How “Overemployed” Programmers Are Earning Multiple FULL TIME Salaries

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 17 май 2024
  • Freelance Coding is the way in 2024! Learn How: www.freemote.com/strategy
    / aaronjack
    #coding #programming #javascript

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @dennisrosenkilde8871
    @dennisrosenkilde8871 Год назад +6859

    So this is how you get that 10 year experience on a 3 year old programming language that recruiters want.

    • @yandikalamiya2857
      @yandikalamiya2857 Год назад +199

      go developer basically

    • @milkyroad9593
      @milkyroad9593 Год назад +80

      Hahaha finally an answer

    • @Chubakabrah1
      @Chubakabrah1 Год назад +90

      Holy, you are right. No wonder they are asking crazy numbers for new languages.

    • @dadutchboy2
      @dadutchboy2 Год назад +34

      It makes so much sense now

    • @sodapopcowboy8620
      @sodapopcowboy8620 Год назад +5

      @@dadutchboy2 Yee
      Engineer Gaming! *music plays*

  • @nbme-answers
    @nbme-answers Год назад +10935

    Don't be a 10x engineer, be a 1x engineer at 10 different places

  • @MichaelMrozek0
    @MichaelMrozek0 Год назад +418

    If you're actually getting your work done, go for it. If you're forcing your coworkers to cover your work for 6 months until they finally convince your boss to fire you, you should probably feel bad.

    • @gokublack8342
      @gokublack8342 11 месяцев назад +7

      It is what it is 😂 that's the balance if you can handle the extra work fine if you can't and slack you get the boot

    • @BillClinton228
      @BillClinton228 7 месяцев назад +10

      You're coworkers are not your friends, and there is no reason for you to feel bad. They dont feel bad when they let you go...

    • @luckerooni1153
      @luckerooni1153 6 месяцев назад +5

      Coworkers don't have to cover for anything. They can do their own work too. If the project stops or slows down as a result, it's up to management to solve it, and if they fire you then then clearly you weren't keeping pace. If no one gives a fuck, coworkers do not need to pretend to be management because they are certainly not getting paid to manage the project.

    • @hongmeiling6065
      @hongmeiling6065 3 месяца назад +1

      Nobody who is "over employed" is actually doing twice as much work. Especially not in a job like software engineering. This is for people that want to play the system, nothing else. More power to them.

    • @piotr2951
      @piotr2951 10 дней назад

      @@BillClinton228 Exactly what a person with no integrity and empathy would say.

  • @Kytreeswerving
    @Kytreeswerving Год назад +811

    “What do I think?”
    I think for years companies have been exploiting their workers.
    I think it’s nice to see the worker exploiting their companies for a change.

    • @deeepdish
      @deeepdish 11 месяцев назад +21

      Fire with fire... but will say it finally feels fair

    • @hangukhiphop
      @hangukhiphop 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@Riorozen That's dumb as hell. The government works _for_ the firms.

    • @armanigenes
      @armanigenes 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah sure the companies that are still making profit from our labor is being exploited...

    • @donovangunther4538
      @donovangunther4538 11 месяцев назад +20

      Doesn't even really count as exploiting companies if you're getting the work done. Framing overemployment as bad because there are cases of workers not performing at certain positions is cringe

    • @goutamboppana961
      @goutamboppana961 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Riorozen the US govt is 5 corporations in a trench coat, that means behind all the rosy language of capitalist dogma, they mostly work for corporations

  • @eonreeves4324
    @eonreeves4324 Год назад +5686

    i was an automotive tech for 20 sum years. I was paid in what they call "Flag hours"
    This means if "The Book" says that a job takes 5 hours, and I do it in 5 minutes, I get paid for all 5 hours.
    After doing a job many many times, you get very very fast at doing it.
    I had 3 bays at my disposal and would be working 3 cars at the same time.
    Those mode door actuators that go out inside the dash board for example, the book says the dash comes out and that takes like 7 hours. Because I knew in my mind exactly where it was, I didn't need to take the dash out. I would reach inside the dash and remove / replace the part working completely blind. I can see with my fingers. Took me 5 mins tops. That is a skill and an ability I earned so I get paid for that.
    If you can do the work of 10 people you should get paid like 10 people lol

    • @eirod
      @eirod Год назад

      Good luck get any employer to agree to that.... Most are very greedy and want profits all to themselves...

    • @hasty-prize9900
      @hasty-prize9900 Год назад +553

      that only makes sense , we should be payed for service not time

    • @eirod
      @eirod Год назад +223

      @@hasty-prize9900 that's how business owners are born I'd imagine...

    • @scotttang6229
      @scotttang6229 Год назад +250

      the best period! Why should you be paid the same amount when producing 10X? Makes no sense. And it's usually the top 20% that produces 80% of the work.

    • @notyet2345
      @notyet2345 Год назад +27

      So basically you overcharged people.

  • @ryanelliott5976
    @ryanelliott5976 Год назад +4184

    If a waitress or a gas station attendant have to work 3 jobs to barely scrape by and feed their kids, I don't see why remote workers shouldn't do the same thing in order to actually have a retirement. They're probably the only ones in our generation who actually have a shot at it. The only difference is one is motivated by survival today while the other is motivated by not having to struggle for survival in the future.

    • @isaac80745
      @isaac80745 Год назад +27

      Yeah but it will likely catch up to y'all

    • @ultimamateria1604
      @ultimamateria1604 Год назад +294

      Anybody can get a job as a waitress or gas attendant. Programming is a specialized skill, it takes time, discipline and in most cases, money to find any amount of success in it. What we should be critical of is the government not raising the minimum wage in correlation to the average cost of living

    • @ybuburxyutcertyffyyneyb2680
      @ybuburxyutcertyffyyneyb2680 Год назад +88

      It lowers the amount of jobs on the market meaning someone who wants to be in IT may not be able to get a job. Its kinda greedy and unkind.

    • @mikenice182
      @mikenice182 Год назад +90

      @@ybuburxyutcertyffyyneyb2680 not at all, there are sooooo many tech jobs its kinda ridiculous. I get 10-15 emails a day from recruiters. All different roles, at different companies. The IT field is in desperate need of people, and there isn’t enough “talent” out there. Actually alot of companies are really desperate too, it can all work in your favor.

    • @isaac80745
      @isaac80745 Год назад +3

      @@ybuburxyutcertyffyyneyb2680 That is exactly what I am thinking.

  • @christsciple
    @christsciple Год назад +328

    Yeah this is me! I have two full time senior software/data engineering jobs, and a third "job" as an advisor at a blockchain/fin-tech startup! It's actually not that difficult for me in my situation because one job has so much bloat/red-tape that everything moves at a snails pace. I write some code, do some sort of system integration or ETL jobs for backend resources and wait around for others on the team.
    The other job is simply laid back and we have no scrum master. Tasks/projects are fairly flexible. That said, I still do my best at both jobs and work hard to create useful products.
    I don't play video games or anything so I figured this was the best use of my time. I would highly encourage others to do it just know you're taking on some risk by doing this.
    I guess my motivation for it is simply money. Money buys freedom and I don't want be a debt slave forever. Eventually I'd like to take a vacation, explore, and to help support my family and friends.
    This has allowed me to build a new house, pay off debt, buy fun things for my brother, support my young sister, and just not stress so much.
    10 years ago I was working construction during the day, a janitor in the morning, and tech support at night. Learning to code has completely changed my life!

    • @christsciple
      @christsciple Год назад +28

      @@murtazafakhry2955 Python, SQL, and C# are my bread and butter. I am comfortable in other languages but do not use them as much. It all depends on what you want to do. Python imo is the best language to get started with. I like more of the backend stuff hence the languages I work with. If you want to be more of a front developer, JavaScript is the way to go.
      If you can master the basics of Python, you will be able to learn any language. There are many similarities. Functions, loops, decorators, methods, data types, etc. From there, it's just a matter of working with specific libraries/packages.

    • @Viper-sn5cx
      @Viper-sn5cx Год назад +2

      Amazing bro that's awesome! You deserve it too working three jobs at once esp construction talk about back breaking. How long did you work all three? I imagine that had to be a hard time for you. You've definitely inspired me as I'm working to get my Google IT cert and thinking of going the way of data engineer but also love cloud/cyber security too so may do a little of everything. Any advise you have for starting out and to reach the level your at now?

