vote up 38 vote down star
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What are the known cases where a programmer (just by programming) can become rich.

A programmer that started a company, I think, doesn't count except if he/she was not the CEO but the leader programmer.

This question, at first, may seems silly but its so fundamental as anyone else that you'll see in this site. In a given moment, a programmer must do the choice between crossover to a managerial role or keep programming just for the fun of it. And this choice affect everything else.

I was surprised at first not to see this very question being posted by younger visitors but it seems that, until today (20080807) everyone is only focused in technical facts. I firmly believe that a programmer must develop also "soft" skills and this kind of questions will be asked by newbies anyway (soon or later).


I wonder if Joel and Jeff has addressed this topic before... and I question Which is the business model for StackOverflow?

Updates:

  1. Adam says that anyone that knows how to answer this question will not be answering. But that is exactly against the soul of the my question. I want to keep programming, even testing and documenting mind you!, but also I want to go on vacation anytime. I want to share my wealth with my friend programmers and so.
  2. Greg: I'm 35 years old and I don't think is naive to ask yourself what will be your sources of wealth. Maybe the question can be rephrased to "What are the things I must do to keep being a well paid programmer by age 60" but, you surely realize, that's implicit in the much more visible question that I posted.
  3. Ballon: It seems like you read those books (there are three by same author for the same subject, right?) Can you tell us if you're rich?
  4. Tom: That's my point. From my POV it seems like the only way to increase your paycheck is by climbing the corporate ladder, that's not being a programmer anymore. Just for the record: I did just that but I miss you guys! And I'm pretty sure that the formula involve to always learn as much as you can from others, that's explain pretty well why I ask.
    EDIT: Bad news for you: I've been working for leader companies for twelve years and, although I like to think of myself as programmer, I'm not a formal programmer for eight years.
    EDIT, SORRY ME: I'm doing it pretty well... but I'm not rich. Are your friends rich?
  5. Modesty: I want to very proud of my achievements and for a weird reason, I prefer to be honest.
  6. Avenger: I was tempted to accept your reply as the truer one but I realized that we're doing this just for fun (It's not obvious?) so let's keep it rolling. Besides that I want to keep the feet on the ground :P I'm already maintaining my family but I don't have money to do flights to the International Space Station
  7. Ramiro: Muchas gracias! That's the kind of info I think we all need to keep our morale high!
  8. Well, it seems David has the right answer.
  9. Ballon: I was an enterprenuer (that means I run a startup before the word was used as it's used today) and started my own business at age 21. We grew very rapidly. Almost as fast as we broke :P
  10. Grom: Its not about to accumulate wealth. It's about to keep being a programmer (not a very good one in my case) but enjoying luxuries like flights to the International Space Station, your own Basketball team, your own archeological team, your own country, or whatever your can dream of.
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38 Answers

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vote up 47 vote down check

How to get rich:

  1. Stay out of debt
  2. Spend less than you earn
  3. Wisely invest the difference

This works no matter what your job is.

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This may not guarantee riches, but it certainly improves financial security and reduces stress. – vezult Mar 24 at 13:52
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vote up 27 vote down

Send me £20 and I will email you the answer.

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Can I get a refund? – Seventh Element Jan 29 at 21:45
vote up 20 vote down

Develop your own idea in your own space and own it yourself.

You'll never get rich as a wage-slave. It is contrary to the corporate model for them to make you richer - you are lower in the food chain. Working independently raises you in the food chain.

Solve a problem you are passionate about - you'll do a more thorough job and you'll sell it convincingly. It will help if others give a damn about the problem you just solved and the need you just met.

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vote up 11 vote down

I think you have to become a Businessman of some Sort.

Bill Gates did not become rich because of MS-DOS, he got rich because his Business-Deal with IBM. The guys who did Google, YouTube or Fecesbook did not become rich because they made good software, because they sold their software to bigger companies at some point or went to the stock exchange themselves.

So yeah, you need to have someone for the business side. And then, you need an idea. Bonus points if you live in a country where some new trends did not fully arrive yet. For example, Facebook may be HUGE in the US, but in Germany they are nowhere near StudiVZ. YouTube is big in many countries, but in France, DailyMotion got a good spot as well as they did target the French market specifically.

So if you live in a country where a recent trend did not yet fully hit, you can get rich by taking a good idea, making a clone specifically targeting your country and then sell it later, but you need a businessman in addition to a programmer.

You can also get rich by another type of Application programming. Do you know that every time there is a bank transactions, they are rounded and small fractions of a penny are simply lost? You can get rich by programming a tool that takes all these fractions of a cent and puts them on a secret bank account on some offshore bank.

Possibly the most reachable way to get rich: Work for a company that pays huge bonuses and make sure you get it.

Or start your own company, make a kick ass app and start selling it for some years, but then you also need Marketing/Customer Service/Sales.

