To become a manager, or at least a tech leader with a juicy title like <i>Principal Systems Architect</i>.<p>I am not sure if you are Indian or person of Indian heritage, and if you are working in India or abroad, but within Indian context, being a developer at 30+ is not seen favorably. I tried changing jobs at 34 in 2014 with 12 years experience, and was constantly offered a "leadership" position when all I wanted was to be a lead developer with freedom, basically same as my last job. I didn't take any of the offers, also because I wanted to start my own company. Things didn't workout and now I am looking for a job again, at 38. This time I have wised up and won't insist on engineering position. I am a realist, and have made my peace with it. I am preparing myself mentally to do something that I have always despised - filling excel sheets with colored cells.<p>---<p>Further, personally, because I will indeed start my company once my financial condition improves, and I can do all the engineering I ever want with all the freedom I always wanted, I don't much care for the nature of the task I do as an employee elsewhere. I have no intentions of making a career working for someone else.<p>That said, I have an inkling that I might have it harder this time since I was unemployed chasing a dream for four years, and I am not sure how Indian companies (well, Indian outposts of Amerieuro companies) consider it. The weak link is of course the mind set of Indians who do the interviews, who would be mostly my age, and I don't know if the hype around startups has made them "open minded" or created further loathing of people treading that path because, let's face it, most Indian startups are copycats and hardly innovative, and its quite challenging to appreciate efforts of people who whip out yet another clone and pose as if they are innovators of cutting edge technology, and its quite likely that startup attempters will be prejudged negatively.