You don't, you find a US company with a local entity that hires you on a local contract in that country. That way you're compliant with taxes, and the company is compliant with employment law in your country.
The alternative to that is starting a sole-trader company in the country you're in, and contracting directly with the US company through it (or a remote-employees-as-a-service company that basically does this on the company's behalf for a fat fee).
sorry, my question is not that much of a legal side, there's plenty of info around - it's rather about identifying jobs which are open to this. Most HRs and hiring managers just ignore the applications which openly state - "I'm not on US soil".
I can share my experience as a canadian who's been working remotely for US companies since 2016.
Typically I would either find a warm intro from a past colleague, or I would specifically find someone involved in the hiring pipeline at the company on Linkedin and say "Hey im so and so, and blah blah blah, im thinking of applying but would love if you could tell me more about the role and the culture before I commit"
From here, so long as you baseline can stand out as a solid engineer and communicator those US only barriers fall down.
This is why to someone elses point
> if they’d hire you, why wouldn’t they hire someone much cheaper.
They'd hire someone cheaper certainly, provided they could find a person with identical quality, similar culture, and near PST timezones. Which is a fairly tall order in reality.
Its also why its not too uncommon to find Canadians pulling in near SF salaries while not having to relocate
Americans are not necessarily expensive in this day and age. Maybe the ones in the big cities are, but international salaries are rising up to match. Plus, they might be happier with a lower salary in a lower cost of living, especially if the quality of life is boosted by weather/location/food/hot people into foreigners.
American salaries likely anchor high though, and you can probably still get a decent amount above locals for the same work.
Plus even if you were mid, you'd be mid for the upper tier market. That might still be better than an average market, and you might do well in a market that's facing a shortage. Keep an eye on HN to see which countries are investing massively in tech.
Go on Linkedin and search for small companies with less than 50 employees that have been in business for 3-5 years minimum. Figure out what they do, what they sell and if you would be interested in their company. Don't worry about whether they have a job listing or not.
Approach their founder(s) directly and sell yourself.
Is being unwilling to dig deep, find direct contacts (to avoid being grouped with LinkedIn or Indeed mass-appliers) and actually understand the place you're applying (and their mission statement) before writing your note/cover letter
the new version of not being willing to go into a place and ask for a job?
I imagine it's a very crowded and competitive market to work remotely for US companies (and not through a sweat shop agency). The fact that a candidate has emigrated from US shouldn't typically be a big factor.
You don't, you find a US company with a local entity that hires you on a local contract in that country. That way you're compliant with taxes, and the company is compliant with employment law in your country.
The alternative to that is starting a sole-trader company in the country you're in, and contracting directly with the US company through it (or a remote-employees-as-a-service company that basically does this on the company's behalf for a fat fee).
sorry, my question is not that much of a legal side, there's plenty of info around - it's rather about identifying jobs which are open to this. Most HRs and hiring managers just ignore the applications which openly state - "I'm not on US soil".
ah right - personal network helps a lot here. if you're applying through the job board you're starting at a disadvantage.
I can share my experience as a canadian who's been working remotely for US companies since 2016.
Typically I would either find a warm intro from a past colleague, or I would specifically find someone involved in the hiring pipeline at the company on Linkedin and say "Hey im so and so, and blah blah blah, im thinking of applying but would love if you could tell me more about the role and the culture before I commit"
From here, so long as you baseline can stand out as a solid engineer and communicator those US only barriers fall down.
This is why to someone elses point > if they’d hire you, why wouldn’t they hire someone much cheaper.
They'd hire someone cheaper certainly, provided they could find a person with identical quality, similar culture, and near PST timezones. Which is a fairly tall order in reality.
Its also why its not too uncommon to find Canadians pulling in near SF salaries while not having to relocate
Think of it this way - if they’d hire you, why wouldn’t they hire someone much cheaper.
You can’t identify them from the outside, but your network can. If you want to try, try companies with heavy worldwide presence.
Americans are not necessarily expensive in this day and age. Maybe the ones in the big cities are, but international salaries are rising up to match. Plus, they might be happier with a lower salary in a lower cost of living, especially if the quality of life is boosted by weather/location/food/hot people into foreigners.
American salaries likely anchor high though, and you can probably still get a decent amount above locals for the same work.
Plus even if you were mid, you'd be mid for the upper tier market. That might still be better than an average market, and you might do well in a market that's facing a shortage. Keep an eye on HN to see which countries are investing massively in tech.
Go on Linkedin and search for small companies with less than 50 employees that have been in business for 3-5 years minimum. Figure out what they do, what they sell and if you would be interested in their company. Don't worry about whether they have a job listing or not.
Approach their founder(s) directly and sell yourself.
Is this the new version of "just walk in and ask for a job" of our parent's time?
Is being unwilling to dig deep, find direct contacts (to avoid being grouped with LinkedIn or Indeed mass-appliers) and actually understand the place you're applying (and their mission statement) before writing your note/cover letter
the new version of not being willing to go into a place and ask for a job?
Yeah. I'd say so.
I imagine it's a very crowded and competitive market to work remotely for US companies (and not through a sweat shop agency). The fact that a candidate has emigrated from US shouldn't typically be a big factor.