    • @christsciple
      @christsciple Год назад +7

      @@Viper-sn5cx Appreciate the kind words! I did construction from childhood until 27 (mid 30's now). Don't have any great advice other than work hard at it. I was really poor and living in a high-crime area, really determined to get out of that life so I pretty much just wrote code every minute of the day that I could. Python was the game changer for me. Watched RUclips videos, looked over professional GitHub repos to see how smarter people were writing and formatting, and practiced a lot with Leetcode and building my own projects of interest (started with a stock scraper; scraped data with bs4/requests/selenium, formatted using pandas, saved into a sqlite db, copied over to postgres, etl into sql server via ssis). Just things like that.
      Data engineering is huge rn jobs aplenty!
      You got this bro!

    • @Viper-sn5cx
      @Viper-sn5cx Год назад +1

      @@christsciple Thank you brother! It's definitely a huge mountain to climb but great things have small beginnings. I'm excited and can't wait to begin this new career. Thanks for the advice and Merry Christmas!

    • @prashantmishra9985
      @prashantmishra9985 Год назад

      You are an inspiration. I want one advice from you. Which has better prospects : Full Stack Web Development or Data Science?

  • @QvsTheWorld
    @QvsTheWorld Год назад +557

    My only concern with overployement is how it could affect wages if adopted widely. If enough people are are accepting multiple lower wages jobs then employer will start assuming this is the new normal.

    • @Slashx92
      @Slashx92 Год назад +256

      Another concern of mine is junior positions being taken by seniors with 3 jobs, saturating the position for the ones that are actual juniors and need the experience

    • @lukiso5734
      @lukiso5734 Год назад +35

      Yes. I fear that this can't be sustained if alot of people do this

    • @LifeLikeSage
      @LifeLikeSage Год назад +56

      This is so far the only good concern I've heard against people doing multiple jobs. All others seem to be by salty losers that are mad because they can't perform like those that can punch down at multiple easier jobs.
      I just want to highlight that the golden part about the original post is that it's concerned with the macroscopic outcome of people working many jobs, not the spook of morality.

    • @DanielBlak
      @DanielBlak Год назад +3

      That and you know...getting sued for everything you earned.

    • @QvsTheWorld
      @QvsTheWorld Год назад +8

      @@DanielBlak All the stories I've heard of people getting caught, they just get fired. At this point I'd say it's a plus for overemployment since you're not loosing 100%.

  • @Protocoding
    @Protocoding Год назад +1716

    Having your camera off is a powerful tool. I once worked at a company for a year and never saw my coworkers face, he didn’t even have a profile picture. Found out he had a whole team of devs taking meeting and completing Jira tickets for him.

    • @Zero-rp4xr
      @Zero-rp4xr Год назад +23

      What are jira tickets?

    • @msgeorgem
      @msgeorgem Год назад +212

      @@Zero-rp4xr tasks

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Год назад

      Looks like the play is to live in a country with low cost of living, and pretend to be a US citizen or something while you're actually a company

    • @CarlosAlvarado04
      @CarlosAlvarado04 Год назад +134

      That’s why I always turn on my camera when I have to interview somebody. If the candidate doesn’t turn on as well, then is done, will be rejected.

    • @Byron5429
      @Byron5429 Год назад +431

      I don't turn my camera on because half the time I'm naked.

  • @lefty_missle3898
    @lefty_missle3898 Год назад +2038

    I worked remote 2 jobs for 6 months. The idea wasn't intentional. I was looking for work during the pandemic and received 2 offers. It hit me that how do I know if I will like the job or my co-workers. that's when I realized I didn't have to reject either and try a 6 week free trial on both job offers. I ended up liking both and stuck with it.
    Eventually I was told I had to go back to the office at least 3 times a week for one job and once a week for the other. For about 2 months I was working in one office and doing work of the other job and vice-versa. No one noticed because it's the same type of work. Same softwares and email provider. Reason why I stopped doing it was because I wanted back my free time. I wanted to feel energized after work to work on hobbies and also have personal free time during work.

    • @shadyworld1
      @shadyworld1 Год назад +122

      Exactly!
      It’s like temporary gig to do with your life just to push yourself either financially or technically maybe both in really short period of time!
      However some of us get used to it to the point they lost their own life, I been that before and now I’m all on for one employer just to get back my life too and have some energy to do other things!

    • @mannybear4937
      @mannybear4937 Год назад +2

      What do you do?

    • @everythingisfine9988
      @everythingisfine9988 Год назад +44

      True. It's not a bad idea if you need to save up money for a big purchase, pay off a major debt or maybe there's some downtime in your life where you can't go out. Broken leg for instance, might as well stay home and work 2 gigs. But the one thing you don't get back in life is *time*

    • @Neonagi
      @Neonagi Год назад +5

      I assume you stuck with the 1x/week job in the end to get more free time back.

    • @mikea5745
      @mikea5745 Год назад +50

      Okay, this one is actually really bad. Don't do this. If you're using the office space of company 1, you can't do work for company 2. That's a great way to get in legal trouble with both companies

  • @lucysour
    @lucysour Год назад +60

    It would just be too stressful. I work one senior level position and I love when things are "slow" enough that I can work on a personal project or learn something new. It hardly happened at all last year. Also, the constant context switching would be a nightmare.

    • @DanishTroll87
      @DanishTroll87 4 месяца назад +4

      That's the thing. Let us assume senior means 8+ years of programming (150k) and entry means less than 2 years of programming (65k). What you should do is get 2 mid level jobs that pay ~85k each. This way you'd be able to jump between tasks relatively easily and also finish both job's daily tasks within 8 hours. This way you'd end up with 170k a year instead of 150k. And you'd get more benefits as well. Health with company A, dental with company B and so on.

    • @blackbriarmead1966
      @blackbriarmead1966 3 месяца назад

      I agree here. I work two remote jobs, but the second one is only part time. The part time company knows I work full time, but I’ve never told the full time company. And I’m looking to quit the low paid part time job. I will lose maybe $600 a month after taxes, but I think it will be worth it since I earn 10x at the main place. The reason I am still at the 2nd place is because I built their MVP and they are just now doing trials with the client. Pretty cool to see my work having an impact, especially since it was my first paid experience

  • @davidrivard1252
    @davidrivard1252 Год назад +29

    Confidence does play a key rule. If you run stuff like the Overemployed guy said, yes you'll get more rejection in interviews because they can't fulfill demands, but eventually you'll find the interview where the employer is fine with minimal meetings (and if you know what work is expected of you (which you should) and what you can achieve, go for it).
    Don't be confident like you run their business (cocky), but be confident in your abilities (know your worth); you're boss can't just say 'meeting scheduled tomorrow'

  • @austinfastidio3183
    @austinfastidio3183 Год назад +2215

    It’s amazing to me that this is even a conversation. As long as you can fulfill the requirements of the position, do whatever you want. My perspective comes from working hourly. I’m an electrician and have worked a second part time job after leaving the first one for the day, six days a week. This is exhausting and costly but worth it if you need the money. I’ve even done this while saying yes to side work (basically freelancing). I’ve heard of people having as many as five hourly positions, working up to 100 hours per week. The fact that introducing this concept into a salaried environment raises additional previously unthinkable objections or concerns is beyond me. This conversation needs to be put to bed: add value for your employer to justify your employment and your employer can say nothing about your life.

    • @abraham2217
      @abraham2217 Год назад +5

      True

    • @Geomaverick124
      @Geomaverick124 Год назад +92

      True. this 'overemployed' movement is nothing new...its just new to salaried positions...hourly and low wage workers do this all the time to make extra money

    • @gmennc2648
      @gmennc2648 Год назад +12

      @@Geomaverick124 contractors are not salaried employees, they are hourly so it’s really nothing new at all.

    • @rosco3
      @rosco3 Год назад +13

      Yes and no, yes it is as simple as "you can fulfill the requirement" but one of the requirementd is a lot of the times exclusivity.
      Because you will learn of stuff that should not be disclosed, you shouldn't share tools, code, systems, designs, etc.
      It's hard to compare thinking jobs to manual labor. If you can have 2 thinking jobs without actually sharing then fine.
      Otherwise it is stealing as that intellectual property is not yours when doing a salaried job.

    • @gmennc2648
      @gmennc2648 Год назад +20

      @@rosco3 I feel like the same can be said if you leave one job and go to another. I used to work for a big tech company - there’s nothing stopping me from implementing the same ML algorithms at this new company if I wanted - or I could have even uploaded the code base to my personal git account and reused my code exactly. I don’t do it because it’s wrong, but I do not see a difference between going from one job to another vs working them simultaneously.

  • @NickWindham
    @NickWindham Год назад +1384

    I’m a loan officer and have seen this a couple of times just recently. Developers are working 2-3 six figure jobs at once. Average time at each job ranged from 9 months to 1.5 years. Since I could document it for 3 years, the guys qualified easily. Pretty eye opening.

    • @francisco.segura
      @francisco.segura Год назад +2

      Woahh

    • @wiczus6102
      @wiczus6102 Год назад +21

      How can an average have a range?

