The author's journey as a software engineer began with their win at the ACM ICPC programming contest in 2001, where they spent years preparing and competing to achieve this milestone. The competition has since become increasingly challenging, requiring top coders to practice extensively and memorize complex algorithms. Despite being attracted to high salaries offered by large companies like Microsoft and Google, many Top Coder winners find work at early-stage startups more fulfilling due to the sense of responsibility, autonomy, and challenge that comes with solving tough problems in a smaller team environment. For example, Adam D'Angelo, a former Facebook VP and CTO, left his job to found Quora, while Nikolai Durov joined an early-stage company and built a successful exit. Many Top Coders now find themselves at companies like SingleStore, where they work on hard algorithmic and systems-level problems, distributed systems, and cloud infrastructure.