![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 25, 4:34 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote:
On May 25, 3:17 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote: In a previous article, Mxsmanic said: Robert M. Gary writes: Where can I get a software engineer in the US for 75K?? I've been trying to grow my U.S. team for quiet some time but even six figure saleries don't generate a lot of response. Are these telecommuting positions? The problem with "telecommuting positions" is that if they want telecommuters, they want Indian, Chinese, or Eastern European telecommuters, or people willing to work for those types of wages. The cost is actually a very small factor in overseas hiring in the software industry. Our two main motivating factors are 1) we want a large pool to hire from, in the U.S. right now its very much an employees market, its hard for employeers to find "good" (not the high school kids that were hired during the internet bubble, real engineers with real engineering degrees) programmers to pick from and 2) Since a large amount of sales come from overseas its hard to explain to a foreign country or company why they should buy your product if you don't spend any money in their country (i.e. "why should I buy your product if you won't hire anyone from my country")? Its the same reason Boeing subs out the 777 all over the world, those country are customers too. BTW: The cost savings in India for programmers is all but totally gone. China will always have a small roll because of the extream language difference. Eastern Europe is probably going to see a large increase in technology hiring in the near term. -Robert, BS Computer Science, MBA, holder of 3 U.S. patents for software Robert, Let me guess... you are in a high-cost large city job market, right? I am an Electrical Engineer with 20 years of design experience in both hardware and software, and in Idaho I make $80K a year, which is pretty typical. Not many 6 figure salaries here. Plus, HP has been laying off so many people in Boise that there are lots of folks in the market for an engineering position. Not an employees market here! I wish it was! |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message news ![]() writes: Plus, HP has been laying off so many people in Boise that there are lots of folks in the market for an engineering position. HP is laying off people everywhere. The decline at HP started when it become a publicly-held company with anonymous stockholders. Every company that changes owners in that way goes down the same path. I guess that is why Google is doing so poorly :-) Danny Deger |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 26, 12:34 am, Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: Plus, HP has been laying off so many people in Boise that there are lots of folks in the market for an engineering position. HP is laying off people everywhere. The decline at HP started when it become a publicly-held company with anonymous stockholders. Every company that changes owners in that way goes down the same path. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. So what,fjukktard? Bertie |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message news ![]() writes: Plus, HP has been laying off so many people in Boise that there are lots of folks in the market for an engineering position. HP is laying off people everywhere. The decline at HP started when it become a publicly-held company with anonymous stockholders. Every company that changes owners in that way goes down the same path. Oh, ok. So now you're an economist. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 25, 4:08 pm, wrote:
On May 25, 4:34 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On May 25, 3:17 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote: In a previous article, Mxsmanic said: Robert M. Gary writes: Where can I get a software engineer in the US for 75K?? I've been trying to grow my U.S. team for quiet some time but even six figure saleries don't generate a lot of response. Are these telecommuting positions? The problem with "telecommuting positions" is that if they want telecommuters, they want Indian, Chinese, or Eastern European telecommuters, or people willing to work for those types of wages. The cost is actually a very small factor in overseas hiring in the software industry. Our two main motivating factors are 1) we want a large pool to hire from, in the U.S. right now its very much an employees market, its hard for employeers to find "good" (not the high school kids that were hired during the internet bubble, real engineers with real engineering degrees) programmers to pick from and 2) Since a large amount of sales come from overseas its hard to explain to a foreign country or company why they should buy your product if you don't spend any money in their country (i.e. "why should I buy your product if you won't hire anyone from my country")? Its the same reason Boeing subs out the 777 all over the world, those country are customers too. BTW: The cost savings in India for programmers is all but totally gone. China will always have a small roll because of the extream language difference. Eastern Europe is probably going to see a large increase in technology hiring in the near term. -Robert, BS Computer Science, MBA, holder of 3 U.S. patents for software Robert, Let me guess... you are in a high-cost large city job market, right? Probably middle tier. We're near Sacramento. I am an Electrical Engineer with 20 years of design experience in both hardware and software, and in Idaho I make $80K a year, Well, if you account for all the state taxes here (income, high sales, $5000/yr average home property tax, sales/use tax on airplanes, etc) you probably are making a California equiv of $100K. Plus, HP has been laying off so many people in Boise that there are lots of folks in the market for an engineering position. Yea, HP is now where you want to be, especially if you are in a one employeer town. However, the best money has always been at smaller, riskier companies. You always take a salery cut to work at a more "stable" ![]() -robert |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 25, 8:50 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote:
On May 25, 4:08 pm, wrote: On May 25, 4:34 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On May 25, 3:17 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote: In a previous article, Mxsmanic said: Robert M. Gary writes: Where can I get a software engineer in the US for 75K?? I've been trying to grow my U.S. team for quiet some time but even six figure saleries don't generate a lot of response. Are these telecommuting positions? The problem with "telecommuting positions" is that if they want telecommuters, they want Indian, Chinese, or Eastern European telecommuters, or people willing to work for those types of wages. The cost is actually a very small factor in overseas hiring in the software industry. Our two main motivating factors are 1) we want a large pool to hire from, in the U.S. right now its very much an employees market, its hard for employeers to find "good" (not the high school kids that were hired during the internet bubble, real engineers with real engineering degrees) programmers to pick from and 2) Since a large amount of sales come from overseas its hard to explain to a foreign country or company why they should buy your product if you don't spend any money in their country (i.e. "why should I buy your product if you won't hire anyone from my country")? Its the same reason Boeing subs out the 777 all over the world, those country are customers too. BTW: The cost savings in India for programmers is all but totally gone. China will always have a small roll because of the extream language difference. Eastern Europe is probably going to see a large increase in technology hiring in the near term. -Robert, BS Computer Science, MBA, holder of 3 U.S. patents for software Robert, Let me guess... you are in a high-cost large city job market, right? Probably middle tier. We're near Sacramento. I am an Electrical Engineer with 20 years of design experience in both hardware and software, and in Idaho I make $80K a year, Well, if you account for all the state taxes here (income, high sales, $5000/yr average home property tax, sales/use tax on airplanes, etc) you probably are making a California equiv of $100K. Plus, HP has been laying off so many people in Boise that there are lots of folks in the market for an engineering position. Yea, HP is now where you want to be, especially if you are in a one employeer town. However, the best money has always been at smaller, riskier companies. You always take a salery cut to work at a more "stable" ![]() -robert- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Robert, I don't work for HP anymore, I work for a small privately owned company... HP is continuing to cut people here locally as they send the R&D to Shanghai and Singapore. Not much future at HP in the USA. Dean |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
A380 32.jpg (1/1) | Jim Long | Aviation Photos | 4 | February 8th 07 11:57 PM |
A380 15.jpg (1/1) | Jim Long | Aviation Photos | 0 | February 8th 07 06:04 PM |
A380 14.jpg (1/1) | Jim Long | Aviation Photos | 0 | February 8th 07 06:04 PM |
A380 13.jpg (1/1) | Jim Long | Aviation Photos | 0 | February 8th 07 06:04 PM |
A380 12.jpg (1/1) | Jim Long | Aviation Photos | 0 | February 8th 07 06:04 PM |