    • @officialspoon42
      @officialspoon42 Год назад +33

      @@wiczus6102 Perhaps average job length per person, and then the range is for multiple people?

    • @JonathonMcClung
      @JonathonMcClung Год назад +85

      He’s estimating without doing the actual calculations. Probably cause it’s just a RUclips comment and he didn’t feel like it was necessary.

    • @cyrusfolami898
      @cyrusfolami898 Год назад +17

      @@wiczus6102 in math an average can have a range, especially if you are using data and it's graphed and the numbers run a consistent line.

  • @carlosjosejimenezbermudez9255
    @carlosjosejimenezbermudez9255 Год назад +92

    Being married with kids makes this seem impossible even if your job isn't a highly demanding one. I also imagine the anxiety of getting caught would eat me alive in moments where something takes longer than it was originally estimated. I have worked two jobs in the past, but the burden is a big one and not something I could bear for long, let alone with little children chipping away at your time and needing to help with house chores.

    • @Andy-si1pl
      @Andy-si1pl Год назад

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @moaianface
      @moaianface Год назад +1

      @@WinFromWithincrying in my skin these wounds they do not heal

    • @scholaroftheworldalternatehist
      @scholaroftheworldalternatehist Год назад +4

      Yep this is for 20s-30s people with no kids. Prime example why one should wait to have children until they are satisfied with their financial status

    • @emetdan
      @emetdan 10 месяцев назад

      @@scholaroftheworldalternatehist You will never have kids then

    • @O_Canada
      @O_Canada 10 месяцев назад +2

      "I miss the part where that's my problem"

  • @zionen01
    @zionen01 Год назад +12

    Tech workers that find a way to no longer be afraid of sudden layoffs without notice and economic uncertainty. Kudos!

  • @conchobar
    @conchobar Год назад +699

    The key is taking jobs well below your abilities. While I would never inform either employer, if one employer does finds out, your job performance will heavily influence whether they care or not.

    • @kharlajean36
      @kharlajean36 Год назад +6

      Pretty much

    • @TheEnthraller
      @TheEnthraller Год назад +72

      I mean if you are performing x amount of work in 4 hours while someone else is performing x in 8 hours then as far as I'm concerned that's their problem
      The company that I currently work in requires me to do the work and then I'm free to leave
      What does that mean?
      It means that I should stop commenting and search for another job😜

    • @PASZCZak47
      @PASZCZak47 Год назад +5

      It is super hard for employer to find out, and even if that happen I'll just change this job for another one super easly.

    • @wiczus6102
      @wiczus6102 Год назад +5

      @@TheEnthraller It's not your concern as an individual. Do what you want. But it's a problem for society, since the production cost of a product doubles.

    • @abuthahirdancho5045
      @abuthahirdancho5045 Год назад +15

      @@wiczus6102 why do anyone need to care? In capitalism, u can be as much selfish as you want and society will still function as normal. So, I can be infinitely selfish, ryt?

  • @realbigsquid
    @realbigsquid Год назад +791

    I feel like if you can work two jobs remotely, it's not anyone's business. If you have to work two jobs in the first place, then the economy is broken. The amount of income required to recoup student loans is ridiculous.

    • @jaredwilliams6853
      @jaredwilliams6853 Год назад +47

      I never thought about working two coding jobs like it’s fast food 😂

    • @ssloc
      @ssloc Год назад +13

      If you work for a company and they require you to work from 9-5 then it is their business what you are doing on their time. Just talking facts

    • @danielcya8334
      @danielcya8334 Год назад +46

      @@jaredwilliams6853 it’s like fast food but you get to work way less, have more time, never have to deal with customers, oh and you get like 5x the money per job

    • @austinfastidio3183
      @austinfastidio3183 Год назад +53

      @@ssloc not the conversation, we’re talking about salaried positions with no time limit or time requirement. But even if you do work a job with time requirements, it’s still none of their business what you do before or after work.

    • @kev2020
      @kev2020 Год назад +3

      I agree as long as I'm not picking up their slack.

  • @cupofjuice5832
    @cupofjuice5832 Год назад +18

    I currently work two full time
    Jobs (for 6 months now). I only struggle when my teammates call out & it makes my workload become more. But honestly depending on your career path, it is very manageable.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Год назад

      It's crazy we live in an era people feel they have to take on two jobs to live a "good" life.

    • @cupofjuice5832
      @cupofjuice5832 Год назад

      @@Danuxsy Ive had 2 jobs my whole working career. Just now they are both remote.

  • @Casio163
    @Casio163 Год назад +14

    I am doing that as a language teacher. Working for 4 different companies. Sometimes for Chinese companies, sometimes on government contracts and sometimes private tutoring. It doesn't bring as much money as software developer but it's okay. Salary varies widely though depending on clients.

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
    @rightwingsafetysquad9872 Год назад +775

    I find it odd that software devs find working 2 jobs controversial. I've worked 2-3 jobs most of my adult life. Most of the time I didn't need to, but I'm not a naturally social person so it's either work an additional job, read, or play video games. Most of the time at least one of the companies I worked for knew I had multiple jobs, none of them cared as long as it didn't interfere without prior agreed availability.
    The way I'd play it if a company found out and had a problem is to offer them to quit the other job if they'd increase your salary by 50%. At some point you have to ask, are they paying for your time, your skills, or are they buying you as a person. If it's the first, they have no right to care about what you do when you're off their clock. If it's the second, they should have to pay a premium for exclusive access to your skills above market rate. And if it's the third, leave that company as quickly as you can.

    • @geoffreyzziwambazza7862
      @geoffreyzziwambazza7862 Год назад +49

      This is the best “the Great Resignation” era advice I’ve seen yet.

    • @andysaldivar9703
      @andysaldivar9703 Год назад +102

      I'm pretty sure these devs are working multiple jobs at the same time not like you clock out of one and clock into another. They're clocking into both at the same time.

    • @omarjimenezromero3463
      @omarjimenezromero3463 Год назад +9

      we are ask to do some things at some pace, even if we have better pace, we are not gonna get more money but instead more work, so best of remote and objectives working its that one only need to most care about do the work at the pace they say, so one end up working like 3-4 hours for a 8 hours job, so instead of working 8 hours for a work that does not pay all that, we usually have 2 jobs, that the work of the day its done in 8 hours, but in sofware there are these people like olimpian athletes, people who can do those works on 1 hour or 2 hours, so they end getting more than 4 jobs, because they can do 8 hours of work at software in 4 diferent companies with the results and demanding of a 8 hour every job, so this let us do our job at the pace of the bosses and getting extra payment of it, because senior devs actually only are valuable for most companies at cobol language, fortran or C/C++, because in other languages they only mostly need to get their work done up in their time stamps, not on the one of the developer but of the company.

    • @vanilla4064
      @vanilla4064 Год назад +5

      I’m curious, do you work the same times (ex. 9-5pm) for both jobs or no overlap?

    • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
      @rightwingsafetysquad9872 Год назад +26

      @@andysaldivar9703 If you're getting paid by the hour and claiming the same hours with multiple employers, that's a problem. If you're claiming different hours, no problem. If you're paid a flat rate and the work is getting done, no problem.

  • @trndsttr7585
    @trndsttr7585 Год назад +722

    This sounds nice, until you realize the programmers doing these are absolute masters of their craft.

    • @jonathandaniel7321
      @jonathandaniel7321 Год назад +154

      its also about having much mental energy

    • @GhostSamaritan
      @GhostSamaritan Год назад +133

      Some are "working" several entry-level jobs and outsourcing tasks to Indians.

    • @shukrantpatil
      @shukrantpatil Год назад +181

      @@GhostSamaritan and the Indians are doing the same by working multiple jobs at once aka freelancing lmao

    • @GToast01
      @GToast01 Год назад +40

      @@shukrantpatil there the circle closes lol

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Год назад +46

      @@shukrantpatil
      It's subcontractors all the way down

  • @julissadc6303
    @julissadc6303 Год назад +11

    Programmer here, Once I had 1 full time jobs and 2 part time jobs, it was the worst, yes I had more money but it was extremly time consumming and I got massive burnt out from having to keep track of 3 very different and complex projects

  • @stayaway7357
    @stayaway7357 Год назад +18

    I could definitely take on a second IT job and make it work
    My output is higher than my colleagues by a large margin and I have found a lot of time to code on the side
    My goal is to become a Web Dev, so the study time is more valuable to me at this point in time

  • @kylesizemore2751
    @kylesizemore2751 Год назад +1280

    I'm in a position where I could do this but I choose not to. The endless pursuit of MORE is pointless. Instead of making the number go up I just do what I want to do when I finish my work for the day. I think the most valuable thing to do if your a programmer in this position is to skip the stress of multiple jobs and just work on your own non-productive personal projects with all the extra free time you've earned. It's an opportunity most people never get.

