I have been working as a web developer, now a manager and less of a coder, for over 20 years. I started working at a local web design company in high school and continued working there part-time during the semester and full-time in the summers throughout college. I almost burned out from that due to an insanely manipulative and verbally abusive boss, but lucked into an even better job when I had a lunch with the former co-partner to the bad boss. I was really just looking for some advice as I got ready to graduate but I left that lunch with a job offer!
Fast forward to the 2008 financial crisis and the small business he was running, of which I was employee #3 for after his sister, ends up falling apart. Most of our business came from a marketing agency that was literally down the street, so they snatched up me and another developer to maintain the dozen sites we had built for them in the last few years. That place was chaotic at first, but the leadership at the top was smart enough to invest in digital before many of our competitors, letting things grow and then knowing when to pull back and focus on the business side of the process, too.
(Fun story, the very first meeting I was part of after moving to the agency, still on contract and not a FTE yet, the owner of the whole agency comes in and tells us the last project was 300% over budget. I can’t even imagine that happening now, at worst we would have realized something was wrong by the time we ended the first sprint!)
I’ve now been at that agency for 14 years as of last week! I never thought I would stay in one place or enjoy being a manager, but I’ve come to love the mentoring side of my job more than the technical side. Now that I am nearing my 40s, it’s also nice to have a stable employer in a region that does not have many similar opportunities–most of our clients are out of state, so before the rise of remote working I would have had to moved away from my entire family to find an equivalent job (both in terms of the kind and quality of work we do and financially). I’m still learning new things all of the time, too, even if I am not necessarily the one writing code myself.
I have been working as a web developer, now a manager and less of a coder, for over 20 years. I started working at a local web design company in high school and continued working there part-time during the semester and full-time in the summers throughout college. I almost burned out from that due to an insanely manipulative and verbally abusive boss, but lucked into an even better job when I had a lunch with the former co-partner to the bad boss. I was really just looking for some advice as I got ready to graduate but I left that lunch with a job offer!
Fast forward to the 2008 financial crisis and the small business he was running, of which I was employee #3 for after his sister, ends up falling apart. Most of our business came from a marketing agency that was literally down the street, so they snatched up me and another developer to maintain the dozen sites we had built for them in the last few years. That place was chaotic at first, but the leadership at the top was smart enough to invest in digital before many of our competitors, letting things grow and then knowing when to pull back and focus on the business side of the process, too.
(Fun story, the very first meeting I was part of after moving to the agency, still on contract and not a FTE yet, the owner of the whole agency comes in and tells us the last project was 300% over budget. I can’t even imagine that happening now, at worst we would have realized something was wrong by the time we ended the first sprint!)
I’ve now been at that agency for 14 years as of last week! I never thought I would stay in one place or enjoy being a manager, but I’ve come to love the mentoring side of my job more than the technical side. Now that I am nearing my 40s, it’s also nice to have a stable employer in a region that does not have many similar opportunities–most of our clients are out of state, so before the rise of remote working I would have had to moved away from my entire family to find an equivalent job (both in terms of the kind and quality of work we do and financially). I’m still learning new things all of the time, too, even if I am not necessarily the one writing code myself.