Great criteria to filter jobs over, but minimally useful for candidates when it only captures a couple dozen jobs from a handful of companies.
And the price for being able to post new listings seems high for it probably not having many candidates (on account of the few listings, and it being a narrow niche).
Good luck to whoever is trying to make this work, but this kind of thing is a notoriously hard business problem.
Hi, I am the creator of Remotewide, thanks a lot for your feedback!
I made the price 999$/yr after thoroughly looking into all other job boards, and I see that most of them offer around 150$ - 200$ per job post, so I think that 999 / 12 = 83$ / month for unlimited job posts makes it cheaper?
Do you have any other advice how I could improve this for candidates and companies? Thank you a ton!
It seems to me those job boards are not equivalent to yours - they have many, many, many more posts and many, many, many more eyeballs on those posts. If I'm your customer how do I justify paying quite a large up-front cost with no indication of what sort of results I can expect? At least if it was a relatively high per-job post charge I could maybe justify just using it once and dropping it as an experiment.
For a lot of businesses offering their product for free at the start just makes them fail. Probably would be good to focus on really high quality matchmaking at the start while you can be high touch, then fall back to normal-ish matching.
I applied to one of the jobs on your site today. I had not seen it anywhere else, although admittely I had not been shopping around. So whether your content existed elsewhere, I appreciated it and acted on it.
We like details. The salary (range) is essential. There is absolutely no reason to apply to a job that pays 60k when we are currently earning more than double that. So knowing up front what is possible saves a lot of time for the employer and the candidate. The remote and location independent pay factor are also very significant givens.
Beyond those, it comes down to the details and quality of listings. That is content you cannot control, although you can provide good suggestions to your company customers about what consitutes a good job post. The company I applied to had a great job post. So from my perspective, you at least attracted one high quality company.
Keep it up, and keep pushing. The more companies you gather, the more success we all have.
Hi, I am the creator of Remotewide, and this was one of my initial thoughts against building this, but then again, I found some other websites also focused on super-niche like 4dayweek.io - this can also be introduced as a filter on remoteok or any other leading job board, so I thought it wouldn't hurt to try :)
And yet, despite this being a "feature" one of the big ones could adopt some people running job boards make a decent amount of money: https://remoteok.com/open
I'm looking for a Senior Engineer, curious if you or any of your connections would be open to checking out a Senior Software/Full Stack Engineer opportunity with my company, Orum.
Things to consider: ‣ Base salary is $150k-$180k (+ Equity) ‣ Tech stack primarily consists of Node.js, TypeScript, and PostgreSQL with a very clean codebase ‣ Be in charge of building and owning features end-to-end, taking it through conception, implementation, shipping, and iteration ‣ We are looking for people who are well-trained like yourself, and looking for a leadership opportunity within a growing company ‣ Team of A-Players with a strict No Jerks Policy
Let me know if you have any questions on the role. -Noah
I'm looking for a Senior Engineer, curious if you or any of your connections would be open to checking out a Senior Software/Full Stack Engineer opportunity with my company, Orum.
Things to consider:
‣ Base salary is $150k-$180k (+ Equity)
‣ Tech stack primarily consists of Node.js, TypeScript, and PostgreSQL with a very clean codebase
‣ Be in charge of building and owning features end-to-end, taking it through conception, implementation, shipping, and iteration
‣ We are looking for people who are well-trained like yourself, and looking for a leadership opportunity within a growing company
‣ Team of A-Players with a strict No Jerks Policy
Let me know if you have any questions on the role. -Noah
Hey everyone, I'm building the engineering team at Orum, a series A hyper growth startup in sales tech.
I'm looking for a Senior Engineer with in depth experience in node.js and typescript. Would greatly appreciate any connections with engineers open to new roles, and if you have interest please reach out!
If this is truly location independent - in other words Global, then how is this any different from the offshoring or outsourcing that’s been the bane of western tech employees for the last 2 decades?
> how is this any different from the offshoring or outsourcing
There really is none, and what people are failing to realize is that if a SF-based company was paying you $300k, and the market rate for the same level of skill in North Dakota is $100k, there is nothing stopping them from hiring a lot of ND based developers and slowly winding down SF-based devs.
It won't be a "we're firing you because you are making SF-based pay", it will be for other reasons that don't directly link the two, until the entire work force is paid less.
Next, you can swap out North Dakota pay for pay in other countries, and you can see where this is going.
