brief-guideline-for/392785
Submission: On July 24 via api from US — Scanned from GB
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Skip to content Menu Close Menu Entrepreneur Landing Page Sign In Subscribe Search Entrepreneur Landing Page Search Close Menu Subscribe to Entrepreneur * Starting a Business * Growing a Business * Leadership * Small Business Guide * Business News * Science & Technology * Money & Finance * Living * Franchise * For Subscribers * Write for Entrepreneur * Bookstore * Ask an Expert * Tips White Papers * Podcasts * Video * Entrepreneur TV * Webinars * Entrepreneur Store * Spotlight * Magazine Subscription * Edition Plus Minus * United States * Spanish * Georgia * India * Asia Pacific * Middle East * Europe * South Africa Facebook X LinkedIn YouTube Instagram TikTok Snapchat RSS Copyright © 2024 Entrepreneur Media, LLC All rights reserved. Entrepreneur® and its related marks are registered trademarks of Entrepreneur Media LLC 1. Home Home 2. Breadcrumb Arrow Starting a Business Get All Access for $5/mo HOW TO FIND THE RIGHT PROGRAMMERS: A BRIEF GUIDELINE FOR STARTUP FOUNDERS FOR STARTUP FOUNDERS UNDER A PLETHORA OF CHALLENGES LIKE TIMING, INVESTORS AND CHANGING MARKET DEMAND, IT IS EXTREMELY HARD TO HIRE PROGRAMMERS WHO CAN DELIVER. By Vasily Voropaev Nov 21, 2021 Share Copy Subscribe to the Entrepreneur Daily newsletter to get business news, tips and inspiration sent to your inbox Subscribe I understand that the data I am submitting will be used to provide me with the above-described products and/or services and communications in connection therewith. Read our privacy policy for more information. Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Expanding a startup team has always been hard. Startup founders have to take into account many factors before letting new people into their team at early stages. This is only made worse by pressure from investors expecting fast results. The current situation only makes hiring even more challenging. The pandemic and the shortage of immigrant workers in many sectors, including IT, broke established market rules. Now, on top of the usual startup-related difficulties, founders have to transform their business and switch to the virtual realm — specifically, by hiring remotely. Here's how the classic hiring methods have changed and what the new options are. THE MYTH OF TALENT SHORTAGE Recently, the recruiters in my community have been saying that their market is literally boiling over — too many new offers and not enough professionals to respond to them. Whilst on my platform, I receive hundreds of new applications from developers weekly. What I see is a skills shortage. Maybe the lockdowns kept people from going to courses, getting some practice or they just got used to the perpetual vacation. Everyone expects to get a salary over $200k, but rarely do their experience and skills match their expectations. I suggest non-technical founders get an advisor who is a senior developer who can interview the candidates. They will give the right tasks, check the performance and figure out the candidates' real knowledge of infrastructure and coding languages. This is necessary for two reasons: Founders will prepare the right offer and will have appropriate expectations regarding the coders' work. Related: The First Virtual Job Fair for Programmers Arrives in Mexico JOB DESCRIPTION If you don't want to get lost in this hiring melting pot, make sure your job description really describes what you're looking for. It should not be too general, nor combine 2-3 positions in one unless specified as a temporarily 2-in-1 role. If you need a visionary leader, as opposed to a worker that will only follow set tasks, distinguish the two roles. Hire a professional recruiter to consult you on writing a comprehensive job description. Otherwise, delegate it to outstaffing agencies that will do end-to-end hiring for you. LEVELS OF PROFICIENCY Now that you know what you can offer and what you should expect from the candidate, place the job description on various platforms. Divide them into two segments — first the junior developers' profiles, then the more experienced software engineers. Junior programmers are good for startups led by full-stack developers, where the CTO can teach, correct and navigate fresh hires until they become mature coders. Although, experience shows that juniors often learn everything they need and move to another company within 8-9 months. Middle to senior developers are harder to find. Retaining them is an even harsher game. They will bring extensive experience and can be good advisers for your product development, but at the same time, they will bring biases and culture from previous jobs. You could ask for advice from recruiting agencies or serial entrepreneurs about how to set up the company culture, especially for remote or hybrid teams with a dozen of newly hired employees. Related: After 17 Years, I Quit My Job as a Computer Programmer to Follow My Passion. It Paid Off. WHERE TO FIND THE PROGRAMMERS Sourcing developers is a combination of art and science. Buy recruitment software to manage the job applications. Check if it also contains a feature that would