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Having worked in software development for 12 years, I've recently started to worry about ageism in the industry. Seeing I'm not too bad at what I do I've never really worried about where my next job's going to come from, but the more I look around me the younger software developers seem to get.

Although I feel I'm now at the top of my programming game, I have some management experience and I'm now wondering if I should make a fully-fledged leap from development to ensure future career security.

I know ageism has traditionally be linked with the IT industry, but given modern employment law makes discrimination illegal, is ageism still a real problem for software developers? Or are my aging neurons deluding me?

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as usual, "it depends"

it depends on the person, not just their age

i have met brilliant developers in their early 20s who didn't have a clue about customer service, user focus, or the benefits of testing; some of them cannot hold a conversation with another person that is non-technical. These guys are excellent coders when given a precise box to fill. Just don't ask them to define the box.

i have met age 40+ developers who absolutely did not want to learn anything new, whether it was languages, tools, techniques, or even the names of the 20-something guys on the team. These are probably the guys DrPizza is complaining about. I hope. Some of them are still decent coders in their own realm, but that realm is shrinking and getting less relevant every day, which makes them even more cranky.

for younger developers, here are two questions:

  • are you a better programmer this year than you were last year?
  • do you expect to continue learning and improving year by year?

if the answer to both of these questions is yes, and we assume that most developers feel this way, then by logical induction it holds that older programmers are in general better than younger programmers - as long as they have kept up with the technologies that matter to your company.

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I find it funny that some of the posters seem to imply that age doesn't matter in terms of the quality of the code they produce. If you're older, you have a wider and deeper experience, which does allow you to make better decisions and write better software, you've made more mistakes in the past, youv'e had more time to get your head wrapped around some of the important problems. Granted, if you're young you can whip out the syntax all the same, but that's certainly only a small part of software development, design and planification mistakes are extremely costly in the business of building complexity. Also, while it is true that some of an older dev's experience is obsoleted by new technologies, much of the spirit of these things doesn't change. That's why it's good to know the fundamental stuff very well, because there is much power in recognizing bad reinventions of older things better though out. Everyone should be familiar with the power of LISP, for example, and relational databases.

I for one believe that I'm getting better and better with age, and I don't foresee this stopping anytime soon. A potential problem is that some of the people who are in charge of hiring in large firms don't understand what it takes to get good developers on board--they see them as replaceable monkeys, because they are so far from understanding what they do.

In summary: older developers have more experience, and thus are more likely to produce better software. Note that "more likely" is not a guarantee of "better". Some young people are talented, the problem with it is that it is a non-obvious judgement call to make.

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I think if age (too young, too old) overshadows your capabilities in any way, it's not a healthy situation. As soon as perception is interfering with reality it becomes an issue of culture within the organization.

In terms of worrying, all I have tried to do is make sure I put lots of praise and recognition on others.

Most of it might not find it's way back, but, the key is to find out who will be quick to share the blame and quick to take more than their share of their credit.

Young stars often get treated poorly for being bright, young, and single and having the extra hours to put in that their more experienced colleagues no longer do, which is fine. Everyone's gotta pay their price on the experience train.

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Ageism is out there: I remember being a developer in my late 20s sitting in an open plan area next to my 30-something manager. He was on the phone to a recruitment agency looking for more developers. "Don't send me anyone over 30. If they haven't made manager by 30 they can't be any good". I promptly resolved to quit (OK there were other reasons too). Funnily enough, shortly before I was gone there was a reorganization and a bunch of 40+ "company old guard" developers were assigned to our team. My ageist manager simply couldn't deal with them; he couldn't even interact with them without a lengthy roundabout "hows the wife and kids ?" preamble.

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As a developer pushing 50, I can't hold DrPizza's obvious lack of experience and mental acuity against him. After all, it wouldn't be fair to pick on a kid.

Oh, what the hell - here's DrPizza in a nutshell: "if you are good at something, you won't keep doing it."

How do these statements sound to you?

  • "If you are still performing surgery in your 40s you are almost certainly a bad doctor."

  • "If you are still representing clients in court in your 40s you are almost certainly a bad lawyer."

Of course it helps to have more to your career than just slinging code as you reach your 40s and 50s if only because there are so many people like Dr.Pizza there. But I'd have no problem hiring another developer at my age as long as they still loved the field.

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It's a huge problem in my life. I've developed videogames for over 25 years ... recently I had some cardiac trouble, and had to take a month medical leave of absence from my current employer (unpaid). The third day of my leave, I was notified that I had been fired. It's very VERY difficult to find meaningful work as a developer in a field where the average age is 25. Nobody wants to bother with you .. why should they?

In the videogame business, anybody over 40 is looked at with suspicion and doubt. It's pretty much always been that way. After my most recent experience, I'm deciding to not work in the field anymore.

