Yeah, I've been working in IT for many years and I dream of being like Mike Ehrmantraut sat in his parking booth. IT is an overrated line of work and I'm bored and burned out.
@@submissivekoala What usually ends up happening for most people is you either find yourself stuck in a position you hate, maintaining legacy infrastructure you have come to loathe because of how irredeemably stupid the design is (but it's too expensive to change it!) or if you're very good you'll go far, maybe get into a big tech company and then work 5 years there and die (metaphorically) of burnout because of the insane work environment of silicon valley tech giants. Most IT people (including myself, that's my plan at least) usually work a few years in the industry and either found companies (not always successful, but often) and/or retire or something along those lines
@@sguptzz not that much as they are not as in high demand Similar to game devs who know a lot of graphics, low level driver knowledge and heavy math get paid less than Suzan who build web applications cuz there are more demand for web devs (Of course it depend on the country in Japan for instance they belittle software guys and think hardware across the board is better which actually affected the economy negatively)
I'm a web dev, working mainly with Angular atm. Earning about 80k. I'm totally fine with this. I don't work extra hours, I spend time with my wife and kid. No stress or anything. Life is good.
Don't take advice from anyone who isn't doing what you want to do. Every loser that failed will tell you that you can't do it either. Plan out what you want and you can make it happen. Never stop.
I'm a web dev. Been a web dev for 10years. Best job ever! Do frontend stuff if you like to play with client side, ux and design. I wish you huge success my friend!
@@amasirat dumb answer. You can work wherever you want. You can take trips to the other side of the world and login on a beach. You can create your own schedule. You aren't paying commuting/ parking fees and being miserable in traffic every day. You get that time spent in traffic back, and that adds up to a lot of time over years. Office life is for suckers who need artificial social interaction because they don't have a life outside of work.
@@vikalptyagi1932 oh nono, that was a joke, it's an excellent choice. just be careful because it does happen, mostly in startup companies where they cut costs any way they can
Those are low ranges in the US and typically a base salary. We have cloud engineers making more than $150K. Cloud architects can vary depending on what level, but it's between $120K to $500K depending on your skills and location.
Actually, my coworkers husband works with IT at banks. He is one of very few people who still can maintain the code. And he earns way more than these jobs.
I'm currently an Infra Engineer looking after our on-prem and Azure resources. Looking to get a couple more years experience in Azure and go for the Architect exam.
Imagine time when eventually all would become computer scientist so man who could fastly solve variety of household tasks(handyman) would become rare job with high paynment.
I’m a cloud and infrastructure recruiter and our DevOps engineers are getting 130k+ a strong app architect makes more than a cloud architect every day of the week, cloud architects are a dime a dozen while app architects require years of background experience. Just got a guy an interview for Tuesday at 200k for an app architect role.
@@madmax7539 I don't (yet), but I'm studying for it. I got hired in a fairly peculiar way. I'd love to chat if you want, but maybe not under youtube comments? Sounds a little inconvenient :)
These are salary ranges for mid level engineers. Senior and Principal are making much more in any of the bigger cities like Chicago , NYC, Boston, San Fran, etc
Since you put solutions architect in this, I would say Product Managers are actually paid much higher on average and the technical ones you can loop in here.
Doesn't matter if you're unemployed. 15 years of experience here with application architecture, cloud tech (ok like 7 years), PHP, c, python, rust, Java... Haven't been able to find a job in 6 months.
So, would you say there aren’t more businesses opportunities in the Web 2.0? Why is ML the future? By the way, how did you manage to do the transition?
@@imt3206 there are enough business opportunities ahead , you could expect for atleast a decade. Technology is always moving forward so we have to adapt . I have started learning right from mathematics to understand the machine learning concepts. It's hard to learn consistently but no other option
Devops engineer is the highest, used to be a custom-private/public (AWS focus) engineer but switched to devops bc of the higher pay. 150k offers as an architect became 190k devops offerings with the same experience.