Developers will claim the "off-shore" talent is sub-par, but eventually this becomes a level playing field, with highly many skilled developers spread across the globe. Then what?
> what people are failing to realize is that if a SF-based company was paying you $300k, and the market rate for the same level of skill in North Dakota is $100k, there is nothing stopping them from hiring a lot of ND based developers and slowly winding down SF-based devs.
As someone who has been remote, even pre-COVID, I can tell you this is not at all how it works. Trust me, a dev based in North Dakota who has Google, Lyft, Stripe, etc. on their resume will have no problem making within 10-20% of the same pay as someone based in San Francisco.
The issue is people want to claim that someone who works at Bob's IT Shop in North Dakota or a new grad from North Carolina is the market equivalent of an SF dev who's deeply embedded in the industry, and that's false. The first thing is conflating skill with experience. Being a good coder doesn't necessarily make you qualified to work on production systems for a large company.
> As someone who has been remote, even pre-COVID, I can tell you this is not at all how it works. Trust me, a dev based in North Dakota who has Google, Lyft, Stripe, etc. on their resume will have no problem making within 10-20% of the same pay as someone based in San Francisco.
I've been remote also for 10 years pre-Covid.
How did those people originally get Google, Lyft, etc on their resume? They were smart and skilled.
There is no reason someone can't land those positions in an area where the CoL is 500% less than what it is in San Francisco. If we expand this globally, they could live like a king on $50k USD locally.
Stretching out the timeline, there is no reason companies will continue to pay SF salaries for these positions when they don't have to.
If you move to Thailand, but the local developer in the unit next door is more skilled than you, you have to prepare for the invitable.
> Being a good coder doesn't necessarily make you qualified to work on production systems for a large company.
It will once you are onboarded and learn the ropes. How else do you get that experience?
What you are suggesting is a temporary gap in knowledge. This gap can be rapidly closed moving forward.
>there is no reason companies will continue to pay SF salaries for these positions when they don't have to.
Doesn't that depend on the extent to which companies are going to demand folks come back into the office? The flexibility that Airbnb just announced is great, but it seems that Apple is still making Cupertino a place for high wages.
I recently had a recruiter make a mistake with what city I live in and she organised an interview for me with a team based 800km away. I did so well in the interview that the team is making a single remote position for me. The company does have an office here I can work from when I don't want to WFH.
When the pay is right, I agree that remote employees don't have to be bottom of the barrel.
Not all the jobs are fully location independent, for example the ones with "HelpScout" when you read the section "About the role" near the end is written:
> At this time, we are only able to hire in the following: United States, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, United Kingdom.
I believe this information should be presented near the top so as a consumer of the product I can skip reading a long description just to know that I cannot apply
Beware of a thing: location independent pay inside national borders is a good thing for Citizens and the nation in general, beyond borders is a good things ONLY for big corps and the most poor, so a bad thing for us westerns.
Just imaging how can be the paycheck if the market is the entire world: seeing actual paychecks that means beside very little, very demanding in skills jobs where it's next to impossible find workers from some cheaper countries because due to their schools systems they can't form skilled enough people 98% of other remote works will clearly be interesting only for those from very poor countries were a very little salary is a high one in their own country.
For big corps of course that's perfectly nice: a call center operator from Turkmenistan enough fluent in some westerns languages is equally good than a local one, his/shes cost of living makes a salary of 150 USA/EUR very interesting, connections are starting to be good enough not to have problems, so... Remember that actual neoliberal-driven IT is built around the concept of Ford's model stereotypical workers, so real quality does not count much in actual systems.
I'm deeply in favor of WFH as much as possible, to do anything can be done remotely from remote because TLCs are there anyway and so that's can and should mean efficient and cheap (even if often due do bad IT choices is the contrary), but remember that we can't have equal cost of living anywhere: if we live at "polar" latitudes we need heating, a big expense, if we live at "tropical" latitudes we need cooling which can be a significant expensive (since it can be mitigated by p.v., just during the day), if we live in not-much-fertile or too dense area foods costs are higher, if we are far from industry goods costs more, but other things cost less etc. Even in an hypothetical "fair, ethical and just global world" we can't see equal costs everywhere, so we need different prices and different wages and different social systems. Ignoring this means push even more the inequality accelerators against workers interests.
This is a fallacy in that the problem is also in-borders.
The costs of living differences are vast inside a country, and so a company that has equal pay for different locations either massively overpays some people, ballooning its salary budget, or prices itself out of employees in high cost of living areas.
