Interesting, sometimes a job visible on a board[1] is not listed on the company’s website[2].
The offer is fresh so I guess it will be added later. Then again, when replying to an offer like this please double check that you are actually talking to the company and not to some impostors, stranger things have happened[3].
I also created a free daily email for remote jobs (segmented by type such as data engineers, devops, security, etc) for those interested: https://bloomberry.com/remote-jobs/
No fluff, ads, or images, just a daily list of the latest remote jobs found in the past 24 hours sent to your inbox. Nothing stale, or reposted, as they're directly from company websites, not scraped from aggregators or job boards.
Hi, i like your effort and was subscribed for a while. The vast majority of jobs were from us so they were almost irrelevant to me (based in eu). I would appreciate if you added some location filtering before subscribing. Thanks again.
Lots of scammers on Telegram in my experience (n=1), personally err on the side of caution and minimize footprint there because of it. One should be judicious who they are providing personal information to.
The trouble with the big sites like Indeed and Linkedin is companies, whether willful or negligent, misclassify their "hybrid" jobs as "remote" constantly, wasting both sides' time
Job sites are similar to drop-shippers: relisting the same stuff you can get better by going direct to the source while offering no (or negative) value.
Sort of on topic, I've been struggling so much lately to find something for Ruby or C#, either web or desktop... My numbers so far (since September 2024), are: 500+ applications, 2 interviews, 1 offer below what I'm making right now... The struggle is real.
Are you really married to those languages? Its not much of a jump to go to similar, but more popular languages. Like Ruby -> Python or C# -> Java/Kotlin.
almost all job descriptions demand multiple years of experience with their specific languages. i'd be happy to jump, but from my experience you don't even pass the initial filter unless you already know the target languages or frameworks.
Mainly since employers expect you to have a high degree of competency on the stack they are seeking people for. Sure I have worked with other languages like Python and Go, but I don't have the breath of experience I have on Ruby or C#... I guess I picked the wrong languages =)
I think you picked wrong only in narrowing yourself so much. Nobody cares about your deep language knowledge unfortunately, unless that translates into more velocity. It's not pretty but it's what it is. For someone to care about your deep knowledge it needs to be at the level of writing books and being involved in the specs, with commit rights to core, and even then...
This isn’t true - many hiring managers and HR filters do in fact screen by language and keywords. I personally wouldn’t work there but it’s particularly true for non tech companies and especially true for sweat shop like environments. A lot of Java and c++ roles are also very specific in what they’re hire for because the frameworks and (in c++ especially) language complexity is profound. A competent ruby developer would take a decade to become a competent c++ engineer because it takes a decade to really learn the complexities of c++ at that level. (Which is one reason I’m a huge supporter of rust killing off c++). Companies built around modern tool chains tend to be more progressive in their hiring and their tool chains are more forgiving.
I'm curious where you find the time to apply to 500 jobs. You're not alone, I know, but is quality not better than quantity? Are those applications tailored to the jobs you're applying for?
Admittedly I've not job hunted recently. Are things really just that bad?
Interesting, sometimes a job visible on a board[1] is not listed on the company’s website[2].
The offer is fresh so I guess it will be added later. Then again, when replying to an offer like this please double check that you are actually talking to the company and not to some impostors, stranger things have happened[3].
[1]: https://remotearmy.io/jobs/MhroFysU-backend-engineer-ii-musi...
[2]: https://www.lifeatspotify.com/jobs
[3]: https://consumer.ftc.gov/consumer-alerts/2023/08/scammers-im...
I also created a free daily email for remote jobs (segmented by type such as data engineers, devops, security, etc) for those interested: https://bloomberry.com/remote-jobs/
No fluff, ads, or images, just a daily list of the latest remote jobs found in the past 24 hours sent to your inbox. Nothing stale, or reposted, as they're directly from company websites, not scraped from aggregators or job boards.
Hi, i like your effort and was subscribed for a while. The vast majority of jobs were from us so they were almost irrelevant to me (based in eu). I would appreciate if you added some location filtering before subscribing. Thanks again.
Job board board.
What we need is another job board board that covers all the job board boards so we can find all the job boards.
https://jobboardsearch.com/ claims to cover 457 job boards
Grea! I just put this on my meta job board aggregator
This one has almost 600 so only a few thousand to go.
for italian software engineers / tech workers I created fullremote.it it's a newsletter and a telegram community
100% free, we're more than 7000 members!