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And then sold it to IBM for a fee per sold unit, which was brilliant. The original Developer got 50.000$ if i remember correctly, and compared to what Bill Gates made, he did not really get rich with it. – Michael Stum Sep 20 '08 at 0:12
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vote up 10 vote down

Here is my 3-step plan:

  1. Learn programming
  2. Become a good programmer
  3. Win the lottery

Personally I think 1. and 2. have the most chance of success.

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2.5 Hack the lottery – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Dec 22 '08 at 12:15
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vote up 7 vote down

Um you can't. dOnt look for the get rich quick. Do the job because you love it, and the code you produce may someday be monetizeable. Don't program to get rich, get rich by programming.

When I program I am doing what I love, so I am rich, even though my bank account is near empty.

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vote up 6 vote down

I think it depends on your perspective.

If by getting rich you mean living on your own island with a fleet of private jets - you won't do that by being a programmer. The best you can hope for is that somehow you get a shareholding in a company that makes it big and makes you rich with it - but even then it's likely that you'll have to be more than just a programmer.

However, if by being rich you mean not having to work for a living, then that is entirely possible if you're willing to put the work in and make a few sacrifices in the short term. I can wholeheartedly reccommend buying a copy of "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" - it'll change the way you look at 'being rich'.

EDIT: Guess I should've seen that question coming! Yes - I have read the Rich Dad, Poor Dad books and no - I'm not rich (in monetary terms) - YET. I'm 29 and I own and run a small internet development company (there are currently 7 of us full-time). Despite the books title, the value I got from it was in terms of it changing my attitude towards money. It isn't a get-rich-quick scheme!

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vote up 6 vote down

Its easy

  1. Become a good programmer with an original idea
  2. ????
  3. Profit
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vote up 6 vote down

Look... you can't get hyper-rich without taking risks. Risk-reward is how the world works; the more risk you're willing the to take, the larger the possible reward. This applies to any field. You can continue programming but if you want to get rich off it you need to be doing something that's high risk. Lots of people can develop guru-level programming skills, the few that are willing to find a high risk scenario are the group that will have a subset who gets rich.

It could be taking your programming skills and starting your own company. It could be going to a startup and working for stock for four years while you live off your savings. It could be working 90 hours/week for nothing while you build something to get accepted to TechCrunch50 or Y-Combinator. But at some point you need to take some risk, just like any other part of the free market.

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vote up 5 vote down
  1. Make application.
  2. Make application popular.
  3. Sell application to large software company for obscene amount.
  4. Profit!
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vote up 5 vote down

Come up with some stupid brilliant idea like the Million Dollar Homepage. They only work once though.

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vote up 5 vote down

If any of the people here knew the answer to that question...I doubt we'd be hanging out on SO, we'd be retired on a beach somewhere.

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What about retired on a beach somewhere with with wireless internet, hanging out on SO? – Dave Sherohman Feb 8 at 15:13
vote up 4 vote down

Interestingly enough, Stu's model seems to be the model of a lot of the big name stuff nowadays. It starts out as some kind of grad project or hobby, gets popular, and then is immediately sold off to a big corporation who puts an advertising model on it or something to that extent to milk some cash. The big name app survives for a few years, until it turns lousy due to corporate ignorance, over advertising on the product, or the "2.0" version of the app is created by a rival that effectively unseats it, and the model starts all over again.

It's a double edged sword. I mean if you had some small app or web site that you loved and then somebody walked up to you with a million bucks to take it from you, what would you do? Sure the purist in you says "heck no!" or "only if X, Y, and X occurs", but at the same time, that pays a lot of bills and you can always start on another hobby app in the meantime.

...well that's my 10 bits at least. 8^D

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vote up 4 vote down

I guess there aren't may millonarie programmers, but a very famous one is Charles Simonyi, the father of Office. He was a programmer at Xerox Labs in Palo Alto before going to Microsoft. There he lead the Word and Excel teams.

By the time he quit from Microsoft he was a millonaire (thanks to all the stock options he received as a Microsoft employee). Now he is a CEO of his own company, but he was rich before doing that.

PS. By the way, he do has enough money to travel to the space station, jeje.

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vote up 4 vote down

What's more important to you getting rich or enjoying what you do?

As long as I can pay the bills and put food on the table, and go on a holiday every now and then I'm quite happy to continue programming.

Quit worrying about how to become rich and just enjoy life.

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vote up 4 vote down

You can't, because it takes a lot more than programming to earn money. The people who can enjoy "luxuries like flights to the International Space Station, your own Basketball team, your own archeological team, your own country, or whatever your can dream of" never sat down and did just one thing.

They did a lot of stuff other than, say, program, or trade stocks or what not. Many of them have vast pools of people that they manage and those people are the ones doing the variety of tasks that comprise of the system to create wealth, which in turns allows the rich person to enjoy owning whatever they own.

