I highly, highly doubt it would work. The competition is already fierce. Only a small portion of people, who are both lucky and talented would make that much money. If I could make even $2,000 a month by freelance programming, I would not get a 9-to-5 job.
@@typingcat as I understood, freelance for him = contract. But I don't think it will work for a person who has just 1-2 years of experience (as mentioned in video). You should became at least senior (I mean real senior) in your field.
@@tchq Definitely. I tried freelancing with only 2/3 years of experience, and I mean full-time experience. I was 25 at the time and started programming PHP when I was about 16 years old, as a hobby. The real problem was I was still a junior overall at 25, with a lack of focus: I was full-stack. And for freelancing, that's awful. If they hire someone, they want actual experience: a specialist in that specific field, that does the job perfectly. So either front-end or back-end and specialized in at least one programming language (a true senior that knows all the quirks of that specific language). Of course you are also expected to have enough experience with linux, orchestration tools, design patterns, security etc. I was still able to get a few jobs though, as freelancer, but I went back to a permanent contract soon enough.
I don't want to trash talk these kind of videos, but it feels like they're the magazines of our times, each week you get a new issue of opinions, and surface-level talk on the same old topics, but as you can see from the comments people get a 2 second motivation kick and then they don't know what to do next. I'm just thinking to myself what would happen if we had a new platform and didn't have to live by the RUclips algorithm.
Extremely unrealistic video, and the "info" it provides is nothing new... Regular job, freelancing, content creator and independent engineer? I've seen a hundred videos saying this same stuff...
Great video, I used to do programming in the early 2000s havent done it since but would love to get back into it. Hardly remember anything, will probably learn Python. I think everything you said makes sense, id like to get up the freelance stage, that would be enough for me personally.
I’ve found freelancing is highly overrated. You do make more, but not enough to give up security, usually the benefits of full time work outweigh a higher hourly rate. Also, most contract work is still in person. So instead of working from anywhere, they expect you to either live or relocate to come in office for the entire duration of your contract.
You will burn out in freelancing from your client demands so fast there is no chance you will make 10k a month unless you are some robot that has some exceptional talent
I would say that earning a living wage by solo-creating Android apps is extremely difficult now. You must be very talented and also lucky. If it were anywhere near "achievable", most programmers (other than those who work at top tech companies) would have quit their job and be creating Android apps.
@@InternetMadeCoder Then what are you talking about? iOS apps are not any easier. Or what Microsoft Store or some other place? Android is obviously the first logical conclusion and if you're not talking about than then you should of clarified while selling your snake oil
140K month isn't for everyone, people should alway be prepared for variant B or reserve money farming, if your main career will fail, you will be able to reverse it again by the reserve system
I'm learning Python right now but it's not easy as a regular 9-5 worker, any tips and tricks? and what's the best career path course if i want to be a Back-end dev?
Hi, same situation here. Try to balance it with 9-5 job, doing sports 5 times a week and also seeing friends. But I feel getting exhausted from using my weekends mainly to study.
@@pieneclaessen it’s very challenging 😥 i think the best course on Udemy (100 days of code) is the perfect one, i’m halfway done, but i’m thinking of doing the ZTM python career path, it’s the best way to get hired, if you dedicate your time of course 😀 2hrs for the weekends and 1h Mon-Fri would be good, nevertheless it’s very boring to study alone, as a self taught while working 😌
@@abdiadennn Besides Udemy courses, I think Coursera has a great range of variety when it comes to learning a new programming language/skillsets in general. In the end it all comes down to how serious and dedicated you are.. and if you're willing to go a route that's more structured but still self-teaching along with a monthly fee. Coursera also rewards you with Certs of completion and has a degree credit system, if you end up going for a degree in whatever.