Imagine the equivalent for house prices, saying that the same spec house should cost the same regardless of location, and you're not allowed to buy a house for more or less than the set price. If you think that's a good idea, fair enough (although I would completely disagree); otherwise I don't understand how you reconcile this difference.
True, but inside a country internal migrations and adjustments can happen under a common law, for instance in fiscal terms anything is the same. In law terms idem.
With WFH surely we will see a shift and a shift that will hurt some, dense cities small apartments will loose values, as commercial for quick launches for office workers in the business/city center, properties in nice areas with good connections that so far are valued much less than central buildings in cities will see a rise etc BUT inside a country it's far more manageable than all around the world!
Not sure if you're arguing for, or against same pay regardless of location... My opinion is that, if a company pays my US peers $200k, I expect to be paid the same. I can't force this opinion on others, but what I can do is refuse to work for companies that don't follow this rule.
Location still matters, even for remote employees in the US.
You can get on a flight to anywhere in the continental US in a few hours, usually much less (In my case I'm about 1.5 hours from SF). US citizens don't need to apply for a visa and can travel on a moment's notice to attend a meeting, or sync up with coworkers, or interview at a company.
The other issue is regulatory. I'm sure companies would pay higher compensation overseas, if overseas governments were more business-friendly. If you think the pay isn't competitive in your country, petition your government to have lower taxes and less regulations for a business entity that wants to operate there. You might have to compromise and give up some of the benefits like free healthcare, that we have to pay enormous amounts of money for in the USA.
It's not a matter of being free and able to travel, wages are a matter of supply and demand: too few workers? => skyrocketing wages. Too much workers? => very poor wages.
Now look at population density of, let's say India. How many Indians have enough knowledge to apply for some positions respect of let's say the ratio of French? You easy see that potential number of workers climb exponentially, so wages go to the bottom.
You might say "hey, but also the offer became far bigger", true, but now look at the entire world: in the west/JP/SK we have the highest wages and cost of living in the planet. We have had in the past a certain "mean culture" thanks to developed schools systems witch WAS around the highest of the planet, we have dominated tech sectors. In the past. Now mean culture is plummeted, thanks to those who have pushed the Ford model to the extreme because people without culture, especially without a generic culture, are easy to govern. Tech is still a bit higher than the rest of the world but not so much anymore and so on MEANWHILE cost of living do not lower and will not in a more globalized world.
As a result pay-the-same means for some countries pay much, for some others pay too little. As a result we would see another mass disruption from a war between about-to-be-poorer vs about-to-be-less-poor that, summed to all other ongoing crisis will just push more people toward wars and extremism. As I said anything can and should change, but at a certain slow peace, to avoid too much collateral damages during the change. That's valid if you are thirsty almost dead of thirst and you drink too much once new water arrive to die of water indigestion and equally valid if you consuming too much water daily and suddenly stop: your kidneys will be the source of huge health problems. You might say "hey, but some will got rich quickly". Yes. Very few multi-national giants surely would be more rich in a quick time. Workers who get rich quickly from poverty in most of the cases will be equally or even more poor in a nick of a time because getting rich quickly means being unable to handle richness and so squander quickly as we regularly see with young generations too quickly substituting rich parents, that even if being born wealthy they have studied well and have had good examples and practice at home, in theory.
Always consider a thing: from chaos there are very few who can really profit, like the same ration of lottery winners, from the "poor" classes, while the topmost rich being outside the chaos observing normally profit very well. See the French Revolution: the real winners were the bankers who have substituted an impoverished nobleness, not much differently than so many other revolutions. Simply because those who see the big picture being a bit outside and resourceful can maneuver, those in the fray can only elbow hoping to save their life in skin.
The issue happen if someone who happen to live in expensive countries see offers with too low wages for living a good life there and can't really compete.
Cost of living in Norway is far higher than in India, if we adjust payments to an average Indian's residents will be happy, but Norwegian will be on the road. Inside a country surely, especially in big countries, cost of living might vary as well, but in a far narrower manner. For instance Italy south is around 30% cheaper than north (by a very generous amount), while compared to vast part of India the difference is around 80%.
Compensate 30% is hard, compensate 80% is next to impossible. Surely you can emigrate, but did you imaging the chaos we will see for such mass migrations also mixed by many others (climate, war, ... migrations) amid closing borders due to scarcity of resources, geopolitical tensions etc?
