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Comparing Salaries for Coding Bootcamps vs. Computer Science Degrees

Comparing Salaries for Coding Bootcamps vs. Computer Science Degrees

One of the most common questions we used to get at Bloc (a company for coding bootcamps that has since been acquired by Chegg) is: “Don’t I need a Computer Science Degree to become a developer?”

The answer, in our opinion, is no. Last year President Obama pointed to coding bootcamps — saying “It turns out it doesn’t matter where you learned code, it just matters how good you are at writing code.” He was referring to an economic shift from a credential-based economy to a skill-based economy. Employers and hiring managers care less about where you went to school and more about your ability to deliver high-quality work as a dedicated contributor to a team.

“It turns out it doesn’t matter where you learned code, it just matters how good you are at writing code.”

Recently, our friends over at Stack Overflow published some data that actually shows that this shift happening.

Stack Overflow (Quora for Developers) just released their 2016 industry wide survey of over 56,000 developers. They found that 57% of developers don’t have a CS degree. Even more telling, bootcamps (an institution that didn’t exist 5 years ago) now represent 6.5% of the industry. So no, you don’t need a degree to get hired for a high-paying tech job.

The second question we often get is “Won’t I be more successful if I have a degree?” The answer to this one surprised even me. Up until recently, we probably would have advised students that if they can afford to quit their job and go back to get a degree in Computer Science, they would probably be able to command a better salary if they did.

But that appears to be changing.

salary 1.png

Global Salaries for Coding Bootcamps vs. Computer Science Degrees

Among the many fascinating statistics in the report (like that developers under age 50 prefer Star Wars to Star Trek, which, as a staunch Picard fanatic, sorta broke my heart), they also broke out salaries by education type. This first chart shows global salaries normalized across the country.

US Salaries for Coding Bootcamps vs. Computer Science Degrees

salary 2.png

The second shows salaries for developers in the US. On both graphs, Bootcamp graduates are one of the top 3 earners. And in the US, bootcamp graduates earn almost $6000 more than developers with a Bachelors in Computer Science!

So the answer to “won’t I be more successful if I have a degree” is actually unclear. Our answer today is “maybe, but maybe not for much longer.”

This post first appeared on Medium.

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