    • @Alex-br6qt
      @Alex-br6qt Год назад +98

      Yes, exact-fuckin-ly. Wish there were more balanced people like you in the « developed » world.

    • @Bllakez
      @Bllakez Год назад +86

      True. But if you grind two jobs for a bit and get some good $ to invest with you can retire sooner

    • @nidhinm3301
      @nidhinm3301 Год назад +49

      Agreed. If you already have nice job. Then only thing u need is not money.. Its time for your self

    • @yepcock5814
      @yepcock5814 Год назад +132

      @@Bllakez oh yeah so I can do the things I wanna do now when I’m 50? That idea can go kick rocks

    • @PubstarHero
      @PubstarHero Год назад +32

      With the rapid inflation and stagnant wages in most places, I'd rather work in two places at once and get more cash in my pocket so I could do something like... I dunno, buy a house with a 15 year loan instead, then afterwards have more of my life to enjoy and work the jobs Id want to work where I would feel rewarded. Or just get back into music production full time if I made enough to be in a FIRE situation.

  • @XROSSDABOSSX
    @XROSSDABOSSX Год назад +636

    This is an interesting topic. The morality of loyalty to a company. I have always erred on the side of being loyal and working more than what's expected of me, however I've found that has led to me being taken advantage of and I'm beginning the switch to "the highest bidder"

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      Loyal to what?? A dog is loyal to its owner are you a dog ?? No
      Then friends are loyal to their friends, is the company your friend? No
      What about family ??
      Then explain please loyal from what point of view ??
      You are a disposable asset

    • @Boss-ir3nm
      @Boss-ir3nm Год назад +158

      Why would you be loyal to a company that by in large doesn’t give a hoot about you 🤣🤣

    • @R5123
      @R5123 Год назад +7

      @XROSS Don't be afraid to use that as leverage and ask for more, especially if you have been with the company a while.
      I was as the same company for 5 years because I was being challenged and moving teams and tech stacks, as well as really liked the company. I don't think there is one right answer, it is your life, so perhaps building your network and working longer in a good spot has helped. That said, I did switch companies recently since I felt I saturated the amount I could grow and needed to change, plus a step up in salary

    • @marinamiletic6153
      @marinamiletic6153 Год назад +84

      "Loyalty to a company" HAAHAHAHAHHAAH

    • @R5123
      @R5123 Год назад +5

      @@marinamiletic6153 Do you watch anime?
      On a serious note, I don't think all companies are out to get you and overwork you. Though there seems to be quite a high number of discontented workers out there.

  • @thedevguild7525
    @thedevguild7525 Год назад +1

    Hi Aaron, thanks for sharing! I have heard such cases from my fellow devs and been wondering for the longest time how it is possible till i saw your video! Love your insights.

  • @wholereflections9129
    @wholereflections9129 Год назад +1

    Wow love the quality of your posts

  • @alexanderdinkov8002
    @alexanderdinkov8002 Год назад +601

    It's only justified if:
    - You actually deliver the results you are paid for
    - You don't cause unnecessary stress & friction in any of the companies

    • @justincain2702
      @justincain2702 Год назад +24

      Still dont think its justified under the agreement of being hired, but employees gotta do what they gotta do.
      The company would expect you to inform them when you finish work so they can assign something else, since you are still on the clock. That said, its kind of an unfair deal in the first place because they pay a static rate no matter how productive you are. This leads people to abuse the system anyway (which I would argue is why we see so many "lazy" workers.) Instead of just killing time, why not do work for another company (even though it's technically not allowed).

    • @wiczus6102
      @wiczus6102 Год назад +1

      How do you know what is the price of the results you're talking about if everyone works 4 hours instead of 8?

    • @alexanderdinkov8002
      @alexanderdinkov8002 Год назад +10

      @@wiczus6102 you know what's being asked of you, because
      - it's described in the employment contract
      - your manager told you
      - you can remember what your actual abilities were during the time when your weren't overqualified for such a position. In other words - as long as you are honest with yourself about your own abilities over time, you can simply use your past self as a measuring stick.

    • @alexanderdinkov8002
      @alexanderdinkov8002 Год назад +7

      @Justin Cain there are different employment contracts.
      Some state that you're not allowed to have multiple jobs.
      Others do not state such a restriction.
      One way to avoid restrictive contracts is if you are employed in your own passive income company. It's a good explanation to use when rejecting strict contracts and asking for ones with more freedom.

    • @wiczus6102
      @wiczus6102 Год назад

      @@alexanderdinkov8002 I mean how does the hiring manager know what he should pay you? If everyone just works less they will think it's just the norm. Is that fair towards the end consumer?
      If a hospital has to pay 500k for a piece of software. And 250k of that 500k is people picking their nose at work. How fair is it that the patient in that hospital covers the cost of that software?

  • @Longlius
    @Longlius Год назад +296

    7:30 this is exactly why developers are so rarely cut even if they underperform. Between recruiters, sign-on bonuses, time on the clock spent by senior engineers/tech managers doing interviews, equipment, relocation stipends, onboarding, drug and background screens, etc. spread over potential hires, most companies will spend anywhere from $15k to $40k to hire one (1) full-time developer. Even a grug who can spend time fixing basic bugs so better engineers can work on actual problems is worth their weight in gold.
    In my experience, unless your company is facing extreme shortfalls in revenue, you'll never get fired. Big tech is sort of the anomaly right now because it grew too fast on VC and investment instead of revenue. Regular companies that need software solutions but aren't in the software business themselves are almost always safe bets for secure employment.
    Anyway, I don't really recommend working multiple full-time dev positions. It's doable in the short-term but the mental load over a few years can become extremely taxing, especially when you factor in emergencies popping up that will consume much more of your time than usual at a job.

    • @TheEnthraller
      @TheEnthraller Год назад +10

      I suggest to do thisin bursts maybe half a year and then take a break
      A full break or maybe work one job
      Either is fine

    • @feliciaf8
      @feliciaf8 Год назад

      This that's why for now im looker for experince first in 1 full time job for now

    • @smurf88
      @smurf88 Год назад +10

      Working just one dev position is extremely taxing for me. Not even necessarily the workload but the mundanity of a rigid schedule and horrible people.

    • @philiplorber1255
      @philiplorber1255 Год назад

      but if the company you working isn't in the tech industry, they shouldn't normally run into emergencies or stress inducing situations

    • @philiplorber1255
      @philiplorber1255 Год назад

      And also, you are meant to get all in; big impact low effort, squeeze in all the money in short term; staying more than one year in a position doesn't sound like making a big impact ngl

  • @Ragnarok540
    @Ragnarok540 Год назад +9

    The hard part is that each job can't conflict with any other job, but if you don't have to be on a lot of meetings and each job is something you can easily do, go for it. If you start having to work more than you planned for then you know you made a mistake.

  • @bennycanfora5242
    @bennycanfora5242 Год назад

    Great video and analysis 👏🏽

  • @notyet2345
    @notyet2345 Год назад +125

    As an semi retired IT professional, we have been working from home long before the pandemic. I know a citrix admin who has been working from home working multiple IT contracts at the same time. I even worked with a guy who came into the office for one IT contract while working remotely for another IT contract. This has been going for years.

  • @CknSalad
    @CknSalad Год назад +34

    free-lance or side hustle is a lot better in the long run to me. with free-lance you can expand your network and tackle potentially many different, but interesting problems. plus, you can focus on helping smaller / family businesses which is nice for free-lancing.

  • @d21852
    @d21852 Год назад +3

    Something I would recommend as well is basic data editing work remotely, it doesn't pay much alone but you can set up a "macro recorder" to do it automatically and then you can run a few of those on different computers while you do other stuff

  • @veto_5762
    @veto_5762 Год назад +5

    I think as long as the companies don't have anything to do with eachother and you're completing the requirements of both it's fine, if you need the money and feel able to do it then go for it, if it doesn't work for you it's fine too

  • @JundaOng
    @JundaOng Год назад +38

    Mind blowing. Now I suspect why my fellow programmer is often missing, and not doing more.

    • @theseangle
      @theseangle Год назад +7

      Lol this comment sounds like a clip from the Office series

  • @nestorcolt
    @nestorcolt Год назад +171

    I'm a devops and nowdays my position is getting lots of attention. I'm currently working on a stable role where all is undercontrol. Usually I get many offers as remote freelancer fulltime and was just about to accept one to give it a try. After watching this video I'm definitely gonna do this.

    • @AlbertBalbastreMorte
      @AlbertBalbastreMorte Год назад +3

      So what would having stuff under control mean in the case of a devops? No system crashes? All operations being automatised?

