7:54 AM
@KevinM.Mansour Crush your enemies. See them driven before you. Hear the lamentations of their women.
Although in a more non-Conan oriented way, you can pick. I personally prefer working on a company with a strong product. Last one I was in had a software that it offered to clients and had a really strong position in the market. Very few (competent) competitors and the company angled in such a way that the market needed the product.
It was a financial software and they also made sure that it covers all compliance regulations. So many institutions who had to also have regulatory compliance would also need some product. And ours was one of the few available. It was also actually good for the purpose.
Current company I'm in doesn't have an outward facing product (erm, sort of. Yet. Long story) but we develop internal tools. The "clients" are part of the same company. That has benefits and drawbacks, of course, yet one of the main things is that we'll never run out of work. There will always be something that needs to be done. Like, there is no prospect of ever going broke as the company itself is huge. And the size also means constant employment.
As in, they won't sack devs to cut costs or anything.
Again, though, that's my preference. some people prefer moving company to company regularly. Say, every two years or something. That's certainly doable. Also makes sure you don't stagnate and get to experience a lot of different technologies and approaches.
Some people exclusively move between startups. Very high payments and benefits in that sector. Also very high fail rate, though - IIRC, I saw a statistics that 60% of startups fail. But if you just move around you mitigate the risk to your own employment.
Some people also work at the same company for literal decades. Rare but it also has benefit that you'd have a secure employment. And I certainly get this. I've been at my current company just shy of 5 years now. And I have no desire to move. I've been told I could be getting as much as 20% more salary at other places. However, the peace of mind I have here is not to be discarded lightly. I'm perfectly happy with my current salary. And I am more than happy with the workload.
There are also other options. One can work at a company that takes on many projects. My first job was at such a company and I can say, the increased diversity of work is also something to consider. The drawback is that these companies need to take on projects constantly. And if there aren't any you might be benched which, from what I head, gets old quite quickly. Or you might be sacked to save costs. Or the company goes belly up entirely due to lack of income.
Also, the work in such companies tends to be hectic. Usually you have deadlines set that you may not even have a lot of control over. Also, potential scope creep that you also have no control over. Which, from experience, I do not recommend at all.