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Follow the money?
Former Member
Posts: 1,876,323 The Mix Honorary Guru
Hiya, so I love my job, it's great, and the long term opportunities are stupendous. However, short term my salary is (although v comfortable right now) not comparable with a lot of comparable jobs that I know are advertising.
I wonder whether it's better to stay somewhere I'm happy and going to grow into a great career, or start taking the opportunity to 'hop' for rather significant pay rises. I'd rather stay here in all honesty, but I know it's not easy to renegotiate a salary because the company needs to budget what you're worth. Just worry about selling myself short.
I wonder whether it's better to stay somewhere I'm happy and going to grow into a great career, or start taking the opportunity to 'hop' for rather significant pay rises. I'd rather stay here in all honesty, but I know it's not easy to renegotiate a salary because the company needs to budget what you're worth. Just worry about selling myself short.
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When you ask, have prepared arguments about why you're worth more, which should include what you're worth to someone else. Put in your work ethic, project work, team contributions, learning curve, etc, type thing.
The problem is that it's an SME I work for currently and they just wouldn't have the budget to pay what some of the larger companies can. Though I would probably get churned out there and not grow as much - the opportunities here are great. It's like the difference between playing first team for a small but up and coming football team vs being permanently benched until you are let go from a premiership team.
Really I think I want to stay here. Just getting emails from people asking if I'm interested in 'x role' where the salaries on offer are quite a big jump it does make me think a little bit.
For the record, I jumped for more money, and ended up at a job I enjoy more, with good people with better opportunities.
Also I'd have to start wearing a suit :-P
Last in, last out. Be everyone's bitch. Expected to sacrifice all personal life for work. I do 9 hour days, wouldn't want to do 12 hour days.
Had a few friends in different industries go the 'big' route and most of them do say they can be a bit of a meat grinder. One working for a well known big pharma for £££ was literally eating modafanil on holiday so he could do more work at night time.
You need to weigh up staying where you are versus moving into the unknown. Applying for other jobs is usually a good thing to do every so often anyway, it gives you the tangible evidence that x would pay you y.
If they've given you a good raise this year they may well do again next. While nice this can become a trap - paying someone (who is worth it) well above their job description makes it harder for them to move.
I'm running the fine line between being paid more than my value where I am because I'm good at it (though I certainly make more money than I cost, there's a fair chance I could be replaced for someone who would cost less), but salary is less what I'd get at the largest companies in the sector.
I would love to stay with the company I'm in especially since the bit I'm working in over doubled in business last year with just three staff (increasing to five this year), it's a huge growth area and the opportunities are really big. It's more of a gamble mid to longterm, getting paid less now, but ending up in a more senior position when we get really big.
I'm just worried if I'm staying with a company where, because it's it's size, I'm going to be held back. I have a friend who is a snr dev for a professional services firm that isn't massive, and we worked out he could easily jump ship and go straight into six figures (he's a workaholic in an in-demand field), but he doesn't want to do that because he likes his job.
I don't think staying in a job because you like it is a bad reason, the main reason I made this thread is because I know there are other opportunities out there that would pay more but I want to know that not jumping ship everytime a potential payrise comes along isn't a terrible idea.