It's not easy but you gotta put in the work! I'm in the same boat as you. I work M-F, 9:30AM-6PM studying Python and also studying for my CCNA simultaneously, but it's totally doable if you try not to waste time in your day. A typical workday for me looks like this: -8:45AM - Wake up, get ready for work -9AM - commute to work -9:30AM - clock in, breakfast in the office -1:30PM - Lunch -6:00PM - clock out , commute home -6:30PM - arrive at home, cook dinner (for later in the night) -7:00PM - complete one lesson/project in Udemy 100 days of code course, maybe a leetcode question too if I finish quickly -9:00PM - complete one lesson in Udemy CCNA course -10:00PM - Eat, play video games, work out, or do whatever I feel like for the rest of the night Then I'll take care of things like groceries/errands/car maintenance and stuff like that on the weekends. It's a lot of work but I know it'll be worth it in the future, good luck!
web dev 6-12 months, back end development 6-24 months software dev 24-48 months machine learning 48+ months cloud dev is applied in all above, 6-12months. start from first and build iteratively.
The only problem of this formula is that he only tried 1) get a job, and 3) create content. So if to end up creating content you'd better just start creating code from day 1. There are so much content to xreate much easier than creating code and makes lots of money. So basically this formula doesn't promise.
pick a tutorial on yt, id recommend Bro Code but it suits you. Then build increasingly hard projects once you understand the fundamentals. When you do get stuck, go on W3schools, other google stuff, or chat gpt. With chat gpt ask it why there is a problem and how to fix it. Understand it, then apply it. e.g, if the mistake was that you used a for loop incorrectly, understand why it can't work in that situation and why chatgpt's response works. W3schools is good if you are like me and cannot be asked to read through documentation. Lastly, refer to tutorials later when you are stuck on/just found out a specific thing, such as the map function.
Just work for company because they will calculate taxes. They will hire accountants to do the job on the company expense. As a freelancer will you take time off for taxes?
I actually tried following these paths as a senior engineer and found out that some guys who knows business, relations and getting investors in are more likely to make tons of money while knowing zero lines of code and stuff. Then it really decreased my motivation to learn code deeper and shifted my path towards these stuff. However, I could not make enough money out of it (buy some property and invested in stocks but they can't pay me as much as my 9 to 5 job does)and been feeling diminished when I see the same level of devs are already outperform it (while they are advancing in coding I was dealing with another stuff investment, body building etc) so what should I do know I am really confused 😢 should I maximize my coding skills but it scares me to forget all of business stuff while doing it because you know where you spend your energy is growing while other part is diminishing
I know that only high skilled person, with architect certificates and definitely 5+ years of experianse in a field can achive $10k+ or business holder. If you have skills you can achive $2k+ but I don't think that will be on start.
⚡️ Learn all the newest trends in the Tech Industry for FREE - hired.com/internetmadecoder
1. Get a job & gain experience
2. Become a freelancer
3. Content creation
4. Independent software dev
I highly, highly doubt it would work. The competition is already fierce. Only a small portion of people, who are both lucky and talented would make that much money. If I could make even $2,000 a month by freelance programming, I would not get a 9-to-5 job.
@@typingcat as I understood, freelance for him = contract. But I don't think it will work for a person who has just 1-2 years of experience (as mentioned in video). You should became at least senior (I mean real senior) in your field.
@@tchq Definitely. I tried freelancing with only 2/3 years of experience, and I mean full-time experience. I was 25 at the time and started programming PHP when I was about 16 years old, as a hobby. The real problem was I was still a junior overall at 25, with a lack of focus: I was full-stack. And for freelancing, that's awful. If they hire someone, they want actual experience: a specialist in that specific field, that does the job perfectly. So either front-end or back-end and specialized in at least one programming language (a true senior that knows all the quirks of that specific language). Of course you are also expected to have enough experience with linux, orchestration tools, design patterns, security etc. I was still able to get a few jobs though, as freelancer, but I went back to a permanent contract soon enough.
Not me searching for comments even before watching video to know whether it's legit and finding out it's posted just 5 mins ago.
Same here 😅
Lmao same
Lmao you got nowadays
No dislike Button 😅
🤣
I don't want to trash talk these kind of videos, but it feels like they're the magazines of our times, each week you get a new issue of opinions, and surface-level talk on the same old topics, but as you can see from the comments people get a 2 second motivation kick and then they don't know what to do next.
I'm just thinking to myself what would happen if we had a new platform and didn't have to live by the RUclips algorithm.