    • @Bitlox
      @Bitlox Год назад +4

      What sort of things do you do as a devops? I've administered and built linux machines for the last 20 years and think it would be a breeze to "administer" machines.

    • @nestorcolt
      @nestorcolt Год назад +3

      @@AlbertBalbastreMorte well I'm not the only one in the team to begin with. I'm delivering my tasks, writing docs, and ye, automation. I been doing CICI pipelines for microservices and pretty much will be only maintenance and observability.

    • @nestorcolt
      @nestorcolt Год назад +3

      @@Bitlox what I do is CICD pipelines and event driven architectures. Some people is in charge of the most operational side and I design serverless solutions and help with the implementation. DevOps minset is about to deliver faster, reliable, and run systems at scale. A lot of IaC and monitoring

    • @EzeAsuoha
      @EzeAsuoha Год назад +1

      Did u end up doing it?

  • @dynamicdingus7003
    @dynamicdingus7003 Год назад +7

    Im still in college but this sounds like a cool idea if I could manage working 2 or 3 jobs at once for 2 years and then sticking to one after that. Getting the income of 4 to 6 years in just 2. Not have to stress about money at all after that and i could just focus on my hobbies while working 1 job

  • @yashchoudhary1193
    @yashchoudhary1193 Год назад

    This really helped thanks a lot!

  • @caioreis350
    @caioreis350 Год назад +29

    I can see someone doing this for a limited ammount of time to raise some money for a specific goal. Having 10 to 12 hour work days will consume you eventually. You also have other interests besides work.
    What about time with family, friends, books, church, girlfriends, passion projects?
    You will will sacrifice all that for money.

    • @benjamindavis2475
      @benjamindavis2475 Год назад +4

      Could save you a few years if you can put your second salary down to pay off a loan

    • @grimjudgment6527
      @grimjudgment6527 Год назад +1

      I can say as someone working full time, but also not being paid enough to actually survive (I'm homeless)
      I think it'd be more beneficial if I could be these guys, performing two remote jobs at once. Honestly, I only just recently got a raise that *might* allow me to slum it out and survive in a hotel (No apartment complex will take me because I have no credit) and I could use my PC to do freelance remote jobs to get some extra dough.
      I'm already learning Spanish in my free time when I've finished meeting the physiological needs on the Maslow Hierarchy. I might pick up writing or running tabletop games, which would allow me to work on my own hours.
      Hell, I wouldn't mind taking some time to apply for jobs I'm woefully under qualified for just to see if I can convince a company to think I'm worth being paid a living wage.

    • @jack_of_no_trades
      @jack_of_no_trades Год назад

      Yes, I would sacrifice all of that for money if there aren't scheduling conflicts(and if you pay me well enough and if I don't burn out). Besides, not everyone reads a lot and some people don't have a girlfriend to begin with and maybe don't even want one(like me). Not all passions are time consuming either. And it might not affect time with family and friends.

  • @duke_8747
    @duke_8747 Год назад +129

    I think it’s fine as long as you are meeting your work requirements and deadlines. For instance, even if you are senior level engineer but let’s say you just prefer working multiple entry level positions and can complete this work in a timely manner then who cares lol

    • @R5123
      @R5123 Год назад +32

      Well one downside is that you are taking up 2 entry level positions that would be ideal for other people new in their tech career

    • @duke_8747
      @duke_8747 Год назад +41

      @@R5123 but you are leaving open a senior level position for someone else.

    • @R5123
      @R5123 Год назад +19

      @Duke _ Fair enough. I think generally my point is there are far fewer entry level positions than senior levels, so I don't think it is good for the ecosystem.
      To @@victoranderson1034's point, however, that would only bother someone like me who has that temperament to be considerate of others. Generally I think if we all aim at the highest good, we can make this world a better place, and this doesn't seem that way to me, unless you are up front about it before you are hired. Doing it stealthily seems very wrong to me.

    • @omarjimenezromero3463
      @omarjimenezromero3463 Год назад +2

      @@R5123 not like that, HR are pretty bad chosing people, and entry levels are all around the globe, all seniors can not (and do not want to) get on all entry levels, and most of HR does not hire if you are new, they usually hire if you can pass their test, so if you can pass the test even if its not your area most HR are going to hire you or get the eye on you, entry level its not fair, and seniors are not fair level, every corpo its not fair, i do not why you think world its fair, its not, quit complaining and prepare yourself for other oportunities, that form of thing its pretty nooby, companies are not going to save students a$$, its mostly vice versa and they hire you in a way they look like they are doing a favor to you.

    • @ayumuaikawa
      @ayumuaikawa Год назад

      @@victoranderson1034 Indeed, unfortunately the wealth of the elite is mostly based on that same logic of competition, taking other people, deals mass firing to save money etc..

  • @patrickp8446
    @patrickp8446 Год назад

    Damn haven’t watched in a long while, your production value has gone up so while. Nice to see you come so far.

  • @N4chtigall
    @N4chtigall Год назад +3

    I can't imagine how fucked will be our job market in 5-10 years. You will either work in IT or you will earn minimum wage. The only hope is that soon this bubble will burst and the situation will fix itself because if it will go on it will be our downfall. "Normal" jobs are getting paid shit even though they often require the same or even more time, effort and skills as programming. Seems like something went wrong.

  • @d-L-b.
    @d-L-b. Год назад +72

    One scenario that could happen in the future if this gets out of control is: The companies will probably open more hourly paid (contractor) positions for juniors and mid-seniors instead of the full-time ones. Saving those positions for the managers and their more valuable seniors. Which can hurt the new generations. But maybe I’m wrong.

    • @jaysonp9426
      @jaysonp9426 Год назад +6

      Maybe, also likely that at some point our employment will actually be tracked

    • @ohwell1832
      @ohwell1832 Год назад +13

      Well the term for that is micro managing. It is already happening specially in the third world countries.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Год назад +8

      we live in a very egocentric society, people care only about themselves and don't care if it hurt newer generations that will take their place.

    • @107thFruit
      @107thFruit Год назад +5

      This is already happening at my workplace; fortune 500 financial sector. I don't know if it's happening elsewhere, but you'd be naive to think that senior leadership doesn't know about this niche trend in some of their higher pay grade staff.
      It's funny, social media makes ideas spread so fast senior management find out about it pretty quickly and may choose to act in their own favor. Powerful corporations won't take this lightly, they /will/ just make dev jobs contractual.

    • @zDemoGODz
      @zDemoGODz Год назад +1

      @@Danuxsy tell that to the boomers that bought out all the flats and houses and sell them for 10x now forcing me to rent.

  • @LordOfOlympus
    @LordOfOlympus Год назад +11

    I have my main job and then I just consult on the side for other industries. I find working two full time jobs introduces way too much risk, but telling my boss "Hey, I'm going to be heads down on a consulting gig this week, so I'll be taking off an hour early to switch gears" is a non-issue. YMMV with this approach, as my leadership is very results-oriented and doesn't care if you work 1 or 40 hours that week, as long as the work gets done. I find it affords me quite a nice extra sum of money every month, without introducing a signficant amount of stress.

  • @RykonDragonix
    @RykonDragonix Год назад +4

    The simple solution is to be honest as you pursue expanding your employerbase. Plenty of people openly have side hustles. Also, if you're a contractor, there is some expectation of the mercenary life. If your employer wants to monopolize your productivity or time, they should come to the negotiating table with more job security behind the position than contractor status. NDAs/Non-Competes are still fair game to me though. I can certainly respect that.

  • @frozendoritos2316
    @frozendoritos2316 Год назад +7

    I've done this for 4 years now, and let me tell you why: I enjoy working on startups, but usually the pay is not good. To compensate for that, I work for one of the biggest US employers as well, which gives me a much better salary. Thing is, I barely put 5 hrs of work per week for this employer, and get paid for 40 hrs every week. That allows me to focus on my startup work while having the second full time job income :)

    • @senju31
      @senju31 5 месяцев назад

      Are you aware of any companie hiring for remote web/software developers currently?

  • @MrCPPG
    @MrCPPG Год назад +10

    It is managememt that sets the expectations and resource utilization. If works gets done I don't see the problem. Many times employers try to coerce software engineers to double as sysadmin or dba without extra compensation.

