You nailed it: there is power in that mutual gesture - it creates a bond that pushes both parties to work through challenges instead of just noping out with a break up. There's a reason they call it "tying the knot".
Source: A 40-year old who has no interest in marriage and only saw it as an "antiquated social construct" when I was younger. I learned there's more to it.
The transparency is great and is clearly a value-add for candidates, IMO.
But the salary simply does not compete with HCOL Startup Senior+ Engineers (around 20- 40% lower than Staff level).
That said, Oxide is in a unique class of startups that can still hire strong talent despite this pay deficit (whether due to an exceptional product, team, technical challenge, or other rare attribute). I know a Software Engineer who just took a 25% pay cut to join a construction analytics SaaS startup because he has heard his brother (a Surveyor) complain specifically about problems this company's solving!
I was actually completely unaware of Oxide's or Bryan's existence until yesterday - I had no clue they were both known on here, let alone so popular!
I'm just an HN user who was browsing jobs, found this one that listed the exact salary (with this link to their philosophy) - I had never seen this approach before and wanted to hear what HN felt about it.
This is roughly the Senior (5-10 YOE) salary range at Bay Area startups post-Series A.
Staff-level or higher starts at around $230K and occasionally reaches $275K.
The salary data comes from researching roughly 250 Bay Area startups. I'm personally defining startups as some combination of: Series A - D, founded post-2015, less than 100 Engineers.
Thanks for explaining! For future reference: would it have been OK if the post had the same title, but I left the URL box empty and placed the URL in the Text box along with a few sentences for context?
I'm sorry for any trouble I caused here. I have no affiliation with the company, but just came across this company/its post and thought "Interesting! I wonder what HN readers will think."
This is very polarizing and seems to be a cultural issue. Americans and westernized cultures are appalled at its selfishness, while many Asian cultures are accustomed to this totally normal and expected part of the closer family unit.
We don't know the context though. Some people are responsible and have kids when they're doing fine financially, but then unexpected hardships happen. They don't deserve to be blamed in hindsight.
>You're somewhat stuck anyway for companies that don't post jobs.
Good news on this front. I have manually compiled a limited tech stack DB for roughly 5,000 US startups over the last decade (limited because it only has Frontend and Backend languages/frameworks for each company). Much of this data is current too, thanks to the 2021 boom in jobs. And the majority of startups either share their technologies in job descriptions by simply listing them or alluding to them, with fun statements like "we welcome skills in Python, Ruby, or JavaScript/Node.js (but Ruby would be ideal)." It's big tech companies that are more likely to be vague, because you could end up being hired into one of a multitude of product groups using different technologies.
On a side note: the second Ruby example is one reason scraping will be insufficient, and why language-specific job seekers pull their hair out using most job boards. If you search for Python positions, that Ruby company will pop up because it has the word Python.
If this was a viable idea, then I'd really need to get deeper into the stack (i.e. "preferred" experience with technologies like AWS, RabbitMQ, Spark, etc). This is crucial, allowing a hiring manager or recruiter not just the data to hit the basic requirements in candidate sourcing, but exceed them by delivering those "pluses." But I digress. Perhaps I would wait to see if this idea even has legs before committing to the time investment of digging for these "secondary" technologies.
Actually, disregard my question - I decided to just do the Apollo Basic trial and view the Technologies in the Advanced Search.
It's limited to cloud providers, as you mentioned, and just a few other tools (only one or two being tangentially related to the tech stack data needed for the idea presented it my post).
It's a bummer, because I would like this product to already exist!
Source: A 40-year old who has no interest in marriage and only saw it as an "antiquated social construct" when I was younger. I learned there's more to it.