help you coordinate job postings on all the platforms you've chosen. If you don't set up the optimal process for hiring at the beginning, it will become very time-consuming. Along with that, make one wrong step and your employer brand reputation will suffer, scaring all cool programmers away from your startup. You probably know the traditional job posting platforms by now. So here are a couple of new platforms I'd like to highlight: * Startup job websites like f6s, angel.co, GitHub, etc. * Outstaffing companies: These companies cover everything from a legal and financial perspective. You only make interviews with shortlisted developers and sign an agreement with the company that controls all the deliverables. * Online schools offer young but very talented coders that graduated from boot camps. * Organize a meetup for developers that are free of charge and engaging. Conferences, hackathons and marathons will work fine. In my opinion, the top hiring event ever made was a Neuralink demo held in August 2020. Look for specialists that are already used to the remote lifestyle. Digital nomads and engineers who have worked in autonomous environments are your primary target. HOW TO KEEP GOOD PROGRAMMERS Think about what they need or wish to have, things like: * working with interesting projects * a clear vision for their career growth * a flexible schedule * high-quality equipment * a development infrastructure in place, connected with a product manager, designer, customer support, sales and legal support. Forget about team building and group retreats. Listen to the real needs of your employees, give them choices and flexibility. Sharing a mission, the same culture and work attitudes should be key to finding your developers. Employee perks, flexible schedules and engaging tasks will make them happy. If you see that you cannot cover all these aspects at your current stage, don't hesitate to delegate it to HR and outstaffing companies, or hire professional recruiters. Related: Hiring the Modern Programmer: Does That Smart New Software Wavy Line Wavy Line Vasily Voropaev CEO of Smartbrain.io As CEO and founder of Smartbrain.io, Vasily Voropaev is a serial entrepreneur, business angel and pioneer of the Eastern Europe freelance and remote-work market. Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join. EDITOR'S PICK RED ARROW * He Didn't Want to Lead His $1 Billion Business the Same Way Anymore — Here's How the High-Stakes Switch-Up Paid Off * Lock Your Workplace Is Just Pretending to Care — and You're Part of the Problem, Too. Here's Why. * Can ChatGPT Help Start a Business? I Tried the Latest Version, GPT-4o, to Find Out. * Lock Her Startup's Product Was Better and Cheaper Than the Competition, So Why Wasn't It Selling? The Answer Would Bring in $25 Million a Year. * Taylor Swift Just Gave a Masterclass in Crisis Management — Turning an Onstage Disaster Into a Highlight * Fast-Food Chains and Their Menus Barely Resemble Those of the Past — And This Viral Post Reveals How Stark the Difference Is MOST POPULAR RED ARROW See all Chevron Right Business News HOW TO BE A BILLIONAIRE BY 25, ACCORDING TO A COLLEGE DROPOUT TURNED CEO WORTH $1.6 BILLION Austin Russell became the world's youngest self-made billionaire in 2020 at age 25. By Sherin Shibu Living TAYLOR SWIFT HAS A LUCKY NUMBER. AND SHE'S NOT THE ONLY HIGH PERFORMER WHO LEANS INTO SUPERSTITIONS TO BOOST CONFIDENCE. Even megastars like Swift need a little extra something to get them in the right mindset when it is game time. By David James Career THESE 3 BIG TECH COMPANIES OFFER 6-FIGURE SALARIES AND EASY INTERVIEWS — ESPECIALLY IF YOU FOLLOW THIS EXPERT'S ADVICE There are far more candidates than positions, so being strategic on the job hunt is key. By Amanda Breen Marketing SEO TRENDS YOU NEED TO BE AWARE OF RIGHT NOW, ACCORDING TO A SEASONED PRO Navigate the future of search engine optimization to elevate your online presence and drive meaningful engagement. By Nikola Baldikov Health & Wellness 4 HABITS I CULTIVATED TO BECOME A HEALTHIER, MORE EFFECTIVE ENTREPRENEUR By the time I hit mid-life, some of my bad habits were becoming a risk to my long-term business goals — and my health. Here's how I was able to change them. By Greg Smith Business News SAM ALTMAN'S MANSION WAS ONCE THE MOST EXPENSIVE HOME LISTING IN SAN FRANCISCO. A NEW LAWSUIT SAYS IT'S A 'LEMON.' The mansion was marketed with a "Batcave" garage. By Sherin Shibu Success Successfully copied link Terms of Use Privacy Policy Cookies Policy Accessibility Statement Site Map Contact Support Advertise SIGN UP FOR OUR FREE DAILY NEWSLETTER We'll be in your inbox every morning Monday-Saturday with all the day’s top business news, inspiring stories, best advice and exclusive reporting from Entrepreneur. Subscribe I understand that the data I am submitting will be used to provide me with the above-described products and/or services and communications in connection therewith. Read our privacy policy for more information. Facebook X LinkedIn YouTube Instagram TikTok Snapchat RSS Copyright © 2024 Entrepreneur Media, LLC All rights reserved. Entrepreneur® and its related marks are registered trademarks of Entrepreneur Media LLC