The latter are the ones that get promoted to senior staff+, or more likely become directors/VPs.
There is a very low cap on career growth if you are purely focused on programming.
So yes, if you want to climb the corporate ladder or run your own business, programming is a fraction of the skills required.
I think though it's okay to just focus on coding. It's fun and why many of us got into the industry. Not everyone likes the business side of things and that's okay.
To me, cars are a means to an end. And I can imagine a world without cars more easily than a world without software.
Do you imagine that we just somehow evolve capabilities beyond it? or do we eventually produce universally perfect software solutions and leave it at that?
If I hire you to make software for me, I don't really want software; I want a problem to go away, a money stream built, a client to be happy. Of course, that probably requires you to build software, unless you invent a magic wand. But if you had the magic wand, I'd choose it every single time over software.
Not so with food, furniture or a fancy hotels, where I actually want the thing.
If I had a magic wand to make you satiated, you wouldn't need food. If you're in it for the taste I will magic wand you some taste in your mouth. If I had a magic wand to give you a roof over your head, protection and a bed, you wouldn't need a hotel.
The magic wand argument doesn't make sense. Then you can also get everything else.
Eh, I disagree. I like a lot of the software I'm using. There's inherent value to producing music with Ableton, cutting videos with Final Cut Pro, or just playing Super Mario for entertainment. Those are all more software than no software.
There is a very low cap on career growth if you are purely focused on programming.
So yes, if you want to climb the corporate ladder or run your own business, programming is a fraction of the skills required.
I think though it's okay to just focus on coding. It's fun and why many of us got into the industry. Not everyone likes the business side of things and that's okay.