Salaries are localized to the city cost of living. A job in San Francisco is going to pay differently than a smaller city in the middle of the country.
i want to be an AI engineer, but I am very scared when it comes to it because it's a competitive field and i don't know much about the industry. The only experience I have are some personal projects and I don't know how to get any professional experience. Any tips?
My tips: get familiar with the fundamentals and math behind is and maybe even the history. Code some simple neural networks by hand (so without using existing libraries) and maybe also a library. Then I would progressively start more ambitious projects and when you think you're ready look for internships or Jobs.
I'm considering cardiology, but I love computers, maybe I should become a radiologist, theyre basically the programmers of the medical world. Then again, I love cardiology and I relate to the cardiologist stereotypes, and I do get to operate electrocardiographies, which are computers, but theyre pretty easy to use and read.
these numbers are an insufficiently averaged market rate obtained from a 3 second google search. pay has everything to do with location, company, and ability to negotiate (which is predicated on your skill level/fit for the role/the company's needs). throwing out numbers may catch a viewer's attention, but doesn't mean much.
I’m honestly very indecisive. I’m wanting to get into programming bad but I don’t know what the heck I want to do. I keep looking around online but idk where to rlly start. I love the CZcams shorts Btw
Start to code then your first language isn't that important and you xan always change field. I went from raw Java to Android to Web dev(angular) to Android again. Just keep coding be consistent and it will pay off dont give up its not that hard
Man we fullstack fucks have to do everything and get paid for one credit for none The current HR definition of a Fullstack dev is "backend, frontend, security, database, monitoring, cloud infra, app developer" in 7 languages *AND WE DONT GET TO BE ANYWHERE CLOSE TO TOP 5? AHHHHHHHHHH*
I read some c++ coders making 500k/yr in San Francisco, 25 yr old. Can you imagine? My code was so gross back then at that age. I'd like see a documentary of a guy from a developing country going cali and then making 500k, ha ha.
I work as a Azure DevSecOps Engineer and my base salary is 50k+ above the top paying in this list could say my job consists more responsibilities then a cloud architect though. To also code the solution with infrastructure as code.
They have to study day n night, years after years for a salary of 137k bucks per year... Le Mr. Beast, first man to touch the keyboard win 1,000,000...😅🙃
first of all i want some experience in it field as I'm just a 20year old man im entering the it field, but i have worked on many projects , so experience makes first priority to be more productive
You have to say the level. Is it entry? Then i do not know how to be an entry level architect or manager. And if those are senior the numbers seem to be low.
@MrHolyKindness you sure? Because I'm an AI engineer (master degree in AI engineering large scale) so I would like to know who you are, your experience, your title and your argumentation
Data Architects are almost exclusively senior level people with data engineering and business intelligence backgrounds. The presented salary is extremely low. More accurately you can demand 180k+ at that point in your career.
It isn't this simple. You can make more than that in jobs that weren't mentioned. Not to mention none of those salaries are anywhere near what is possible
@@m5a1stuart83 That is certifications that adds to the pay which you may or may not need for the job Typically the jobs that asks for those are paid highly because they are tough, not a dependency
don't know what hr centric place you're getting your numbers but take them all and X2 minimum for non faang x4 for faang. I loled so hard on these numbers
While I understand the purpose of a comment such as this. Understand that some of us grew up on irc and bbs when the Internet was more anonymous and free... And the trolling comments were far far more cutting. Live in whatever perception wasteland you choose.
That AI engineer needs to clean his screen
There is a job position for it, a screen cleaner
I came here to say this.
Why?
I can safely conclude that after 3 years of novice programming experience, I have decided to work as a warehouse clerk
Yeah, I've been working in IT for many years and I dream of being like Mike Ehrmantraut sat in his parking booth.
IT is an overrated line of work and I'm bored and burned out.
@@halfbakedproductions7887 Mike didn’t only work at a parking booth to earn a living…
@@halfbakedproductions7887 could you elaborate on why it's overrated?
