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When someone tells you that they're a "Senior Software Developer @ XYZ Corp." , what do they really mean:

  1. They've done many jobs of that type before
  2. They're actually senior by age to other developers
  3. They just aced a really tough interview
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They are old. ;>) – Kenny Oct 3 at 14:50
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They are Spanish male developers, Si Señor >:) – Pascal Thivent Oct 3 at 14:53

8 Answers

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That depends on the definition that the company he works for gives him, so it's subjective.

In our company, for someone to have earned this title, it means he's a seasoned developer with experience and a proven track record of being trusted, and good at what he does. The title has little to do with age or seniority, and more to do with skill and maturity.

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Does this experience have to be "formal"? ie. at other jobs? – aviraldg Oct 3 at 14:53
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In general, it's meaningless. See The Senior System Administrators.

In some companies it may have very specific meanings, but you'd need to have a deep understanding of that particular company's corporate culture.

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It means virtually NOTHING unless you know the context of the company they work for.

Typically, it is a prefix that matches pay scale or experience and starts at associate, to staff, to senior, to lead, to principle, to head.

Practically speaking, you can't expect to match it up with technical competence. Some people are really into titles but I would prefer fewer meaningless titles myself.

I think that in the best of all possible worlds, one's title would be one's name.

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"one's title would be one's name" - or the 'Mr.' or 'Mrs.' etc that we tend to put before the name in more formal situations. – akf Oct 3 at 15:17
What I'm getting at is that what may be considered a "senior" at one company, is not really comparable to the same in other companies. For example, in a 5 person start-up someone might be plainly titled "software engineer". Does that mean this person has less capability/value/experience than a "senior" in company of 5000 people? Absolutely not. But sadly, now lots of start-ups are giving everyone the title of "VP"-- ridiculous. I think it is better to forget about silly fine-grained attributes of titles and instead evaluate the person and what they've done. – Angelo Oct 3 at 15:29
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The age of the developer itself does not make anyone 'Senior'. It may happen that someone is being a 'senior software engineer/developer' and someone else (a little bit older) is just a 'software developer'. The type of interview also should not make any difference. The difference should be experience. I think people usually are being considered as a senior software devs when having 5+ commercial (full-time) experience.

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It is all about the money, read this, find the place where you are, and decide if you are one of them :)

And this question should be community wiki, i believe.

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It means that their employer considers them either:

  • more experienced in the technology than their coworkers
  • suitably experienced with a longer tenure than their coworkers
  • paid a salary that puts them in the 'senior developer' bracket

or all of the above.

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To me, it can be a combination of a few things:

  1. They've been there longer compared to some other team members.
  2. They have more experience (might also imply age).
  3. They have more responsibilities, such as managing project, instead of day-to-day "grunt" work.
  4. They have a say in the direction of the projects, if not the company's.

But again, depending on the company they are working for, the job description will vary.

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vote up 1 vote down

It generally refers to a Software Developer that has a lot of experience (which can come with age) and differentiates the developer from a "Junior" developer. In larger companies/teams, people like to have differentiating job titles and show some kind of natural heriarchy. Most of the time Senior developers have earned that title through experience.

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