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vote up 3 vote down

If you are lucky enough to snag good projects that are moderately easy to finish, but will bring you a lot of money then you could become a Freelance Developer

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vote up 3 vote down

If you're 35 and still wondering what your sources of wealth will be, you're unfortunately running a bit late. The best advice I've heard is to keep working your way up the corporate ladder; when you reach the highest programming position at one company, move on to another with more resources and pay grades. But even then, you're not going to make the salary an executive will, no matter how good you are.

EDIT: I'm not saying you have to become an executive, just that you have to keep moving up...I work for a smaller company at the moment, and the maximum pay I could get is nowhere near where I'd like, so I'll probably have to switch jobs in the future to a bigger company with more resources and bigger customers. I'm still going to be a programmer, mind you, but in greener pastures.

EDIT AGAIN, SORRY: I know personally 2 individuals around your age working in the US as developers for major companies who make very substantial amounts of money. Seems to me that research and finance are very profitable areas.

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vote up 3 vote down

One way would be to become a programmer on a successful product for which you receive a share of the sales. It would be tempting to become more than a programmer, and probably most people in this situation do so, but it doesn't have to be essential.

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vote up 3 vote down

You have to be great and you have to surround yourself with people that will do the business side.

John Carmack is the closest thing to this that I know of.

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vote up 3 vote down

Love what you do.

If you really love what you're doing, the money will follow.

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Nah, it won't... – Seventh Element Jan 29 at 21:49
vote up 3 vote down

Easy:

  1. Write a program that many people are willing to pay money for, or a few are willing to pay a lot of money for.
  2. Find a hungry young MBA and offer her X percentage of your company if she is willing to run it.
  3. Collect the the (100-X)% of the profit.

If the money stops coming in, goto 1.

I believe the only hard part is in step 1. Not the programming part, the coming up with the idea part. It is surprisingly hard to figure out what stuff people will actually pay for. I mean, ringtones are a freaking $500M market. Ringtones! People pay for ringtones and they won't pay for firefox.

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vote up 2 vote down

You really can't go into the software industry looking to get rich quick. I find this attitude to be way too common among fellow students where I go to school. They hear that programming (usually) pays well, so they think it's a shortcut to success. As a result, they have no initiative to really learn what they're doing and ultimately aren't too successful.

If you're really interested in what you do, chances are the money will come as a nice side effect.

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vote up 2 vote down

I just want to respond to your updates. I think that you worded the question in a way that made us all think you were looking for the "get rich Quick" answer. What you really mean is how can you land a killer job with huge salary that is still doing what you love, programming. Unfortunately, there aren't a lot of ways to do that. Have a killer idea, build it, popularize it, then reap the ad benefits. Or make something you can sell. but all of that requires doing it on your own time. There really is no way in the current world to get that millions-a-year salary that we would all like and still be doing what we love, in order to reach that, you have to be more business side of it. (How much programming do you think Larry Page and Sergey Brin do today?)

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vote up 2 vote down

Make what is considered impossible...and the rest will follow.

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vote up 2 vote down

What is it to be rich? http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/rich

http://www.globalrichlist.com/

Some more reading about Wealth, and Riches below. Sorry for the United States bias in the links below. Barak Obama, says > $250,000 annual income; John McCain jokingly said > $5,000,000 annual income.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_inequality http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_income_in_the_United_States

What is Rich -- MSN Article

Do what you love, work to make it profitable! And, always improve your "soft" and "hard" skills! Knowledge is important, and so are relationships!

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vote up 2 vote down

Work for a small but growing employee owned company. I did this myself. Started when the company was 150, left when it was 2500. I stayed for 11 years, and kept being given stock. I still own every share I was given, and the company is almost 5000 people.

You have to be very selective with the company you pick, though.

Second best choice is to start your own company. Much riskier, but much better reward potential.

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vote up 2 vote down

Runescape was started by Java developer Andrew Gower. To this day he is he lead programmer with a net worth of 200-300 million dollars.

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vote up 1 vote down

@ggasp:

I think your question is probably being downmodded because most programmers believe that without a great deal of luck (or skill), your odds of being independently wealthy by virtue of being (just) a programmer are very low. You have to be working at the right company at the right time, and even then, nothing is guaranteed.

Others might also believe that if you're asking about the money, then you're not into programming as a career because you like it; you're in it to be financially successful.

I personally believe that, while being rich would be great, as long as I have enough money to take care of my family, I'm "rich enough". As such, my goal is to get a job programming, which I enjoy, at a company that makes me happy (good coworkers, fast computers, fun and interesting projects) and making enough money to do what I like (assuming decent market conditions, enough time to save up for big vacations, etc.).

(BTW, I also recommend Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Not that I've used all the techniques in the book, but it certainly got me thinking about money in a different way, and that's never a bad thing.)

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vote up 1 vote down

Some companies, such as Microsoft, have career tracks for people that are not interested in management but want to remain technical leaders. Mark Russinovich is one such example. Of course you need the talent and experience to obtain these exec-like technical roles.

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