How IT enabled a Matric-qualified carpenter earn $50,000 in 18 months

Geek

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
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Matric-qualified Muhammad Muawiya, a 22-year-old resident of Karachi, earns more than a bank manager every month and that too from the comfort of his home.

In 2016, when 21-year-old, he had enrolled himself in a diploma in IT course at the Saylani Welfare Trust. Then a junior carpenter at the trust, earning only Rs8,000 per month, the young man went on to earn $50,000 in 18 months.

Muawiya had learned about an IT course being offered by the trust where he was assisting his father who is also a carpenter. He had no idea what the course was about but enrolled in it anyway.

“The first six months were quite a struggle and I didn’t understand much,” he said according to a media report.

But he continued and signed up for another course next semester and that’s when he grabbed an internship at Panacloud, a software development company with a focus on artificial intelligence.

It was during this internship that Muawiya got his first project on upwork.com, a freelancing website. After receiving a high five-star rating, Muawiya never looked back ever since. In the next 18 months, he earned over than $2,000 or Rs280,000 per month on average.

Not everyone earns this much though. Muawiya’s seniors are earning even more. Take for example, Daniyal Nagori, managing director at Panacloud, who has earned more than $100,000 in one year. This brings his average monthly income to more than $8,000 or above Rs1 million.

People like Muawiya and Nagori are part of a 200,000-strong nationwide network of freelance developers.

Some of these freelancers are earning $5,000 a month but avoid the limelight for security reasons.

IT services are in high demand both locally and internationally, says Nasir Hussain, one of the lead trainers for a mass IT training programme, which is a collaboration between Panacloud, the Saylani Welfare Trust and Iqra University.

“When you can earn $2,000 from a project you can finish in one week, why bother with a fulltime job?” asks Hussain, referring to the increasing number of people signing up for the mass IT training programme.

What started as a small project has now spread across Pakistan as President Arif Alvi just launched the Presidential Initiative for AI and Computing, a countrywide programme to provide IT training to the youth.

According to the industry experts, IT has the potential to become the second largest export industry after textile. In a global market of $200 billion, Pakistan’s share is still miniscule at $1 billion, but the IT fever is picking up in the country. Pakistan’s IT exports grew 71% between 2013 and 2016, the highest rate in South Asia, according to the Pakistan Software Export Board (PSEB). The government is now targeting taking IT exports to $10 billion by 2025.

The IT sector is playing a catalyst role in employment generation at a time of an economic crunch as the demand for outsourcing work has increased exponentially in the last few years. One of the major factors driving this growth is that one doesn’t need a solid background in IT. All they need is some basic literacy in computing. People who were once students in this mass IT training programme are now employing more developers to work under them and this is a trend across Karachi, Hussain says. Muawiya is an example of that.

The young lad is now training others and aims to launch his own company for which he will recruit his best students.

Source
 

Aslan

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
This just shows that if people are given opportunities they can excel.There are millions of Pakistanis who are deprived of education.The priorities of previous governments were wrong.Nawaz Parchi Sharif was only interested in short term policies so he could boast about his achievements in election rallies.PTI government must make education its priority especially science and engineering.I know there is lack of funds at the moment but when our economy improves then a lot of effort will be needed to improve education.The quality of existing universities must be improved.Also,new technical universities must be built and linked with industry.We have ahuge population.If we have proper education we can manufacture a lot of goods in the country.CPEC special economic zones will need a lot of qualified manpower.
 

Citizen X

(50k+ posts) بابائے فورم
This is not everyone and luck plays a huge part of it, I have a buddy in Pakistan who has been doing online work on upwork for many years now, he now has so much work he hired two assistants to cope with the workload.

There are others who have tried their level best and never gotten past $100 or $200 per month.
 

c'estmoi

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
This is not everyone and luck plays a huge part of it, I have a buddy in Pakistan who has been doing online work on upwork for many years now, he now has so much work he hired two assistants to cope with the workload.

There are others who have tried their level best and never gotten past $100 or $200 per month.

I work in IT. Few years ago I hired 2 guys for my department. Exact same positions with exact same qualifications. One came from a poor struggling family and the other from a very well off. Guess which one worked harder and smarter and was a success? The one from the poor family. The other one 'lost interest' quickly and quit.
 

Masud Javed

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
absolutely

there is tons of money to be made online

you just need basic information, so you can understand what is written online

basic education is a necessity.

We don't need phd's if we can provide very basic edu to the youth, they will be running on their own in this day of the internet
 

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