The world change and there is nothing strange nor wrong in it, but the rate of change matter, a slow change can be faced slowly, a bit at a time, a sudden change is like hitting descending from a tall building with a rope or flying down without wings or parachutes... We arrive to the ground in both cases, but in very different conditions.
As the 'most poor', I can tell you that wages and costs do not have a similar ratio across different countries. I think its fair I get paid the same for the same quality and quantity of work, and can't think of a reason why that would be ethically unsound. India has great developers and they are already hired everywhere in the world, do they really need to relocate for that?
Surely not, but those developers in their country how much spend for a good house, connection, health, food etc respect of let's say Norway?
Remember that moneys are NOT a value themselves but a unit of measure we all agree/accept, to represent an underlying value for helping exchange, so the same 100 USD/EUR/* represent a much big sum in Indian rupees just because renewing the house, get some services etc costs much less there. It's not a matter of skills/time price. Let's say I want to renovate my house. Here (France) that might be for instance 50k EUR for a not-so-new house, how much can be an equivalent house renovation cost for an equivalent home in India? Is it fair for you getting the same amount of wage and with this very amount being able to buy much more or much less?
Surely, costs differs, so in a country, like USA a newborn or a broken leg might be far more expensive than here, while a car might be far less expensive. That's part of the reason why I say ok for location-independent costs INSIDE nation borders, because a broken leg or a car cost almost the same in Alaska or in New Mexico, but not beyond national border because here a car is more expensive a broken leg in money cost normally nothing.
Yes, it's not about skills/time/price it's about the relation of the worker and the market, this market is very much not a local market, but almost completely global one, wages however stay very local.
Costs differ, but they don't differ uniformly nor do they differ in the same ratio, sales are more globalized than the workforce, so this fact alone tells you that the wages will lag behind the trends (like behind inflation). There is no scientific way to measure this price difference, our best practical way was with local currencies but that's now abandoned in favor of more federated monetary systems.
Costs aside, which represent a relative and local measure think about the absolute measure, which you need to measure savings.
The single largest expense for most people is housing, the cost of which varies widely within a country. Add to that state and city specific taxes and you have even more variation in effective disposable income. The idea that pay should be the same within a country but not across countries seems like special pleading.
Housing is an expensive, but not the only in the game: let's talk about pensions?
Not only: what do you think States are for? They, formally, represent the interests of a cohort of people, in Democracies they formally represent the people at a whole. In a global work market how they can represent rights of their Citizens? Declaring war against some corporate-state? Witch law apply to a cross-border income? Which taxes?
It's clear to anyone that the actual model of megacorps, private equity, zaibatsu, chaebol etc is to became Sovereign corporatocratic states that profit from a grey area between them and real States, but it's equally clear that have NOTHING to do with fairness or jobs. It's just a modern version of classic Indian's companies from UK, a group of criminals, drug smugglers, oppressors evolved to became banks (that's the REAL history of HSBC, for instance) profiting of some lie and peoples life.
Location independent wages inside a country means help leveling the wages in the country, under a common law, fiscal system and not-that-different costs because yes houses have different prices, but connected enough for WFH ones do have not that much differences in developed countries. That means helping a transition from a urban-centric model to a distributed Riviera model. It's positive for employers and employees. Going beyond border is positive ONLY for biggest companies with their global footprint, big of IT thanks to their knowledge thanks to their mass surveillance capitalism AGAINST all others actors.
If you are really convinced please try to prove the contrary. Try to see how a SBE can benefit from such market vs from the same inside country borders. For instance.
Hi, I am very sorry that you had an unpleasant experience, as of the moment the Search is only used for pre-existing tags like "React" "Frontend" "Backend" etc. Here is an example https://i.imgur.com/MUrykgr.png
Just figured it out. I added scroll & listings preserverance in my last commit and it seemed to mess up the search. Fix is deployed, will probably propagate in the next 15 minutes.
Hi, I am the creator of Remotewide, it could be possible that I've labeled some jobs incorrectly myself, so make sure to visit the /companies page and search a bit yourself, maybe there is something useful!
Hi, I am the creator of Remotewide, I am currently going over 25 companies I have on my list that offer location independent pay, and I am sure some of them have sales/accounting in them. Will probably come this week.
And the price for being able to post new listings seems high for it probably not having many candidates (on account of the few listings, and it being a narrow niche).
Good luck to whoever is trying to make this work, but this kind of thing is a notoriously hard business problem.