Why bothers with telegram nowadays? Don't you value your users privacy?
Is using any kind of job board very privacy focused?
At some point you're adding / providing all kinds of personal information anyway.
Lots of scammers on Telegram in my experience (n=1), personally err on the side of caution and minimize footprint there because of it. One should be judicious who they are providing personal information to.
Valid point.
I would hope that the newsletter ends up just directing you to the company directly, not some other rando user. That would be dangerous.
my newsletter goes to company website
Does Indeed filter for remote work?
The trouble with the big sites like Indeed and Linkedin is companies, whether willful or negligent, misclassify their "hybrid" jobs as "remote" constantly, wasting both sides' time
I appreciate the explanation! That's not something I want to see happen. If you see this, can you send me an example?
Yes. Enter "remote" in the location search.
Job sites are similar to drop-shippers: relisting the same stuff you can get better by going direct to the source while offering no (or negative) value.
And how exactly do you go “directly to the source”? Spam the hiring team?
https://hiring.cafe/
Really good job search engine, with a filter for remote work.
It's good
I can't find a remote job in europe. It's all BS. I applied to 40 positions and no response. It's just grabbing your CV.
also looking in europe, i got 3 responses out of more than 100 applications. nothing for the first 50 or more. don't give up.
what would be the point of collecting CVs if you are not hiring?
Sort of on topic, I've been struggling so much lately to find something for Ruby or C#, either web or desktop... My numbers so far (since September 2024), are: 500+ applications, 2 interviews, 1 offer below what I'm making right now... The struggle is real.
Are you really married to those languages? Its not much of a jump to go to similar, but more popular languages. Like Ruby -> Python or C# -> Java/Kotlin.
There’s a huge platform “ways of working” leap. Not just switching languages.
The ways C# and Java are written, deployed, and tested are vastly different and if you don’t have that experience it’s not trivial to learn.
The market isn’t going to support changes like this anyway. Employers will still want actual experience.
almost all job descriptions demand multiple years of experience with their specific languages. i'd be happy to jump, but from my experience you don't even pass the initial filter unless you already know the target languages or frameworks.
why do you only care to work in these languages?
Mainly since employers expect you to have a high degree of competency on the stack they are seeking people for. Sure I have worked with other languages like Python and Go, but I don't have the breath of experience I have on Ruby or C#... I guess I picked the wrong languages =)
I think you picked wrong only in narrowing yourself so much. Nobody cares about your deep language knowledge unfortunately, unless that translates into more velocity. It's not pretty but it's what it is. For someone to care about your deep knowledge it needs to be at the level of writing books and being involved in the specs, with commit rights to core, and even then...
This isn’t true - many hiring managers and HR filters do in fact screen by language and keywords. I personally wouldn’t work there but it’s particularly true for non tech companies and especially true for sweat shop like environments. A lot of Java and c++ roles are also very specific in what they’re hire for because the frameworks and (in c++ especially) language complexity is profound. A competent ruby developer would take a decade to become a competent c++ engineer because it takes a decade to really learn the complexities of c++ at that level. (Which is one reason I’m a huge supporter of rust killing off c++). Companies built around modern tool chains tend to be more progressive in their hiring and their tool chains are more forgiving.
I'm curious where you find the time to apply to 500 jobs. You're not alone, I know, but is quality not better than quantity? Are those applications tailored to the jobs you're applying for?
Admittedly I've not job hunted recently. Are things really just that bad?
Yes.
I applied 4-5 days/week for 16 months and finally got a fully remote job, with a salary commensurate with what I had before.
The job I applied for was alive for less than 24 hours. They got 1,000 resumes. I just happened to be first and early.
I applied and interviewed at FAANG too.. they said they got 1,000+ resumes on day one alone, and they were screening 20 candidates for the one role.
If you've sent 500 resumes.. that's not enough / "a lot" nowadays.
“First”? Or “early”?
It seems to me that most job posters don’t even look at resumes anymore. I tested this by having logs for when the resume link is hit
Just a few applications every day, Monday to Sunday, it all adds up in the end... Except that the result, in this case, is zero.
Why not have an AI do it? Because it doesn’t know your history, right? So just write up your history and have the AI remix it and fill out forms.
[dead]
Fascism, RTO, shareholder value.
Choose 2.