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You could might never get to the top of the developers ladder. But to me it does not really matter much.

However if you go to the proper courses, will refresh your skills and get some real programming experience under your belt you could leverage your business experience to become an analyst or a project manager.

I would recommend getting some industrial courses/certifications over any 'academic' degrees if you want to get a real job. Being an MCP (Microsoft Certified Professional) for example would help much more to get a job as developer than being a BS. They are not really helpful in term of real-world knowledge but they give you a healthy dose of theory and more importantly they are highly appreciated by the recruiting agencies (at least in UK)

Getting the first developer job will be tough without prior experience. But that's where a certificate might help really nicely. Also try to use your connections to see if there is any job opening at a friendly company who will judge you for who you are, not for your CV profile

show/hide this revision's text 1

You could never get to the top of the developers ladder. But to me it does not really matter much.

However if you go to the proper courses, will refresh your skills and get some real programming experience under your belt you could leverage your business experience to become an analyst or a project manager.

I would recommend getting some industrial courses/certifications over any 'academic' degrees if you want to get a real job. Being an MCP (Microsoft Certified Professional) for example would help much more to get a job as developer than being a BS.

Getting the first developer job will be tough without prior experience. But that's where a certificate might help really nicely. Also try to use your connections to see if there is any job opening at a friendly company who will judge you for who you are, not for your CV profile