Toronto Star

Forget Google: coders make a mint working for themselves

Freelancer­s with right skills emerging as the victors in escalating war for tech talent

- SELINA WANG BLOOMBERG

James Knight recently made an unorthodox career move for a 27-yearold coder: quitting a well-paid gig writing software for Google to go freelance. No more catered lunches, gold-plated benefits or milliondol­lar views from the search giant’s Manhattan office.

Knight is willing to sacrifice those perks because as an independen­t he’s pulling down about twice as much as he did at Google. Plus, he has more freedom. In March, Knight and his wife plan to travel to Spain and hopscotch across Europe — all the while writing code for a dating app and a self-portrait app, among others.

“I’d rather control my own destiny and take on the risk and forgo the benefits of nap pods and food,” Knight says.

Amid an accelerati­ng war for tech talent, big companies and startups alike are paying top dollar — as much as $1,000 an hour, according to a person who gets coders gigs — for free- lancers with the right combinatio­n of skills.

While companies still recruit many of the best minds, they’re turning to independen­t software developers to get a stalled project moving or to gain a competitiv­e edge. In some cases, the right person can be the difference between a failed and successful product.

Last spring, Aaron Rubin hired a freelance coder through recruiter Toptal for about four weeks to help get ShipHero, his cloud-based logistics startup, off the ground.

“To find someone that talented in New York in three days was never going to happen,” Rubin says. “Every talented engineer I know has a job.”

Independen­t software developers such as Knight represent an elite echelon of the so-called Gig Economy — a 53-million-strong army of freelancer­s who now account for one in three workers, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The need for coders mushroomed when the iPhone’s arrival in 2007 set off an explosion of mobile apps. Since then, software has been seeping into fridges, watches, apparel — you name it — requiring ever more people to write the underlying code.

Demand for software developers is expected to grow17 per cent between 2014 and 2024, or more than twice the average, according to the BLS, which estimates that the U.S. will have one million more informatio­n technology jobs by 2020 than computer science students.

Big companies have taken to buying entire firms just for their engineers, a practice known as acqui-hiring. Most have dedicated engineerin­g recruiters, but finding the right people can be pricey and time-consuming. So companies have turned to a host of freelance agencies that specialize in finding top-notch coders.

Five years ago, Toptal, a self-de- scribed freelance network, had 25 programmer­s on its rolls and about the same number of clients. Today it represents thousands of coders (the company won’t say exactly how many) and has more than 2,000 clients including Airbnb, Pfizer and J.P. Morgan. Rival agency 10x Management says average budgets for software-writing contracts have doubled in the past three years as the company becomes the go-to place for bigger and broader projects.

Despite accelerati­ng demand for coders, Toptal prides itself on almost Ivy League-level vetting. A virtual company with no home base, it received 15,000 applicatio­ns in the past two months and accepted fewer than 3 per cent of them, according to Taso Du Val, co-founder and chief executive officer.

Helder Silva, a software engineer from Portugal who has worked at Deloitte and other companies, made it past the first two rounds and failed during the live coding exam because he took too much time to solve one problem, even though he was on the right track.

With the tag line “genius on demand,” 10x Management typically represents about 100 software developers, though the New York-based agency receives thousands of applicatio­ns every year.

Co-founder (and former entertainm­ent manager) Rishon Blumberg likens his clients to movie stars: “The demand for Tom Cruise is very large, but the supply is very small.”

Anne Adams, 30, left a programmin­g job at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in 2013 and began freelancin­g through TopTal. Currently she’s writing car insurance software for a large U.S. insurer.

“At a company like Merrill Lynch you have to be seen by the right people doing the right thing rather than just getting on with the job you’ve been given,” she says. “You have some people contributi­ng more than others and people are operating at different levels, while at Toptal, everyone is kind of up there. So that way, you get a lot more productive.”

Knight, who left Google to work with 10x, agrees: “At Google you could probably get away with not working for six to nine months — just showing up and making it look like you’re working,” he says.

“There’s definitely a level of stress that comes with being independen­t that’s absent at Google, but I like that. I have motivation issues if I don’t think my paycheque is on the line.”

 ??  ?? Freelance coder James Knight is making twice what he did at Google.
Freelance coder James Knight is making twice what he did at Google.

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