I went into cleaning
@@submissivekoala What usually ends up happening for most people is you either find yourself stuck in a position you hate, maintaining legacy infrastructure you have come to loathe because of how irredeemably stupid the design is (but it's too expensive to change it!) or if you're very good you'll go far, maybe get into a big tech company and then work 5 years there and die (metaphorically) of burnout because of the insane work environment of silicon valley tech giants. Most IT people (including myself, that's my plan at least) usually work a few years in the industry and either found companies (not always successful, but often) and/or retire or something along those lines
Maybe I'll just stick to assembly language 😂😂
No competition for this
Youll get paid well for that!
kernel,os, embedded system devs really have too good salary
Pretty good
@@sguptzz not that much as they are not as in high demand
Similar to game devs who know a lot of graphics, low level driver knowledge and heavy math get paid less than Suzan who build web applications cuz there are more demand for web devs
(Of course it depend on the country in Japan for instance they belittle software guys and think hardware across the board is better which actually affected the economy negatively)
@@ko-Daegu Loved the Suzan part.
I'm a web dev, working mainly with Angular atm. Earning about 80k. I'm totally fine with this. I don't work extra hours, I spend time with my wife and kid. No stress or anything. Life is good.
Whats your location please?
Can you do this remote from any country ? Congrats on finding happinesses!!
Nice. That’s what I’m looking to get into
@@alexg8460 Spoiler: In countrys where you earn that much, they wont hire Low educated people for remote.
This is missing a lot of context, highly depends on years of experience and location.
pretty much. if you’re in software dev your salary ranges drastically the titles are completely meaningless.
Right he ain’t explain how you get to this
I'm too dumb for that shit. I'll stick to web development lol.
Same. But honestly I’m following the money lol n these sound took goood
Cloud architecture is a fascinating one. Thank you Lewis!
i want to be a web dev. i start learning just last week hahaha almost no progress but i think i can achieve that with practice.
get ready for depression...
@@jamowrk6015 lmao why you say that?
Don't take advice from anyone who isn't doing what you want to do. Every loser that failed will tell you that you can't do it either. Plan out what you want and you can make it happen. Never stop.
I'm a web dev. Been a web dev for 10years. Best job ever! Do frontend stuff if you like to play with client side, ux and design. I wish you huge success my friend!
Same here. Good luck friend! We're both gonna make it.
I make 165k as a frontend dev. LA company working in the south 💪🏻
hey bro i have done diploma in computer science what should i do next?
to have best career so that i can support my family.
@@nihalnadaf712 not the best guy for advice but I am guessing most people look for jobs or seek further education lol?
What company?
mid-level or senior?
@@nihalnadaf712 Start applying and building up your portfolio.
Number one is JS Framework architect.
JS Framework architects reinvent the wheel every week, releasing a new blazing fast framework
This is very nice. He didn't include positions that aren't always attainable like CTO and other high ranking positions.
I just want a job that allows me to see my family and have time for myself
indie game developer then...
Remote job is the key
@@theman3282 you'll just be caged in your room. At least you're in the house...
@@amasirat dumb answer. You can work wherever you want. You can take trips to the other side of the world and login on a beach. You can create your own schedule. You aren't paying commuting/ parking fees and being miserable in traffic every day. You get that time spent in traffic back, and that adds up to a lot of time over years. Office life is for suckers who need artificial social interaction because they don't have a life outside of work.
Meanwhile me: *laughs in 3000$ yearly salary
You can still improve yourself in the industry.
I know dat feel, bro, living in developing countries sucks
@@solitary6002 Living in a developing country really sucks
@@natifov salary in modern country will be the same after taxes
dude that is so fake...how come you only earn that much..
full stack boi do everything 99999999$
fullstack, do everything but only get paid for one thing😎
@@sneezingcat6221 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@sneezingcat6221 dammn I learning to become a full stack developer 😰 is it not good paying job?
