DZone
Thanks for visiting DZone today,
Edit Profile
  • Manage Email Subscriptions
  • How to Post to DZone
  • Article Submission Guidelines
Sign Out View Profile
  • Post an Article
  • Manage My Drafts
Over 2 million developers have joined DZone.
Log In / Join
Refcards Trend Reports
Events Video Library
Refcards
Trend Reports

Events

View Events Video Library

Zones

Culture and Methodologies Agile Career Development Methodologies Team Management
Data Engineering AI/ML Big Data Data Databases IoT
Software Design and Architecture Cloud Architecture Containers Integration Microservices Performance Security
Coding Frameworks Java JavaScript Languages Tools
Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks
Culture and Methodologies
Agile Career Development Methodologies Team Management
Data Engineering
AI/ML Big Data Data Databases IoT
Software Design and Architecture
Cloud Architecture Containers Integration Microservices Performance Security
Coding
Frameworks Java JavaScript Languages Tools
Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance
Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks

Enterprise AI Trend Report: Gain insights on ethical AI, MLOps, generative AI, large language models, and much more.

2024 Cloud survey: Share your insights on microservices, containers, K8s, CI/CD, and DevOps (+ enter a $750 raffle!) for our Trend Reports.

PostgreSQL: Learn about the open-source RDBMS' advanced capabilities, core components, common commands and functions, and general DBA tasks.

AI Automation Essentials. Check out the latest Refcard on all things AI automation, including model training, data security, and more.

Related

  • How To Manage Decision Fatigue in Remote Software Development
  • Being a Backend Developer Today Feels Harder Than 20 Years Ago
  • Build Your Own Programming Language
  • Maximizing Developer Efficiency and Productivity in 2024: A Personal Toolkit

Trending

  • BPMN 2.0 and Jakarta EE: A Powerful Alliance
  • Building a Performant Application Using Netty Framework in Java
  • Sprint Anti-Patterns
  • Initializing Services in Node.js Application
  1. DZone
  2. Culture and Methodologies
  3. Career Development
  4. Another Trick To Find Remote Jobs

Another Trick To Find Remote Jobs

Prove you're the right person for the job AND underscore the inherently remote nature of the work. It gives hiring managers the ammunition they need to make the argument.

By 
Leon Adato user avatar
Leon Adato
·
Mar. 11, 24 · Opinion
Like (1)
Save
Tweet
Share
1.6K Views

Join the DZone community and get the full member experience.

Join For Free

Recently someone asked me if one of the jobs I had shared (something I do every week) was open to remote folks. While I work hard to ensure my weekly list of jobs only includes remote-friendly opportunities, this particular role was listed as being in-office.

However, I offered the following advice based on my personal experience and what I’ve seen from other folks over the years: Even when a job is listed as being “in office,” it’s still possible to get the company to consider a remote employee. 

Like so many things in business, a lot of it has to do with when you ask, and how you make your case. 

Here’s the specific advice I offered to this person. I hope this helps you, too. If you have additional tricks, comments, questions, or kudos, feel free to leave them in the comments below.

You’re best bet is to apply and see how far the conversation gets.

I know that sounds both random and setting yourself up for failure, but hear me out:

In the “before times” (pre-pandemic) I had been a remote worker for over 10 years. This was the strategy  I’d developed over the years (given that almost nobody advertised for remote jobs). I would apply and be very VERY vague about location. “Everything is negotiable, but I want to find out more about the job and have you find out more about me” was my standard answer.

Once we got down to brass tacks, I would already have a sense of the company, how many remote folks there work, the job workflow, etc. I could mount an argument for remote work based on that information.

  • “How many times do you text or call someone who sits literally 1 cubicle away.”
  • “During an outage, how many people go to a meeting room, versus take the call from their desk so they can keep working on the problem?”
  • “How much of the team is not in this location, so they’re effectively “remote” anyway?”
  • “How often do I need to physically go into the data center to physically touch a machine?”

…and so on. My point would be to highlight how much of the job is already remote, and so my being remote from an office location was functionally no different than being on-site.

It worked 50% of the time. The combination of my proving I was the right person for the job AND the case I made about the remote nature of the work gave the hiring manager the ammunition they needed to make the argument.

NOW… how many of those jobs admitted the job could be done remotely up-front? Zero. Absolutely NONE of them would have initially agreed to consider a remote person.

For companies that refuse to consider remote staff, the case I had to make 5 years ago is the same one we have to make today. And luckily (for those of us who believe strongly in the power of remote work) the process is largely the same.

CAVEAT (aka “death and taxes”): The one absolute deal-breaker for remote work status is tax status. If a company doesn’t have a tax presence in the location where you live, it’s very VERY hard to get them to consider doing so for you and you alone. 

However, even this isn’t 100% impossible. I got two different companies to do it for me.

career remote

Published at DZone with permission of Leon Adato. See the original article here.

Opinions expressed by DZone contributors are their own.

Related

  • How To Manage Decision Fatigue in Remote Software Development
  • Being a Backend Developer Today Feels Harder Than 20 Years Ago
  • Build Your Own Programming Language
  • Maximizing Developer Efficiency and Productivity in 2024: A Personal Toolkit

Partner Resources


Comments

ABOUT US

  • About DZone
  • Send feedback
  • Community research
  • Sitemap

ADVERTISE

  • Advertise with DZone

CONTRIBUTE ON DZONE

  • Article Submission Guidelines
  • Become a Contributor
  • Core Program
  • Visit the Writers' Zone

LEGAL

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

CONTACT US

  • 3343 Perimeter Hill Drive
  • Suite 100
  • Nashville, TN 37211
  • support@dzone.com

Let's be friends: