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In Silicon Valley, some work for just promise of pay (over 200 apply to job w/no pay)
kcal9 ^
Posted on 10/06/2002 10:26:30 PM PDT by chance33_98
In Silicon Valley, some work for just promise of pay
Sunday October 06, 2002
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Silicon Valley's job market has gotten so tough that experienced workers are taking jobs that don't pay any money, just the mere promise of a salary or stock in the companies.
Many of these workers have been unemployed; others are independent consultants looking for clients. They're hired by early-stage start-ups and other companies and are happy, for now, just to have colleagues and something to put on their resumes, the San Jose Mercury News reported Sunday.
``I think it's a sham, and I didn't think so when I started it,'' said Sarah David, an information technology director who agreed twice this year to work at startups for no salary before returning to her consulting practice.
While some call it exploitation, others see it as a return to the valley's entrepreneurial roots.
``I think it's very exciting and it's part of what the valley is all about,'' said Kimberly Wiefling, a product development and business management consultant in Redwood City. ``There's a soup of talent and potential and possibility, and here we have people who finally have time to be creative. When we were working 70 to 80 hours a week, we didn't have time to think.''
Wiefling has several clients, some of whom pay her in cash and others in equity, or a promise of future work if things go well.
It's a far cry from the height of the dot-com boom.
``Back then you worked to get rich. Right now you work to survive, to keep your skills up, to tread water so that when it does turn around, you'll be able to say that you were doing something,'' said Andreas Ramos, chairman of the technical writers group for the Silicon Valley Chapter of the National Writers Union.
When eSelf, a Los Altos-based startup software and services company, advertised for people willing to spend three months getting unpaid training as ``independent contractors'' with the possibility of pay later, it got more than 200 r Desum Des in two days.
``Almost everybody had a very clear understanding that this is really training,'' said Ramesh Ramasubramanian, chief executive of eSelf. ``They didn't have any illusions about getting paid.''
Independent contractors can legally agree to work for free. But many work-for-free arrangements violate the minimum wage law, which does not count stock or the promise of a future salary as pay.
``By flying fast and loose and hoping things take off, you are taking risks,'' said Linda Larson Usoz, an attorney with Coudert Brothers in Palo Alto.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: California
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When eSelf, a Los Altos-based startup software and services company, advertised for people willing to spend three months getting unpaid training as ``independent contractors'' with the possibility of pay later, it got more than 200 resumes in two days. Uh....yeah. Maybe if they were training me to be a nuclear weapons tech and launcher I might do it :)
To: chance33_98
To: chance33_98
And yet people from other countries are being imported to take what few paying jobs there are.
To: chance33_98
Well, if you're unemployed already (with dim prospects for getting a paying job anytime in the immediate future), I can see where there might be some attraction to the trend. Look at it this way: You get to hang out with fellow techies, get an office (or at least a cubicle) to work out of, and access to the job market grapevine/rumor mill. Plus, there's always the faint chance that your "employer" will succed sort of make the job an adventure.
4
posted on
10/06/2002 10:37:14 PM PDT
by
Skibane
To: Mike Darancette
This just shows you how desperate American citizens have become. Sad. Isn't free trade and immigration wonderful?
5
posted on
10/06/2002 10:37:34 PM PDT
by
brat
To: Skibane
"make" = "makes"
6
posted on
10/06/2002 10:38:09 PM PDT
by
Skibane
To: Skibane
Sadly, I am envisioning this going on all over the place. Perhaps I can do that with taxes, just tell the government I might pay them someday and until then they can just pretend :)
To: Skibane
The Old economy:
Work for pay.
The New Economy:
Work without pay but you get stock options
The Post New Economy:
Work without pay and without stock options
Brave New World.
8
posted on
10/06/2002 10:44:44 PM PDT
by
Logic_3
To: Logic_3
"Ramesh Ramasubramanian":
``They didn't have any illusions about getting paid.'' This is not capitalism, this is a sick comment from a sick person in a sick system.
9
posted on
10/06/2002 10:50:28 PM PDT
by
Logic_3
To: Logic_3
So people are suposed to work without having
any illusions about getting paid.
My ass.
10
posted on
10/06/2002 10:56:13 PM PDT
by
Logic_3
To: Logic_3
suposed = supposed
11
posted on
10/06/2002 10:59:57 PM PDT
by
Logic_3
To: chance33_98
In working without pay they are lowering the salary standards market and they will soon be lucky to get janitor's compensation.
12
posted on
10/06/2002 11:00:22 PM PDT
by
RLK
To: Logic_3
So people are suposed to work without having any illusions about getting paid.
My ass.
That should be, "My hairy, pimply, stinky, unwashed ass."
13
posted on
10/06/2002 11:05:05 PM PDT
by
Hemlock
To: Hemlock
or better yet,
this (note, contains adult language) which is what I tell an employer who offered me such a job.
To: chance33_98
It's not unusual for a startup company to pay programmers in stock and pizza. If the company takes off, the employee/stockholders are rich. Is this what's going on, or are these guys just getting hosed?
To: Jeff Chandler
It sounds more like Amway to me ;) The article is a tad unclear and lacking of some details, but three months without pay seems a bit much. If you have enough in the bank and you are confident you will get it later on then that is one thing, you can afford the risk. But it seems to that someone could simply take advantage of people, use the labor to get money themselves, and then shrug later on and say 'well, I told you ahead of time you might not get any money'.
I certainly hope those engaging in the endeavor has open access to the financials.
To: Skibane
This would be tough for a seasoned techy to do, but for a guy fresh out of college, or still in college, it would be a good way to build a resume. I have advised several young IT students who are holding down jobs in non-computer fields to forget about making money now, just go get a job in their future field-low pay, volunteer work-anything. Employers want experience, and if they can show that they know how to get things done, they will have a leg up on their fellow grads who have been working at Pizza Hut.
To: chance33_98
I think I ought to move to San Jose and start up a consulting business. I wouldn't need much capital because the people there work for free.
To: Jeff Chandler
Why move? Just put an ad in the paper, tell them they can work from home for you. If you make profit you will share, if not they wasted their time. It like a sales job basically. I will tell a bunch of coders I need a new program, when it is written I will 'hire' some more people to burn the CD's at home and send them out, etc and so on. No office, no payroll, no promises...
To: Jeff Chandler
I have advised several young IT students who are holding down jobs in non-computer fields to forget about making money now,... Why should they forget about making money? If the IT field is not hiring why shouldn't they take a good paying job in another field. To work for low to zero pay is very stupid unless you just like helping other people get rich while you live in a tent. My advice for you is to stop giving your advice to college students who are only going to school to make more money. I doubt most college students will listen to your asinine advice anyway.
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