I agree with your opinion bro. Def there should be something other than the same old algorithm
Im so tempted.. Most developers could make this happen. Im wondering why they dont? Is it a regulation issue? I want to try it 😂
So what makes you guys so special that makes me incapable of coding?
Thank you so much for this comment! I've been sick of the youtube algorithm for a while, I just couldn't tell why. I'll look for another platform lol.
Maybe you should start that type of platform? :)
Extremely unrealistic video, and the "info" it provides is nothing new... Regular job, freelancing, content creator and independent engineer? I've seen a hundred videos saying this same stuff...
I know other ways to make passive income and this are just the regular ways to get money
Great video, I used to do programming in the early 2000s havent done it since but would love to get back into it. Hardly remember anything, will probably learn Python. I think everything you said makes sense, id like to get up the freelance stage, that would be enough for me personally.
I’ve found freelancing is highly overrated. You do make more, but not enough to give up security, usually the benefits of full time work outweigh a higher hourly rate. Also, most contract work is still in person. So instead of working from anywhere, they expect you to either live or relocate to come in office for the entire duration of your contract.
Why did RUclips remove the dislike button?
Huh, actual solid advice. I was expecting another scam video, but this is real stuff. Thanks! Subbed.
You will burn out in freelancing from your client demands so fast there is no chance you will make 10k a month unless you are some robot that has some exceptional talent
If you are half-competent, and have some experience, it’s very easy to make 10k+ a konth from one client.
you should replace the title to "Promotion of Hired and the rest is just general opinions used for ads" !
You should stop being an e titled brat
I would say that earning a living wage by solo-creating Android apps is extremely difficult now. You must be very talented and also lucky. If it were anywhere near "achievable", most programmers (other than those who work at top tech companies) would have quit their job and be creating Android apps.
No one talked about creating android apps
@@InternetMadeCoder Then what are you talking about? iOS apps are not any easier. Or what Microsoft Store or some other place? Android is obviously the first logical conclusion and if you're not talking about than then you should of clarified while selling your snake oil
140K month isn't for everyone, people should alway be prepared for variant B or reserve money farming, if your main career will fail, you will be able to reverse it again by the reserve system
I started studying for a developer a year but not fluently. I'm trying more.
Ah yes, water is wet.
I'm learning Python right now but it's not easy as a regular 9-5 worker, any tips and tricks?
and what's the best career path course if i want to be a Back-end dev?
Hi, same situation here. Try to balance it with 9-5 job, doing sports 5 times a week and also seeing friends. But I feel getting exhausted from using my weekends mainly to study.
@@pieneclaessen it’s very challenging 😥 i think the best course on Udemy (100 days of code) is the perfect one, i’m halfway done, but i’m thinking of doing the ZTM python career path, it’s the best way to get hired, if you dedicate your time of course 😀 2hrs for the weekends and 1h Mon-Fri would be good, nevertheless it’s very boring to study alone, as a self taught while working 😌
@@abdiadennn Besides Udemy courses, I think Coursera has a great range of variety when it comes to learning a new programming language/skillsets in general. In the end it all comes down to how serious and dedicated you are.. and if you're willing to go a route that's more structured but still self-teaching along with a monthly fee. Coursera also rewards you with Certs of completion and has a degree credit system, if you end up going for a degree in whatever.
It's not easy but you gotta put in the work! I'm in the same boat as you. I work M-F, 9:30AM-6PM studying Python and also studying for my CCNA simultaneously, but it's totally doable if you try not to waste time in your day. A typical workday for me looks like this:
-8:45AM - Wake up, get ready for work
-9AM - commute to work
-9:30AM - clock in, breakfast in the office
-1:30PM - Lunch
-6:00PM - clock out , commute home
-6:30PM - arrive at home, cook dinner (for later in the night)
-7:00PM - complete one lesson/project in Udemy 100 days of code course, maybe a leetcode question too if I finish quickly
-9:00PM - complete one lesson in Udemy CCNA course
-10:00PM - Eat, play video games, work out, or do whatever I feel like for the rest of the night
Then I'll take care of things like groceries/errands/car maintenance and stuff like that on the weekends. It's a lot of work but I know it'll be worth it in the future, good luck!