@@vikalptyagi1932 oh nono, that was a joke, it's an excellent choice. just be careful because it does happen, mostly in startup companies where they cut costs any way they can
@@sneezingcat6221 hahaha was thinking of switching to machine learning for a second thanx for clarifying
And here I am learning embedded systems development 😂
I am trying to get into iot. So i am learning how to mess with embedded systems too
I am leaving it after 10 years in the industry, I will get into web development instead
I want to own the darn company
You got this
you need some hard work, for sure you can do it but give it some time and work
Kidnap the ceo's daughter
Those are low ranges in the US and typically a base salary. We have cloud engineers making more than $150K. Cloud architects can vary depending on what level, but it's between $120K to $500K depending on your skills and location.
5. Data architect
4. AI engineer
3. IT security manager
2. Application architect
1. Cloud architect
Actually, my coworkers husband works with IT at banks. He is one of very few people who still can maintain the code. And he earns way more than these jobs.
I was gonna say these salaries seem way too low. They must be talking starting salaries for new graduates.
I'm currently an Infra Engineer looking after our on-prem and Azure resources. Looking to get a couple more years experience in Azure and go for the Architect exam.
Problem with architect exam is it get outdated by the time you finish learning it. Technologies on aws, azure and gcp move so quickly
Blockchain devs:
Hold my beer🍺
Are you a blockchain dev ?
Blockchain is just a data structure, is very obvious you are not in the it world nor a student
I make $160k as a Frontend dev working remote in a Silicon Valley startup.
looks like the AI engineer’s doing webdev
Imagine time when eventually all would become computer scientist so man who could fastly solve variety of household tasks(handyman) would become rare job with high paynment.
I’m a cloud and infrastructure recruiter and our DevOps engineers are getting 130k+ a strong app architect makes more than a cloud architect every day of the week, cloud architects are a dime a dozen while app architects require years of background experience. Just got a guy an interview for Tuesday at 200k for an app architect role.
Heh, I started my path towards greatness as a cloud engineer a year ago and I'm loving it! Hopefully I'll get there soon :))
I want to be a cloud engineer too. Can you please guide me a little. I will be forever grateful. Do you have a degree?
@@madmax7539 I don't (yet), but I'm studying for it. I got hired in a fairly peculiar way. I'd love to chat if you want, but maybe not under youtube comments? Sounds a little inconvenient :)
These are salary ranges for mid level engineers. Senior and Principal are making much more in any of the bigger cities like Chicago , NYC, Boston, San Fran, etc
My dad is a security manager. Sometimes its a hell of a job but well, it does pay good money.
Since you put solutions architect in this, I would say Product Managers are actually paid much higher on average and the technical ones you can loop in here.
I'm planning on being an electrical engineer. I won't make as much as any of these careers, but I'll still make a decent amount
electrical engineers make way more than this 😅
Doesn't matter if you're unemployed. 15 years of experience here with application architecture, cloud tech (ok like 7 years), PHP, c, python, rust, Java... Haven't been able to find a job in 6 months.
Why? I really want to know
@@definitelynotacringeusername you tell me. Offering?
I'm defo seeking for data security :>
Cuz I can't handle the long waits for AIs to train, just to figure out a variable was initialized wrong xD
As a Cloud Architect, I can confirm, it is a well paying job!
Damn I make more than the first two highest paying tech jobs…combined.
What do you do?
I feel like he's lowballing a little bit, but maybe that's just 'entry level' for these jobs?
I was working as senior web developer now switched to ML . It's completely challenging but I'm loving it. AI ML is future.
So, would you say there aren’t more businesses opportunities in the Web 2.0?
Why is ML the future?
By the way, how did you manage to do the transition?
@@imt3206 there are enough business opportunities ahead , you could expect for atleast a decade. Technology is always moving forward so we have to adapt .
I have started learning right from mathematics to understand the machine learning concepts. It's hard to learn consistently but no other option
@@vigneshr.3601 do you have a bachelors degree in mathematics?
@@vigneshr.3601 Also, why a decade? That means Web 2.0 is dying already
@@imt3206 yes but entire transition would take much longer . Im a computer science graduate having 7 YOE.
