I highly recommend the “X who programs” path-it helped me increase my earnings by about 150% over the course of 2 years. It was substantially more useful than concentrating solely on my programming skills or marketing/risk/statistics skills.
Sure. The gist of it is that I worked in fields like marketing and analytics which were high-impact, but where people spent a lot of time doing things manually (this was ~5 years ago-there’s a lot more automation in these sections of companies today.) I wasn’t the best marketer or the best programmer, but I realized a lot of things that people did every week could be automated. So I automated those tasks, saving a lot of man-hours for a lot of very expensive people. Lather, rinse, repeat. It’s very easy to make the case for an 80% salary increase when you’ve just completely automated 4 jobs.
Today there is a term for this role-”growth hacker.” But in general, if you work in an environment where not much automation has already been done, then automation is massively valuable. I’ve saved/earned companies millions of dollars with awful code that happened to solve the business problem.
Heh, now I feel silly for not noticing your username… I actually linked to the Quora question where you left an answer in my original comment. Thanks for the info!
I highly recommend the “X who programs” path-it helped me increase my earnings by about 150% over the course of 2 years. It was substantially more useful than concentrating solely on my programming skills or marketing/risk/statistics skills.
Cool! Can you give us details?
Sure. The gist of it is that I worked in fields like marketing and analytics which were high-impact, but where people spent a lot of time doing things manually (this was ~5 years ago-there’s a lot more automation in these sections of companies today.) I wasn’t the best marketer or the best programmer, but I realized a lot of things that people did every week could be automated. So I automated those tasks, saving a lot of man-hours for a lot of very expensive people. Lather, rinse, repeat. It’s very easy to make the case for an 80% salary increase when you’ve just completely automated 4 jobs.
Today there is a term for this role-”growth hacker.” But in general, if you work in an environment where not much automation has already been done, then automation is massively valuable. I’ve saved/earned companies millions of dollars with awful code that happened to solve the business problem.
I’ve written this up in a bit more detail on Quora and on Hacker News
Heh, now I feel silly for not noticing your username… I actually linked to the Quora question where you left an answer in my original comment. Thanks for the info!