Ask HN: Are companies averse to hiring remote developers from the Bay Area?
I was laid off from my job recently but immediately started applying to new jobs. I'm expanding the job search to include remote positions at companies that might be located outside of California. Unfortunately I haven't heard back from any of them. I wonder if it has to do with the current job market being so competitive, or if my resume is weak, or if those companies think my salary expectation would be too high and they won't be able to match it, so they're not going to bother considering me as a candidate. I know when my previous company was hiring, we stopped reviewing most resumes from local Bay Area developers because it knew it couldn't match their salary expectations.
On a side note: I have about 5 years of experience as a backend developer. I'd be happy to share my resume/LinkedIn over email if anyone is aware of any opportunities! I'm going to echo your assumption that most remote employers will just not bother reviewing CVs from bay area devs. I guess looking at it from a different angle, as a bay area dev are you going to accept a long term position that comes with an 80k compensation package? If in your cover letter you were to indicate that you would entertain a long term commitment at a rate typical with that of the remote company's on premise employees. Perhaps you would get more interest. Just a thought. Best of luck on your job search. For good measure you might post your core skills here. You never know who is going to read this... Well, as an unemployed dev currently making 0k, yes, I would take it. Thanks for the suggestion! As would I in your shoes! The rub is as a potential employer, I would be questioning if you will still be here in 6 months or will you spend your time as an employee looking for something "more appropriate" I want to be clear that this is not any kind of know on you. You might be the perfect long term person for the job. You just need some kind of hook to convince potential employers that you are not a drive by. I agree. OP, Use your cover letter to assuage potential fears of the hiring team. These could include: - show that this company is not just a temporary gap filler until you find a new CA job - provide evidence that you would stick around for morE than a few months. Outside of SV, I don’t think it is common for tenures to be as short as they are in SV. Yeah that totally makes sense, I understand why potential employers would have concerns. For what its worth, I was at one company for 4 years and about 1 year at my previous company prior to getting let go. I hope the tenure at my first company demonstrates that I'm not just a job hopper and do prefer to stick around and grow. You might not be a job hopper by Bay Area standards. I've been at the same place since 2005. Not many places want to train you and reveal trade secrets, only to see you disappear. You don't need to tell remote employers where you're located until after they get a chance to interview you, you could say you live in California without being super specific as to where in California you live. Since the job is remote they only need to know roughly where you live. After they hire you they may find out but then they have decided you're great for their team. We have several engineering positions open at onXmaps. We’re a mapping app for the outdoors with a good offline experience. Our first app was for hunters, and now we have an offroad app too. Check us out https://www.onxmaps.com/careers We hire remote, but don’t target expensive areas in our recruiting. However, we won’t turn down a good candidate based on location (as long as you’re in the US). If your resume looks good, a short call with our recruiter will get us on the same page regarding comp. We are competitive, but not with FAANG. I like the work you are doing - I had been meaning to write a mapping app for rockhounders for years, to let us know whether we are on public land or not, but I saw your product and decided not to do it because although we aren't your target market nor does your product do exactly what is needed - it is close enough to do the trick, and I'd rather see where you go with it than try to re-invent something similar. Thank you! This seems like an interesting problem space. I'll check out the careers page and apply if I see a good match for my skillset! Great to see Montana companies. I’m just an hour north of y’all. What are the main reasons not hiring out of US? I know several employers who hire remote, and it isn't a Bay Area thing -- they won't employ anyone in the state of the CA, for the same reasons they won't employ international employees -- they see CA legislation as too onerous to be bothered with dealing with when they can hire devs out of states with more lax employment laws. Given that CA is an at-will employment state, “states with more lax employment laws” really sounds like a euphemism for “states which allow non-competes”—in CA non-competes are unenforceable. Do you happen to have any more specifics? I’d be really interested to know. Just curious, why live in one of the most expensive places on earth and seek work for an employer in a different locale? Are you tied to the Bay Area for personal reasons? The primary reason I want to remain in the Bay Area is because my family and friends are here. I grew up in the Bay Area and can't imagine packing my bags and leaving them behind. That being said, I'm unemployed and not in a position to be picky. If the opportunity is great, I'll be open to relocating. I'm looking for a backend/Node developer for a 3-6 month contract. Let me know if you want to chat. On your resume pot you time zone, not your location If you need any mock interviews I am willing to help for free. I'd appreciate that! What's the best way to contact you? Please send your email to address below, I will reply with mine. m202mh+27k8y300xvndl8hxqll078i7x3c@sharklasers.com tipefracli@wemel.site, please use this one as the other one already expired. Thanks for HN not providing us a way to share an email address privately, I know I know we? keep things simple just down vote. Thanks so much, just sent you on an email.