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im glad to have seen this.. i share your sentiment as i am also in the IT industry for a dozen years now, and ive started asking myself the same things...

in the past 5 years i've been doing both administrative and technical tasks. i just couldn't leave programming and all that crazy stuff behind. although management is as challenging as coding, but my heart and passion still longs for doing the dirty work..

my stand is if we can do both, we've got an edge. not everyone can excel @ managing people and doing technical tasks @ the same time. with age comes wisdom and i guess that's our edge over the newbies. if the passion for newer things are there, don't lose it. if higher opportunities comes our way, lets consider them! even steve jobs and bill gates has to pass the baton...

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Software engineering as a job really started mainstream in the late 70's. The web wasn't around until around '92 commercially. The reason that you only see young people (I was one of them in 1994 at 19 (33 now)) is because it is a young market. The oldest software engineeer you will see is around 50 (if they were 20 in the late 70's early 80's). The web is really even younger. The oldest web programmer you will see is about just under 40 if you consider real web development started in the early 90s. So just by the distribution you will see these patterns.

Even game development which I am in now, I see guys a bit older because it is a bit more mature, but still it is related the the age of the industry as well. Game development really started in the 80s.

So being programmers and analysts I hope people realize why they see these patterns, but there is something to be said about ageism due to this trend and the type of work programming as seen is. In fact the US needs to shake that and treat engineers better like japan, see Honda for that. Finance guys and marketing guys are needed and skills also needed, but so is real value creation and innovation via engineering.

With that said, programmers should have the desire to start their own thing or throw in some time in their 30s-40s if they want to code what they want to. But you should also have business, marketing, management and entrepreneurial skills by then. Not to mention more psychology, HCI and monetization capabilities in your work.

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Entrepreneurship is to succeed in life. Employment is to survive in life.

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What to do with the case when a developer loves to develop and has a senior position when he both codes and does some other staff?

I do not believe that a managerial position where instead of solving code puzzles you solve political puzzles is much better. Unless there is a huge increase in the salary, it might not be worth it.

Developer guys (both junior and senior) can leave the office at 5 and devote the time to their families and hobbies. Management staff often hardly ever notices it is a weekend now.

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I'm 49 and I'm a programmer.

Well actually I'm a DBA, IT consultant and Business Analyst too. But in my heart I'm a coder - and I think I'm getting better with age. And I make a nice living at it, thank you - but I put a lot of effort into setting myself up that way.

There has always been ageism in IT. I entered commercial IT relatively late in my mid-20 after being a research scientist (biological - but writing scientific code for analysis). WHen I went to move jobs at 28 looking for an Analyst/Programmer job one recruitment company told me I was 'too old'.

Ha. Since then I've done a rollercoaster so far as coding is concerned - followed the big corporate trail up though systems analyst to project manager by my mid-30s before deciding a really missed coding. Went to a small organisation as senior developer then morphed into DBA for 7 years - but started writing code at home which grew contacts and income until I started running my own consultancy a little over 10 years ago. I purposely don't grow larger because I don't want to spend my time managing other people having fun writing code, but I do have a large network of other consultants in complementary fields (graphics, management consultancy etc) I can collaborate with.

My clients are nearly all in the SME sector, most I talk to the boss directly and they no or limited development support inhouse. Age in this case is an advantage as experience with systems in business means that people trust me as I can both deliver software, and deliver the right software for the business context. There is something awfully satisfying about being able to go to a client and say 'you need to spend $10k on this hardware and software development to support this' and the client does it because they trust your abilities and the experience you bring to recommend that decision.

So I spend about 50% of my time writing code, 25% doing 'business IT consultancy' and 25% general purpose IT to support that - for instance several of the systems I've developed for my clients are web based - and I run the web servers to host them.

And lastly it's a great job for fitting with family life and commitments. I have my office in the house (large room, lots of computers and screens) and I work probably 10 hours a day, but it fits with family. I've been at home when my kids were small and when they've come back from school as they've grown older. I don't even have to be in one place - last week I had to see a client on site at the same city when my son is a student, so I go in, see my client at lunchtime, sit in Starbucks all afternoon coding on my laptop, then take him out for dinner. Perfect mix :-)

So ageism - phah. Ageism is only a problem if you associate with people who are ageist - and as a society we're growing older and many of those older people who do have work going are not going to be comfortable with giving it to ageist whippersnappers like DrPizza. There's plenty of opportunity for older developers, but you have to play to the strength of the experience you've accumulated and adapt. If you don't learn new technologies and stay excited by what's happening then that's your problem, not ageism.

Myself I see myself coding until I drop. I'm actually looking forward to being more flexible as I get older - when all the kids have left home we've plans to equip a camper-van with all the tech I need and wander around europe nomadically for a year or three working remotely as needed.

Coding is the best occupation ever invented. Who on earth would want to give it up?