Devops engineer is the highest, used to be a custom-private/public (AWS focus) engineer but switched to devops bc of the higher pay. 150k offers as an architect became 190k devops offerings with the same experience.
Salaries are localized to the city cost of living. A job in San Francisco is going to pay differently than a smaller city in the middle of the country.
i want to be an AI engineer, but I am very scared when it comes to it because it's a competitive field and i don't know much about the industry. The only experience I have are some personal projects and I don't know how to get any professional experience. Any tips?
Same here. I'm really fascinated by AI and currently use it for my bachelor thesis.
My tips: get familiar with the fundamentals and math behind is and maybe even the history.
Code some simple neural networks by hand (so without using existing libraries) and maybe also a library.
Then I would progressively start more ambitious projects and when you think you're ready look for internships or Jobs.
Sorry for the spam, but I somehow couldn't comment it all at once.
Math and read ISLR
@@co9681 Hey! What is ISLE?
Me working on minimal wage as an RPA developer: I'm so close! 😤
I'm considering cardiology, but I love computers, maybe I should become a radiologist, theyre basically the programmers of the medical world. Then again, I love cardiology and I relate to the cardiologist stereotypes, and I do get to operate electrocardiographies, which are computers, but theyre pretty easy to use and read.
these numbers are an insufficiently averaged market rate obtained from a 3 second google search. pay has everything to do with location, company, and ability to negotiate (which is predicated on your skill level/fit for the role/the company's needs). throwing out numbers may catch a viewer's attention, but doesn't mean much.
That’s crazy to see these numbers because they feel a lot lower than what I’m seeing in California. Are these national averages?
Exactly, these numbers are way lower than I was expecting.
Web3 bros in the mud 💀
making a million in one year then losing two million the next
I'm from DevOps want to specialist on Cloud Arch, hope I can do it 😁
What language do you need for that ? would you advise Azure or Aws ?
@@lucaszecat I recommend using TS and using AWS
I just want to learn how to make a website and I can't even do that 😭
Buy a Udemy course from Jonas Schmedtmann. He explains it very simply
Meanwhile an Actual Architect :
Barely 50K
These people seriously undercharging this much? Man, I'm more skilled and expensive than I thought.
There is also a job called pen testers in cybersecurity industry which get paid around 150000 depending on the company
Yes please give like this video - short concept background with discussion,shorts.
Kudos to those company who created chatgpt . I can now make an essay under a minute
Can you tell about all the tech jobs in blockchain.
I am damn interested in this decentralisation thing
I just want a job with a livable salary
These have to be entry level salaries
Looks interesting but absolutely impossible for newbie like me 😢
Do you have a recommended position for beginner?
I’m honestly very indecisive. I’m wanting to get into programming bad but I don’t know what the heck I want to do. I keep looking around online but idk where to rlly start. I love the CZcams shorts Btw
Start to code then your first language isn't that important and you xan always change field. I went from raw Java to Android to Web dev(angular) to Android again. Just keep coding be consistent and it will pay off dont give up its not that hard
@@lukalukovic5082 How do you exercise coding ? I am learning python right now...
These are so wildly off what incomes I've seen. These are the average from noob to pro and not outliers.
I’ll stick to front end engineering making 95k and it’s way easier and simpler
Man we fullstack fucks have to do everything and get paid for one credit for none
The current HR definition of a Fullstack dev is "backend, frontend, security, database, monitoring, cloud infra, app developer" in 7 languages
*AND WE DONT GET TO BE ANYWHERE CLOSE TO TOP 5? AHHHHHHHHHH*
I want all, I want all of em!
I just want to be able to solve algorithms in JavaScript to be able to break into tech 😅
This is like before shares get included
I feel like cloud architec would be really hard All OF THEM sound hard
I read some c++ coders making 500k/yr in San Francisco, 25 yr old. Can you imagine? My code was so gross back then at that age. I'd like see a documentary of a guy from a developing country going cali and then making 500k, ha ha.