  • @MaxGuides
    @MaxGuides Год назад +50

    1. Use a mixer to listen to multiple meetings at the same time.
    2. Senior/Principal knowledge positions can potentially have less coding work than your average engineer.
    3. Double-book meetings at both companies so it seems like you are contributing to a different team & just didn’t have time to attend. (if lower level teammates don’t have calendar detail visibility: Once you are on multiple teams sign up to several large company social groups that’ll host monthly talks for hundreds to fill up your calendar & juniors will cover for you during meetings without asking seeing that you are busy. Haven’t had a boss that looked at my calendar yet, lol)
    4. Use virtualization/removing into your workstations if you have the option. Otherwise the same can be achieved with a physical KVM switch to context switch your entire setup over to a different PC/laptop with a single button press.
    5. Help plan work so that other people call out “your” contributions after coming to you for story clarification.

  • @R0nJ0hn.thats.m3
    @R0nJ0hn.thats.m3 Год назад +1

    My experience after 1 month of doing this has been positive for the most part.
    1 main job (remote) and then a 2nd shift job that's in office and entry level NOC technician work that yes, like the video said, had to be convinced that it wasn't below me.
    Low stress while saving for my kids college funds and house renovation funds.

  • @eyeCU13
    @eyeCU13 Год назад +1

    I like the idea. I'll try it!
    ...just wondering how you manage your LinkedIn profile? Which one of the companies is in your current status?
    I can't just sign off that platform completely, because that would make it hard to get a new job

  • @marlomed2914
    @marlomed2914 Год назад +51

    I feel like this is a prisoner’s dilemma sort of thing. I think it’s fine that some people are doing this, but if everyone starts doing this it becomes a problem

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC Год назад +5

      If it becomes a systematic problem someone someone will take care of it.
      Right now it's just a good option for those who can do it.

  • @LotsOfFunyoutubechannel
    @LotsOfFunyoutubechannel Год назад +6

    Was just thinking of doing a full time job in the day and remote work in the night and this video pops up. It can be difficult for people who need to give time to their family but for single guy living alone, it's less of concern.

  • @_Poisson_
    @_Poisson_ Год назад +7

    It's fine unless teammates pick up your weight. Had overemployed workmates and it was such a pain to work with them, had to work extra hours while being paid the same amount

  • @AwareOCE
    @AwareOCE Год назад

    Really well made video, crazy concept!

  • @TheDoughGetta
    @TheDoughGetta Год назад +75

    A few years back I actually had two full time W2 positions and a side gig doing mobile app development. I burned out after a year but it jump started my finances after the 2008 financial collapse.

    • @jarroddowalter
      @jarroddowalter Год назад +6

      might need to do this after this 2022 collapse haha

    • @pineapplehead789
      @pineapplehead789 Год назад

      Hey Travis, what were your two full time jobs? Not asking for a specific company name, just the work you did.

  • @ohoscr
    @ohoscr Год назад +32

    I feel like it's justified but at the same time I feel like if people are taking those junior positions; people who want to take those junior positions for example someone who just graduated or someone with boot camp experience won't have the opportunity to take those entry level jobs.

    • @shimadabr
      @shimadabr Год назад +15

      That pisses me off a little. Junior positions are much more scarse than higher positions. But my hope is that there is not enough people doing this overemployment thing to cause a big impact.

    • @elannal6281
      @elannal6281 Год назад

      agreed

    • @ImLure
      @ImLure Год назад +7

      What we are seeing right now, is that most companies are hiring mainly senior engineers. Multiple grads and a senior dev have posted on RUclips about how jobs are not hiring junior roles. Then we have people saying how we are “behind with talent” but no one wants to hire grads our self taught devs who are motivated. It’s crazy

    • @ohoscr
      @ohoscr Год назад +3

      @@victoranderson1034 you say that like I'm from a 3rd world country lmao

    • @shimadabr
      @shimadabr Год назад +9

      @@victoranderson1034While I agree with you that it's just how things work and there is nothing we can or should do (through laws for example), I don't accept that as a justification to doing it. How is a junior supposed to work in teams or gain real-world experience if they don't have a job? I doubt there is a single good enginner in the world that growed their skills by self-discipline and self-studying alone. You need this real world experience to build actual good systems and more senior people to give the ways (which save days and even months of research if you were to discover alone). And don't tell me "duh, open source projects", because most people don't want to deal with very inexperienced programmers and also, most if not all junior programmer have a miserable time trying to understand the source-code of "sexy" open-source projects.

  • @vape42
    @vape42 Год назад +3

    This is brilliant I’ve never understood the whole working for being proud of your work bs and who cares about the other people if they could be doing the same thing and we all know cooperations would squeeze every last penny out of you if they could. Even when they do nice things it’s to increase employee productivity/retention etc; they’re not doing it to be nice.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Год назад

      yea homo sapiens are a disgusting species, may our AI overlords crush us.

  • @ivanmak8766
    @ivanmak8766 Год назад

    I am ready for this.

  • @angelaengle12
    @angelaengle12 Год назад +27

    My energy levels would never allow me to put in over 40 hours a week. My best bet is getting two part-time jobs for better job security, if I decided to take a route like this. Odds are I most likely wont. It is an interesting idea, but it has "burning-the-candle-at-both-ends" vibe.

    • @michetix7885
      @michetix7885 Год назад +3

      @@MattMcConaha "If you do hourly work, this is 100% unethical to most people". I can't get it why it's unethical being smarter is unethical?. Owning a company is unethcial because you make more money.

    • @dragondaniel0574
      @dragondaniel0574 Год назад +5

      @@michetix7885 It's unethical because the company pays you for each hour you do, if you spend half the time on another company's work, they are literally paying you double the money for half the value.

    • @quinnherden
      @quinnherden Год назад

      @@michetix7885 why is making money inherently unethical?

    • @michetix7885
      @michetix7885 Год назад

      @@quinnherden I have no idea.

    • @bringbackdislikes3195
      @bringbackdislikes3195 Год назад

      @@quinnherden Alright I'm going to start scamming people.

  • @bobDotJS
    @bobDotJS Год назад +75

    I just spent the last 3 weeks working two separate jobs where each of them were paying me $175k, it's the most money I've made in such a short period of time but I am burned out as all hell. probably because one of them was a startup and it was very demanding work

    • @R5123
      @R5123 Год назад +5

      Dumb question, but how do you manage this? Do you have to basically have two copies of your calendar up every morning, email out, and IM messenger available to respond to chats?
      I guess if you get up early enough, you could handle one job in the morning, and then focus more on the other in the evening? Generally programmers I know hate to "context-switch," and it seems like that's a skill you would have to be good at for this overemployed to work.

    • @bobDotJS
      @bobDotJS Год назад +15

      @@R5123 I do wake up very early. I live in California and the company I work for is in Boston. So my day ends at 2:30 p.m. but it also starts at quarter to 6:00.
      The startup that I was working for was in California and they were aware that I was employed full-time somewhere else. They knew that my primary job had to be my priority but they trusted me.
      My primary job also has very little oversight. As long as I'm meeting deadlines and living up to expectations in quality - they basically leave me alone

    • @dipanjanghosal1662
      @dipanjanghosal1662 Год назад

      @@bobDotJS may I know what are technology stacks you're working in? Like web dev or dev ops or something else?

    • @bobDotJS
      @bobDotJS Год назад +14

      @@dipanjanghosal1662 for my primary job, it's full stack. Node + TS and Go on the backend, AWS, Docker and Zeet for DevOps, and Vue on the front end with mySQL and Firestore for DBs.
      The contract work for the startup (which was just extended another week) is purely React frontend work.
      I am definitely not what you would refer to as a senior developer - I'm probably a decade away from accepting that as my label but my primary job definitely forces me to play that role just because of seniority. But I enjoy it.

    • @dipanjanghosal1662
      @dipanjanghosal1662 Год назад +1

      @@bobDotJS wow, thanks for the reply

  • @chern0-
    @chern0- 11 месяцев назад +3

    Finding overemployed three years ago helped me buy my first apartment and a better car, I gave up on it once I started my family but before that I had full support from my then-gf (now wife) and trust me, it took everything out of me, but at the end I fulfilled my dreams in terms of financial freedom and I felt much better once I accomplished my goals. It did cause heaps of stress for me and I don't plan on doing it again since I became a father :D

  • @oligarchytheatre777
    @oligarchytheatre777 Год назад

    I appreciate your honesty!!!

  • @Marthyboy88
    @Marthyboy88 Год назад +138

    There is literally zero things wrong with this in my mind. Me personally, I probably wouldn't do it simply because that's a lot of work to track multiple jobs at once, but if you're in an industry and the "game" is set up so that this is a thing, then your company needs to figure out how to fix it, or adapt. The only thing you should ask yourself is if they would do the equivalent if they could (make you work multiple jobs at the same company for the pay of a single job), and the answer to that is almost assuredly yes.

    • @x_Degurechaff_x
      @x_Degurechaff_x Год назад +5

      Well if you think about it it's already happening. Doing work nowhere near what a person with your position should be doing is common.

