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===rant

So I have been freelancing as web developer for 5 years. I was also playing basketball professionally so I was only working part-time, building websites here and there, small android apps to learn the job and I was also reading a lot to challenge my brain.

When I stopped playing basketball about a year ago, I thought I would really enjoy coding full time so I pursued a job.

With no formal education and just a basketball background on paper, in the collapsed Greek economy, as you may assume chances of landing a job are minimal.

After about 40 resumes sent I only got an internship. It was a 4 month, part-time, no pay deal, and then the company would decide if they would like to hire me later.

The company had 4 employees and they are one of the largest software distribution businesses in my area. They resell SaaS bought from a third company, bundled with installation support, initial configuration, hardware support, whatever a client may need.

I was the only one with any ability to code whatsoever. The other people were working mostly on customer support with the occasional hardware repair.

After the 4 month period they owner (small company, owner was also manager and other roles) told me that they are very happy with my work and would like to keep me part-time with minimum pay.

Just to give you and idea if the amounts of money involved, in Greece, after taxes, my salary was 240euros per month. And the average cost of surviving (rent, cheapest food possible, no expenses on anything but super basics) is about 600euros.

I told him I needed more to live and he told me ok, we will reevaluate a few months later, at the end of May 2017.

I just accepted it without having many options. The company after all was charging clients 30euros per hour for my projects so I kept thinking that if I worked a lot and delivered consistently I would get a full time job and decent money.

And I delivered. In the following months I made a Magento extension, some WordPress themes, a C# application to extract data from the client's ERP and import it to a third application, a click to call application to use Asterisk to originate calls from the client's ERP, a web application to manage a restaurant's menu and many more small projects. Whatever they asked, I delivered.

On time, version controlled, heavily documented solutions (my C# ones are not exactly masterpieces but it was my first time with the language and windows).

So when May ended I was pretty excited to hear they wanted to keep me full time. I worked hard for it, I was serious, professional, I tried a lot to learn things so I can deliver, and the company recognized that. YAY.

So the time comes to talk money. The offer was 480euros per month. Double my part-time pay, minimum wage. I asked for about 700. Manager said it's hard but I will see what I can do. So we agreed to keep the deal for June while they are working on a better offer.

During the first half of June I finished my last project, put all my work on a nice folder with a nice readme on every project's directory, with their version control and everything.

The offer never improved, so I said no deal, and as of today, I am jobless.

I am stressed as fuck and excited as fuck at the same time.

I will do my best to survive in the shitstorm that is called Greece.

Bring it on.

Comments
  • 12
    Try to get a remote job at a company in a different country, you should be able to make way more money than that man!
  • 3
    Don't give up!
  • 6
    Make sure you keep all those project experiences and mention them in your resume, looks like you have done very well for yourself. Employers will love the fact that you took initiative by yourself with no previous education and you have come so far. Keep up the great work man!
  • 7
    Stories like this make me mad and at the same time hoping @dfox and @trogus will implement a "hire this dev"/"send this dev a job offer" option.
  • 6
    Good luck! And I agree, do consider remote work, if you're a good coder and can communicate you should be competitive in the global market.

    While you're out of work, keep learning and programming in your free time, you don't need a company to gain the experience you need to succeed.
  • 2
    1.Go to nearest college, find a students, tell them to find you clients. You will charge $ they will keep half of them. Find more students.
    2. Go to gearbest website find some cool products, create your eShop, put the products online with x extra $$. Advertise
  • 3
    If you can t find a job, create one
  • 1
    There can we hire you?
  • 4
    I woke up to all this positive feedback, and I want to thank you all, it actually means a lot.

    I will need to write a nice resume even though I kind of suck at self promoting, and then reach out to companies both inside and outside Greece.

    @bashlord this is actually in my immediate plans.

    @theshinytuxedo the whole experience was nice, I learned a lot and got to see how a company works, so I will definitely keep that part. I will also try to upload my code on github during the next days so that employers will be able to see if I would be a good fit for them or not.

    @Wack it's not about hiring, I mostly wanted to let it out, although it would be really nice if that existed too.

    @trogus thank you for your advice and for you work on this wonderful community. I feel I can communicate, the coding part is up to employers to decide.

    @irilias I want to. I will try my best and see what happens.

    @Doomenik I can provide contact information and code samples, just let me know.
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