Learn BackEnd Frameworks. Django and FastAPI.
The temporal job idea really sounds good.
Sir does this apply for a person with 0 knowledge on the field? and on average how many time takes a person to get all those skills and abilities?
web dev 6-12 months,
back end development 6-24 months
software dev 24-48 months
machine learning 48+ months
cloud dev is applied in all above, 6-12months.
start from first and build iteratively.
Believe in yourself bro you got it
I would love to use Java and C++ but data science is forcing me to use shitty interpreted languages.
Where do you post your content to earn money? Thanks
It's this site called 'RUclips'
Does anyone know where I can get this Macbook case from? 3:54
Can i build a Readwise with no code?
The only problem of this formula is that he only tried 1) get a job, and 3) create content. So if to end up creating content you'd better just start creating code from day 1. There are so much content to xreate much easier than creating code and makes lots of money. So basically this formula doesn't promise.
Hello! are you an expert in Python right? Do you have any course = 'python for beginners' ? Thank you!
Try CS50P by Harvard
pick a tutorial on yt, id recommend Bro Code but it suits you. Then build increasingly hard projects once you understand the fundamentals. When you do get stuck, go on W3schools, other google stuff, or chat gpt. With chat gpt ask it why there is a problem and how to fix it. Understand it, then apply it.
e.g, if the mistake was that you used a for loop incorrectly, understand why it can't work in that situation and why chatgpt's response works. W3schools is good if you are like me and cannot be asked to read through documentation.
Lastly, refer to tutorials later when you are stuck on/just found out a specific thing, such as the map function.
What do you think about data analysts?
what camera did you use to record this video?
I finished the guide, now I'm just waiting for my 10k to arrive, i hope it works wish me luck
💀
I have news for you: it won't come to you by waiting...
I'm a venezolan, what would be my salary when i start working?
0.01$
Cetivicate apply good or not?
Just work for company because they will calculate taxes. They will hire accountants to do the job on the company expense. As a freelancer will you take time off for taxes?
Makes sense
That’s a poor excuse to settle for lower pay tho
Don’t even file- less than .03% you’ll be audited
@@InternetMadeCoderNo way youre sayin freelancing pays more than software engineers
@@alwinsanthosh6878it 100% does unless you’re making 100k+ at your job
I actually tried following these paths as a senior engineer and found out that some guys who knows business, relations and getting investors in are more likely to make tons of money while knowing zero lines of code and stuff. Then it really decreased my motivation to learn code deeper and shifted my path towards these stuff. However, I could not make enough money out of it (buy some property and invested in stocks but they can't pay me as much as my 9 to 5 job does)and been feeling diminished when I see the same level of devs are already outperform it (while they are advancing in coding I was dealing with another stuff investment, body building etc) so what should I do know I am really confused 😢 should I maximize my coding skills but it scares me to forget all of business stuff while doing it because you know where you spend your energy is growing while other part is diminishing
I know that only high skilled person, with architect certificates and definitely 5+ years of experianse in a field can achive $10k+ or business holder. If you have skills you can achive $2k+ but I don't think that will be on start.
if i have skills but don't have work experianse may i achive $2k+?
Id be happy with just an extra 1 to 2k but possibilities are endless
this vids mainly for european coders. yall have more leverage as a contractor
How to make 10000$ a month with coding? - Easy! Just find a job at a good company!
Ai vs app vs web developer which is best to learn now
All are good.
Just select one and master it very well then add another.
You can start with ai and app first then later on you can add web. Or you can start with Ai and web apps then after on you can add app. Thanks
What’s the CPM of a coding RUclipsr?
so coding is not dead yet ?
No
never
Coding can never die
Wait a second, you are encouraging people to create content. Isn't that like a central banker saying, yeah you should probably get some bitcoin. :)
how do i start
cooding
😂u serious
hey what about dubai i am in
Uae
If ur making 10k/ month, then what are you doin on youtube? creating competitors? 😂
If he’s making 10K a month; he probably doesn’t care especially when a ton of beginners will never reach his level and quit eventually anyway.
Wow ❤
Marked.
these days is almost impossible to land a job
This is bs
Woww