"They design the application without actually programming it"
Sounds like a huge inefficiency to me
I work as a Azure DevSecOps Engineer and my base salary is 50k+ above the top paying in this list could say my job consists more responsibilities then a cloud architect though. To also code the solution with infrastructure as code.
They have to study day n night, years after years for a salary of 137k bucks per year...
Le Mr. Beast, first man to touch the keyboard win 1,000,000...😅🙃
Because people also study for passion, this money centered though is so sad
first of all i want some experience in it field as I'm just a 20year old man
im entering the it field, but i have worked on many projects , so experience makes first priority to be more productive
Ayyo i was waiting for Full-Stack Developer
😂😂😂
im a software developer and all i see is jobs that offer 25k-50k a year idk how do people get these numbers
at 5k per year i'd be happy, but i would need to pay companies for them to hire me
cloud architect seems interesting, but im more focused on web dev for now, maybe move to game dev after and focus on it
Game devs make much less than web ones if im not wrong.
@@Lobby0 how much junior web dev make ?
You have to say the level. Is it entry? Then i do not know how to be an entry level architect or manager. And if those are senior the numbers seem to be low.
Right. I know a senior front end react dev making $170k in Central US.. its crazy out there
It's average man
What about full stack developer in C#/Java/Python/JavaScript? Those are my top 4 languages and I'd probably look for a job in one of those.
Meanwhile me : Having problems in learning HTML xd
i hope you mean css
@@daniel-xl2pd he means paint
I think web developers will Grow 🔥💫nin future
It's off topic with the video, to do these jobs you need master degrees or PhD
@MrHolyKindness you sure? Because I'm an AI engineer (master degree in AI engineering large scale) so I would like to know who you are, your experience, your title and your argumentation
Data Architects are almost exclusively senior level people with data engineering and business intelligence backgrounds. The presented salary is extremely low. More accurately you can demand 180k+ at that point in your career.
Full stack
these salaries are from 2013
Solo game dev. -200 to 2,000,000+. Great job for people with a gambling addiction xD
IT security managers are linking this video to 5x their salary.
Those salaries are only for US citizens. Most tech industry is outside the US and pays way less than that.
For the moment I am interested in web3
Doing Data Science rn, pretty set for high paying jobs by the looks of it
self learning ?
@@lucaszecat no doing a bachelor of data science, self learning as well on the side
Game dev: 20€ per year
Can you please tell us a roadmap to learn cyber security
It isn't this simple. You can make more than that in jobs that weren't mentioned. Not to mention none of those salaries are anywhere near what is possible
I would have thought security would pay the highest
I just want to be a full stack web developer after completing my front end development journey
It seems so low judging by how hard the jobs are. Ask for better payment.
Can you talk about different parts of coding languages paying jobs?
Meanwhile infosec with CISSP, OSCP, OSCE, CCNA, CCNP :V
That is certification that support the jobs
@@m5a1stuart83
That is certifications that adds to the pay which you may or may not need for the job
Typically the jobs that asks for those are paid highly because they are tough, not a dependency
@@uuu12343 nah, being an IT Guy is not tough guy. But those certification does help someone get higher salary.
Well as a 13 year old who just completed his frontend and backend web development course I think its good enough for me to be a full stack dev
I'm 16 year old programmer too.
I think we should connect.
@@aryan5900 Yes
don't know what hr centric place you're getting your numbers but take them all and X2 minimum for non faang x4 for faang. I loled so hard on these numbers
Sure bro. Can you buy me some Minecraft bucks?
While I understand the purpose of a comment such as this. Understand that some of us grew up on irc and bbs when the Internet was more anonymous and free... And the trolling comments were far far more cutting. Live in whatever perception wasteland you choose.
i just want to develop a software products and sale it, it's too simple 😂
Me studying data science….
Oh that’s a pretty good choice huh
U can finish data science then go for ai
i do all those-
You missed Blockchain dev for $150k
Can you do a video on requirements of each job
Studying, titles and passion
Forgot red teamers. $150-$200k a year.