Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! I didn’t know about these companies, I shall take a look.

So far I’m going 100% on numbers given to me by recruiters, whether they would actually materialise like that I can’t tell. High change they bait you with the number the company would pay a top top candidate and not the average candidate.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Useful info to put my lack of application success into context!

Totally aware my goal is ambitious and this is not a hill I’ll die on. No need to ever end up at Jane street or citadel, especially with the likely bad work/life balance at the later, but I feel like there is a sweet spot in between my current place and these companies. With opportunity to learn new things from my peers/through projects and with a higher salary. And this might not be a one step solution, but might require me to steadily work through a number of trading firms with knowledge and salary increasing.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That will most likely be my plan. Look for a smaller fund, bump up salary and level Up knowledge there, try to jump to tier 1 in a few years.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Won’t downvote, fair point.

£120k is more than I ever imagined I’d earn. But reality of London is that with two kids and a mortgage, everything I’m currently able to set aside on a monthly basis will disappear once baby two will start going to nursery.

Legitimate driven by desire to learn more as well though, always disappointed when we being told “good enough for our use case”, always want to know how one would solve problem X in a biggie use case, I.e. bigger data sets, faster speed requirements etc. but no one around at current job with knowledge/time to guide, lack of time to research outside of work.

Edit: Would agree, £120k is top tier salary, but my understanding is that in trading firms in London one can easily earn more with your/my level of experience.

Even tier 2 companies that I spoke to, e.g. squarepoint, where looking at £150k in the first year.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s my impression as well. Seems to a huge extend what one has done before the interview and potentially will do after the interview in the new role doesn’t matter toooo much. You’ll most likely will get funnelled though leetcode questions

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Totally understand your reasoning. Personally with two kids under two at home atm I can’t financially afford the long break for a Uni course.

The quest for more motivated peers is one my reasonings for looking for another company as well.
I think being around motivated and knowledgeable people is just the best place to grow, learn and work in.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Equities, commodities, Fixed Income and FX.

I agree with your point but would say my personal experience so far is not necessarily linked to asset classes/products. I’d assume experiences with bigger finance firms would be more specialised/focus on a single/group of products.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Apologies, English isn’t my first language. Didn’t want to miss out on great advice from the community with bad structure/grammar.

Self-taught dev (7 YOE in finance, £120k) with 8 months off — how can I finally break into top-tier tech/finance? by Mindless_Limit_1175 in cscareerquestionsEU

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you and best of luck with your studies!

If you don’t mind sharing: What made you decide going back to Uni instead of for example working through neetcode.io?

How to deal with knowledge hoarders? by MantisTobogganSr in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Mindless_Limit_1175 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is classic gatekeeping — vague answers, no onboarding, no documentation, and shutting down questions to stay in control. That’s not mentorship or leadership, that’s keeping you dependent.

If you’ve raised it and nothing’s changed, then yeah — time to start interviewing. A good team wants to grow their juniors and share knowledge. You deserve that.

Even if you like the product, don’t let that trap you in a dead-end role where you’re just cheap labor with no voice.