Current CTO exploring entrepreneurship on the side; coach; mentor; instructor.
Dedicated to promoting digital literacy and ideological diversity in tech.
Remote is a lot trickier, and really depends on the structure of the organization.
remote junior Devs are a bit trickier, as the most difficult part in our experience is onboarding and orientation, which is significantly easier to manage locally.
We probably wouldn't hire a remote dev, but would be open to hiring a local dev and giving them the option to work remotely once they're sufficiently equipped to work with our solutions.
But that friction is going to vary from organization to organization, and the financial benefits are still there, so as a rule, I'd still continue to hire junior Devs, yes.
Thanks for your answer, Brandin!
It's great to hear that you have a whole system set up to onboard and mentor juniors.
What if they're remote though. Do you consider such candidates and does the remote coaching work for you?
Remote is a lot trickier, and really depends on the structure of the organization.
remote junior Devs are a bit trickier, as the most difficult part in our experience is onboarding and orientation, which is significantly easier to manage locally.
We probably wouldn't hire a remote dev, but would be open to hiring a local dev and giving them the option to work remotely once they're sufficiently equipped to work with our solutions.
But that friction is going to vary from organization to organization, and the financial benefits are still there, so as a rule, I'd still continue to hire junior Devs, yes.
Got it, I totally see why hiring remote junior devs might be tricky. Thanks for explaining that! ✨