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I'm 39. I have been involved in hiring some people who were less than 26. I found that common negative traits amongst them included:

  • Failure to design their code before writing it
  • Failure to write documentation
  • Failure to prove that their algorithms are correct
  • Failure to study the problem domain
  • Too quick to partially learn a tool, then stop learning it
  • ... And then using that tool for every problem they see, even if it is not a good fit
  • Not good at understanding the 'Big Picture' of a system design
  • Not good at understanding and maintaining old shipping code.

Some of the positive traits were:

  • Worked hard, often willing to put in overtime for free, even getting close to burnout
  • Worked for much less $$$ than someone more experienced
  • Get easily excited over a project

Of course these are all generalizations, but with many of the younger people I've worked with they ring true.

All applicants must prove to me that they have mature development skills. Mature development skills are less likely to be found in an immature developer.

--jeffk++

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i'm now 28;i 'm also worying about future..technology chances so faster and expirence is less important than dynamism in software industry

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Age discrimination is a very real problem, especially for programming jobs. The way I see it, you can complain about it, or acknowledge it and try your best to mitigate the risk of being screened out based on your hair color (or lack of it).

I wrote this article dicussiong some specific strategies for both managers and job hunters who are concerned about the issue.

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I once supervised a guy near retirement age, and after a lifetime of working on operating systems and compilers, he was a very strong developer able to create ultra clean and reliable code. He'd done consulting and supervision earlier on, but his love for software pulled him back. Also in my group was a woman in her early 50s who was another very fine developer (we wrote a compiler). I've had the chance to work with many 40+ technology workers at places like IBM's T.J Watson lab, SRI, Unisys, Groupe Bull (including guys who worked on Multics!), Oracle, etc. and they all brought loads of experience, common sense, and responsibility to the table. Heck I've even seen older folks doing startups and working at Google.

Companies that have a good mix of older, younger, and in-between workers can be great places to work and learn from each other. Companies that strive to find the least expensive programmers can't be doing anything exciting enough to interest SO readers.

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I'm in the same boat (41 years old, 17 years programming), and have asked myself the same questions lately. I'll assume that you, like me, enjoy programming and solving problems. Despite the economy, I'm actually pretty positive about the prospects for "seasoned programmers".

First of all, if you're good at what you do, there will always be a place and an opportunity for you. Will it show up on your doorstep, or your Inbox? Probably not. But good companies will always need talent, regardless of whether it's 25 or 50 years old. The trick is to find these companies (or start one yourself). The problem is, large swaths of the IT job market consist of CRUD programming in OfficeSpace-type cubicle hells. Technology is often a bolted-on afterthought at these companies, and they'll want to fill up the bottoms of their org charts with the cheapest keyboard monkeys they can find. I would argue that shops like this are not viable long-term career options, regardless of what the happy representative from HR says in the Career Development newsletter. Look for smaller software-specific companies; find somebody with a niche requirement that you satisfy. If you've got the technical chops for it, swing for the fences and look at Amazon, Google, or Microsoft. Hit LinkedIn and work your network. What have you got to lose?

Another reason I'm optimistic is that the computer industry is undergoing a sea change right now. New languages are popping up and becoming popular, new technologies are being announced regularly, and the whole way that applications are being designed is changing with Agile development, automated testing, and apps being "moved to the cloud". Lots of software technology is so new that everybody is starting off from Square One. In this case, a 22-year-old pup (who may not have even taken a Data Structures class in college) has no advantage over you, save perhaps in his willingness to work 80 hours a week. And real software companies know that they'd rather get 40 hours of quality code from a good programmer, rather than 80 hours of bad code from a hack. What would you rather have for dinner tonight, a succulent six-ounce tenderloin, or fifty undercooked White Castles?

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Obviously age discrimination is rampant. This is one reason why any kind of IT career is a huge mistake. Add to that the desire to purge companies of American workers and you have a real nightmare scenario for an older American programmer, no matter how good he (or she) may be. There is no remedy in sight so my best advice is try to pick something that you can still be doing when you are much older and where your experience actually makes you more valuable.

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The perception of age can be an issue, but this is part of the whole cat and mouse game that is getting a job. Some people really like writing code and just want to be left to do that and are happy with it. Rare, certainly but such people exist. The challenge of being a certain age may be that an employer could wonder, "How will this person still be here 5 years from now?" which can probably be answered in a number of ways really.

I've almost got 12 years experience and one thing worth noting to my mind is how the field continues to expand into new areas. For example, 20 years ago there wasn't a world wide web but look at all the jobs and companies that exist because there is such a thing like Google and Amazon.com to name a couple of the easier ones. What big companies will cloud computing create? Will IT security and practices be regulated to such an extent that there will be firms that do IT audits just like what is done with financials in US publicly traded companies?

I tend to look around and see opportunity as well as ponder what roles do I want to have in an organization and does my dream job have a name yet. For example, if someone really likes planning things but not necessarily managing projects, there may be some IT strategic architect-type position out there that will get a name eventually. Look how long it took for CIOs to exist as a title and directors within IT may have a similar challenge.

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