    • @Marthyboy88
      @Marthyboy88 Год назад +3

      @@x_Degurechaff_x Right, that's my point. Just breaking the logic down.

    • @DanielBlak
      @DanielBlak Год назад

      Yeah cut all WFH. Don't be a scumbag.

    • @scholaroftheworldalternatehist
      @scholaroftheworldalternatehist Год назад

      One look at the wealth distribution in America should be enough reason to be overemployed. We're stealing mere pennies compared to folks at top

    • @xGOKOPx
      @xGOKOPx 11 месяцев назад

      People in other comments raised a valid point against it - it's fine as long as few people are doing this, but if most people would then companies would just accept it as the new normal and lower wages accordingly

  • @mohamed_elmardi
    @mohamed_elmardi Год назад +98

    As an engineer I would spend time building my own startup or business instead of having a second job, this grantees that I can reschedule and manage time effectively, and maybe you'll end up making more money than being overemployed

    • @mdikeee4817
      @mdikeee4817 Год назад +1

      what does your startup do if you don’t mind me asking

    • @mohamed_elmardi
      @mohamed_elmardi Год назад +4

      @@mdikeee4817 we're building an eSports Tournaments management tool (you can think of it as a way to give anyone the ability to create & join online gaming tournaments easily) and it has social features too

    • @mohamed_elmardi
      @mohamed_elmardi Год назад

      @@MattMcConaha I actually do

    • @RealPolitik-dy4it
      @RealPolitik-dy4it Год назад +12

      Good idea. In fact, you can have one remote job, while doing some freelance work on the side. At first, the freelance work will be slow, and the pay will be low. But give it some time and effort, and you might end up making 2 or 3x more than you FTE. But the fact that you have your primary FTE, takes a lot of pressure off of you. In fact, I take issue with those “business gurus” who tell you to quit your job right away. No, the best way to do it is start while working a remote job. Then when your business takes off, you can quit.

    • @Reddit2
      @Reddit2 Год назад

      @@mohamed_elmardi if you need a social media manager hmu

  • @xy-inventor1885
    @xy-inventor1885 Год назад +14

    I honestly think this is great but there is one part that draws me away. I’m interested in growing my ability and I need to take difficult jobs where I will he challenged in order to do that. To be overemployed, you gotta punch below your weight range. Although you’re industriousness will grow (hard work, focus, and multitasking) which is no small feat whatsoever and a lot of people could benefit from this, I’m more of looking for challenges where I need to learn more than I already know. Anyone else feel this way?

    • @ihorbond
      @ihorbond Год назад

      Yes, same. I have ambitions and want to grow in my career, not just chase the paycheck.

    • @andriifx1199
      @andriifx1199 11 месяцев назад +1

      By overemployment you will get to see more technologies out there, you will understand processes on different projects, you will get a better view on what this whole business is.

  • @ughmirr5495
    @ughmirr5495 Год назад

    This is a great video man

  • @Palermo1999
    @Palermo1999 Год назад +4

    I have never worked two full-time jobs at once but I always have side contracts that I do in my own time on the evenings.

  • @Geomaverick124
    @Geomaverick124 Год назад +75

    Its justified but difficult...you will miss a lot of family time. If you can get your family on board to this type of work for a year or so, so that you can reach financial freedom, you are golden

    • @richardspillers6282
      @richardspillers6282 Год назад +22

      It's nowhere near as bad as say truck driving. Plenty of other trades that keep you from having a life and have been that way for much longer than programing has existed.

    • @DennisRicardoCavalcante
      @DennisRicardoCavalcante Год назад

      @@richardspillers6282 I guess it depends how these companies works, sometimes you can get lucky and still have your free time, there was a time that I had 3 jobs at the same work time, and I still had my weekends free and also no overtime... but ofc it's not forever as times passes you start to absorv more and more responsabilities

    • @iamhere9573
      @iamhere9573 Год назад +1

      Whats a fameli??

    • @rdkrussel
      @rdkrussel Год назад +10

      Nah. Like he said in the beginning you get your work done in a couple hours, then instead of playing video games you switch to the other job and work a couple hours. Being over employed is not about being the hardest worker and going above and beyond to climb that ladder for _0 years. It's about doing enough to get the job done appearing busy, and bringing home a salary that you would never ever get from climbing the ladder

    • @DennisRicardoCavalcante
      @DennisRicardoCavalcante Год назад +1

      @Nico Gamy Well, sometimes reduce the amount of time that I worked for each company, example in 1 year I put that I worked from Jan to April at A company, may to October at B, and then company C until today.. or I just don't mention some company that I worked but the experience I put under other company's name, cos at the interview no-one will find out whether that experience comes from company A or B.

  • @erlynlebron5577
    @erlynlebron5577 Год назад

    Great video! Thanks!!

  • @neuxell
    @neuxell Год назад +2

    i actually do this regularly if i find a better job lol
    i'll just not quit he previous one until they realize that my productivity is dead and im just weighing them down
    this is mostly because theyre the same scheduled hours, and the job im leaving is usually remote (MUCH lower pay) and the one im transitioning to is usually on-site (MUCH higher pay), so i really cant be there for both
    i'll try remote + remote next time, ty for this video
    it's so obvious to try but i felt in the dark about just mass interviewing and accepting all offers, i thought i could really get in trouble with the tax army

  • @misterstudentloan2615
    @misterstudentloan2615 Год назад +27

    I do 4 jobs and last 2.5 years ish and made over 1.75 million lol. Jobs are 1) ThreeJS/VR stuff in built up spaces, 2) Medical devices: I'm lead engineer on a very big surgery tool (I do the MR/VR stuff), 3) a job with a mobile video game company making 3D casual games for iOS and Android and 4) finally another VR job for some company using the Quest 2 for training ppl in the trades

    • @stomachhurts2044
      @stomachhurts2044 Год назад +1

      Lmao how them student loans tho

    • @misterstudentloan2615
      @misterstudentloan2615 Год назад +12

      @@stomachhurts2044 I got lucky brother 🤣. No loans since I didn’t attend after a year. I came back in my final year and their was a computer glitch that made me get all credits and my degree without paying anything 🤣🤣 even got a refund on my first two semesters fees after I stopped attending but didn’t officially drop out. I have another cool story about how I got a 3080ti at msrp last year and practically for free and a profit cause I sold my 2070 super for more than a 3080ti. Been getting lucky a lot tbh but I like my handle anyway cause it’s funny

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Год назад +6

      You had to work 4 jobs for 2.5 years for 1.7 million? If I remember correctly the GOT cast were paid $1.2 million per EPISODE. Life is so unfair isn't it? One does what he loves and get paid an incredible sum of money and the other has to spend all his time working and get paid peanuts in comparison. The teenage actors in Stranger Things got paid $250,000 per episode in S3.

    • @misterstudentloan2615
      @misterstudentloan2615 Год назад +3

      @@Danuxsy that’s quite true but that’s the world we live in sadly. It was very hard doing all 4 jobs as well I’m still doing 65 hour weeks but good thing is I’ll be in a position to not need to work by Oct next year.

    • @misterstudentloan2615
      @misterstudentloan2615 Год назад +14

      @@MattMcConahaNo I've not mentioned my degree in my interviews because it has never been necessary, I was an internationally ranked programmer when I was 21 so all my jobs have always been through head hunting. My degree is from a tier 1 university. I also am the author of a successful video game from a decade ago and have a lot of other credentials. I am pretty bold at work places too where I would often jokingly boast about how I didn't really get my degree but still get paid as though I have a degree. I still write my university down in my CV and linkedin for added giggles. Also 90% of my coworkers know I work multiple jobs, even managers, I'm too entrenched in their projects to get rid of me and am easy to work with. I can cross lines which most employees can't cross simply because it's very hard to replace me at my price point. I also have two patents of which one still gives me royalty. Also I've worked with FANG companies in the past in some capacity as a consultant and still carried myself the same way and have been asked to work with them even recently despite them knowing my work ethic and demeanor.
      I am also one of the few engineers who works on specific low level things for embedded devices with low power GPUs
      Edit: Most of my interviews are just namesake anyway, because they've mostly already decided to give me the job. Though my roles demand 40 hours a week, I almost always put in only 15 hours approx depending on how the work load is.

  • @CharlieHM
    @CharlieHM Год назад +14

    Interesting stuff man. Though you really have to be unattached in nature to pull this off and not get gray hairs from stress

  • @joehick8102
    @joehick8102 7 месяцев назад +1

    I had a in person physical IT job that was not customer service. I worked nights there before when I had conflicts during the day. I got a full time remote position since my main job was about to do layoffs. I got the remote job and didn't get laid off. so I told my current employer the situation and that I would be working nights. they told me to pack my stuff and leave. the project I was working on was highly important to certifying their product. but they were so offended that they would rather put themselves in financial turmoil even more than keep me around. never tell your employer about a second job, they will always make it their personal goal to screw you over.

