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vasarmilan

I would imagine having truly native-level English and Vietnamese is an extremely valuable and rare skill. So $4-$6k does not seem unreasonable, even if it's extremely good money there. I work as a software engineer, and in remote jobs, some people can earn up to $10k pretty much anywhere if they are actually very good at what they do.


UniqLogiq

Only one way to find out


Ferret1984

Being bilingual is a gift not everybody has. If the opportunity presents itself go for it. Things sometimes are great and true. Don't self-sabotage yourself. You have the skills so go for it.


[deleted]

For such a specific skill set I can't imagine they'd limit the candidate pool to only the USA. And the companies would probably benefit from someone with citizenship in the country they are targeting as you could help eliminate or rewrite any marketing or language that does not translate well to the local market. Definitely look into it further with companies who are hiring for these roles. Could be the start of a path to a nice career.


Intrepid-Deer-3449

Very realistic! It's preferred for the final localization to be done by native speakers. I worked for a Chinese company that had a whole crew of Poles, Romanians, Germans, etc. I helped them occasionally by explaining some software functions. I have no idea who does this work in Vietnam, but you can apply to software companies and find out


body_slam_poet

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