I work remotely as a manager and my staff are all around the country.  I think 
the advantage to being able to work from home is enormous.  You may very well 
find a good person who will work full-time for a "non-competitive" salary in 
order to not have to move from where a spouse has a good job and the kids are 
settled, especially if the work is interesting.  

Some of my staff are developers, and I find no disadvantage to the fact that we 
are all telecommuting.  We are in touch constantly via skype and other 
channels, have video calls regularly, and feel very much a team.  A shared 
project management system like Asana can help too.  

Of course, it may not work with all developers -- you need to be sure you are 
hiring someone who is a good communicator, self-motivated, and knows what s/he 
is doing.  Another caveat is that it can be harder if you have only one 
telecommuting employee and the rest of the team is together.  When several 
people are meeting in a room and one is on a speakerphone or something, that 
doesn't work too well.   But you can do things to ameliorate that.  

Bottom line is if you have good people, it doesn't matter where they work.

Priscilla



-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kim, 
Bohyun
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 12:44 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Hiring strategy for a library programmer with tight budget 
- thoughts?

I am in a situation in which a university has a set salary guideline for 
programmer position classifications and if I want to hire an entry-lever dev, 
the salary is too low to be competitive and if I want to hire a more 
experienced dev in a higher classification, the competitive salary amount 
exceeds what my library cannot afford. So as a compromise I am thinking about 
going the route of posting a half-time position in a higher classification so 
that the salary would be at least competitive. It will get full-time benefits 
on a pro-rated basis. But I am wondering if this strategy would be viable or 
not.

Also anyone has a experience in hiring a developer to telework completely from 
another state when you do not have previous experience working with her/him? 
This seems a bit risky strategy to me but I am wondering if it may attract more 
candidates particularly when the position is half time.

As a current/past/future library programmer or hiring manager in IT or both, if 
you have any thoughts, experience, or ideas, I would really appreciate it.

Thanks,
Bohyun

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