  • @tylerw.1414
    @tylerw.1414 Год назад +2

    I'm really surprised at all the comments in support of this. Any engineer would know splitting focus like this would decrease your overall productivity per hour. This is bad for the world. Less production means less stuff. And you're now taking up double the resources!!! A single engineer salary is enough money.

  • @TreeLuvBurdpu
    @TreeLuvBurdpu Год назад +20

    The company I work for used to bill me out 50/50 to a couple clients and I hated it. You think you can split time 50/50 but there's overhead every time you switch contexts. Also, both companies will expect you can be available at 110% sometimes, for a week or two. Those weeks will OFTEN overlap.

  • @StandStillRushing
    @StandStillRushing Год назад +7

    In other words, it turns out the slaves are not happy being slaves. Corporate greed and Inflation is making the slaves try to game the system anyway they can.
    Bring it on capitalism!

  • @Swaggle247
    @Swaggle247 5 месяцев назад +1

    This was interesting to know

  • @sebastianpayancristancho5027
    @sebastianpayancristancho5027 Год назад

    You have a new subscriber now. 👍🏾
    Of course it is justified! Being financial free is worth living the over-employed dream if we get to a point where our invested money generates enough passive income to cover all our expenses and keep making grow your investment at the same time.
    Nice video.

  • @Robiuche
    @Robiuche Год назад +9

    No body complains when it’s a McDonald’s employee doing two jobs you better not be making lots of money… 😂

    • @JohnS-il1dr
      @JohnS-il1dr Год назад +2

      They would if while flipping burgers he was also doing customer service calls on his phone from a remote call center center.

  • @jocelyn-n-tech
    @jocelyn-n-tech Год назад +5

    I did this for years. Scaling up and down. As many as 4 jobs at once (very stressful do not recommend). But always at least 2. I keep one salaried for the medical benefits and one corp2corp for straight cash. I've been remote for many year before Covid, before working remotely was on the radar of most developers

    • @EzeAsuoha
      @EzeAsuoha Год назад +1

      Whats corp2corp

    • @jocelyn-n-tech
      @jocelyn-n-tech Год назад +1

      @@EzeAsuoha when you have a business and contract directly with another business. It stands for corporation to corporation contract. The 1099 is in the name of your business and not your personal name.

  • @tedbendixson
    @tedbendixson Год назад +1

    I work two jobs. I have my full time job and I'm also building my game studio. When I finish my work for the paid gig, I just swap right over to game studio work. I hope for job two to replace job one some day, since I'll be more in charge of my destiny that way.

  • @ox3965
    @ox3965 Год назад

    That's the way to go.

  • @Geomaverick124
    @Geomaverick124 Год назад +6

    I did this but with a lower paying job like working overnight @ Wholefoods and suring the day working as a Web Dev. This overemployment is nothing new...its just new in the salary IT world...I mean freelancers do this all the time...and people who work low wage jobs do this as well.
    I feel that 2 Software Dev jobs are ok...start with 1 remote job and get your job down to a T, then get another one...also remote

  • @omega_no_commentary
    @omega_no_commentary Год назад +73

    The fact that we have to work 5 jobs at the same time in secret and wear a headphone on each ear and this somehow "improves your mental health" is perplexing.
    This only proves how broken the system is and how everything makes absolutely no sense whatsoever nowadays.
    To me this overworking is nothing fancy to brag about, it is literally a flaw in the system exploited by mind broken individuals out of necessity or ambition. Both are equally dystopian explanations and nothing to be proud of or look up to, imo.

    • @eyesgotshowyo7800
      @eyesgotshowyo7800 Год назад +18

      I work for 2 full time jobs. The paycheck absolutely helps with mental health

    • @mistertexaz
      @mistertexaz Год назад +1

      @@eyesgotshowyo7800 😂

    • @rachellejanssen2655
      @rachellejanssen2655 Год назад +2

      @@eyesgotshowyo7800 For the past 6 years my salary was not good enough to buy a house and I lived with my parents. It meant nothing to me to save 5k, 10k or even 20k per year. I bought my first car and thought "hmm... I could buy another one and I'd still have money left". I was stuck in life and I was/am mentally struggling because I lost most of my friends. You might be thinking "well... then work 2 full time jobs and get a better mortgage!" but that works both ways. A higher mortgage I'd have better chances in the housing market, but a mortgage of 2 salaries means I'd have to pay as if I had 2 salaries. So in the short term it would get me out of the house quicker, but in the long term I'd be stuck with a massive mortgage for 30 years where I'd doom myself to either find a job that pays twice as much or work 2 full time jobs for the rest of my life.

    • @bumblebee4280
      @bumblebee4280 Год назад +8

      @@rachellejanssen2655
      Why would you choose a house that expensive? Just buy what you can afford with one salary and pay for it with two.

    • @davideffron4277
      @davideffron4277 Год назад

      You’re right of course, but all we can do is move with the foul winds of our time until something changes. For better or worse.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Год назад

    This is very true

  • @jaguarprovo
    @jaguarprovo Год назад

    Yep. This helps a lot. Been on it last 2 years

  • @randylandry5332
    @randylandry5332 Год назад +4

    I'm doing this now, I have a cybersecurity job in IT, I have a game development job, and I have a software maintenence job, I'm pretty much programming all day in 3 different chrome tabs lmao, 3x the salary, same amount of work hours

  • @rhainerdotov9535
    @rhainerdotov9535 Год назад +3

    The fact that people need to work multiple jobs to earn financial freedom shows, that there is something absurdly wrong with society

    • @zachb1706
      @zachb1706 Год назад

      What's wrong?

    • @rhainerdotov9535
      @rhainerdotov9535 Год назад +1

      @@zachb1706 The fact that you need multiple jobs to gain financial Freedom. People should not be required to put that much effort in to afford e.g. a house.

    • @zachb1706
      @zachb1706 Год назад

      @@rhainerdotov9535 well you don't need to work multiple jobs to afford a house. These people work multiple jobs because they want to get ahead

  • @lucasnagildo5540
    @lucasnagildo5540 Год назад

    Love this video

  • @escipion93
    @escipion93 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing this man. I am impressed because there some many ways to make money, work and live un this world. Here in Latin America you can have maybe 3 Jobs, but the normal ones, part-time jobs, like deliveryman or hairstylist. Or even work like a freelance with your degree. But, this is crazy. I wanna try It.

  • @Hitotsuday
    @Hitotsuday Год назад +4

    It’s the same as creating your own startup while you work a full time dev job

  • @readerrabbit6690
    @readerrabbit6690 Год назад +3

    Just started a new job. I think after about a year and I’m well in my groove, I’ll start looking for a second job to juggle. A lot of times with coding, the bulk of the work takes only a few actual hours. It’s expected that 4-5 hours of each day is spent researching, learning, and all the miscellaneous administrative crap like emails, time entry, and meetings. Also, many companies in my experience embrace remote engineers to take time out in the middle of the day, no questions asked.
    But then it begs the question, why work two jobs when instead you can work on your own business on the side? That has a way higher upside if you’re successful.

    • @marciebernard1897
      @marciebernard1897 9 месяцев назад +1

      2 jobs for a short amount of time to leverage your own business start up would be my reasoning to work 2 jobs at once. Then ultimately quit both and continue the business I built for myself as my means

  • @GarrettStelly
    @GarrettStelly Год назад +1

    You said something in here that really puts the nail in the coffin as to why people do this. An employer that wants to output more value than they are paying you. While I understand that nothing makes financial sense if you're only breaking even, down the line somebody is going to get exploited. The customer, the worker, the manager, the owner. The matter of fact is it has never been the owner except for businesses that fail and for the majority of the time it is either the customer or the worker that is being exploited.

  • @Koomberi
    @Koomberi Год назад +2

    If you really think about it, if a worker’s value addition is accurately allocatable, it’s no different to a business/sole trader with multiple clients

  • @madhurgupta854
    @madhurgupta854 Год назад +4

    The obvious turn offs for me towards this approach are extra stress (as if I already don't have enough stress in my one job), no time to sleep or exercise, no time to study or do research to gain more skills.

  • @abraham2217
    @abraham2217 Год назад +6

    Sometimes a man’s gotta do, what a man’s gotta do

  • @sunny4883
    @sunny4883 Год назад +2

    Wait until both companies schedule meeting at the same time 😂

  • @Didiplouf12
    @Didiplouf12 9 месяцев назад

    hahah love this, I've been doing it for 3 years now