- Mar 8, 2005
- 8,805
- 65
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depending how significant the salary drop is, i'd definitely go with the new job.
you are saving 5 hours a week in time + saving quite a bit of gas money. time = money, and obviously gas money = money. all of that stuff adds up quick when you start doing the math.
then calculate the 24/7 on call time that you won't have to worry about and won't have to work during those times, that will also be some set amount of time (on average).
it also depends on the percentage drop and where you are. a 10% drop when you are making 75k is a lot more significant than a 10% drop when you are making $150k.
but from just the info in the OP, i'd go with the new job.
I'm looking for some advice.
I've got a job offer on the table and I'm trying to decide what to do. I like my current job but this new one has some potential. I'll break it down with bullet points.
1) Less money than current job and I've been told this is their final offer money wise. I'm not hurting for money, but it's still drop.
2) No on call and no unscheduled after hours work, current job i'm on call 24/7
3) New job is 40 minutes closer to home (8 minute drive instead of an hour)
4) New job has potential for growth, old job is the top tier.
5) New job is with an old boss I have a great relationship with.
6) Current employer is suffering from a downturn.
7) Going from a mixed manager/IT engineer back to a senior engineer.
Basically it breaks down to worrying about the salary hit. I can afford the hit (this job would still be 20 grand more than my previous job, but less than my current job), but I'm still torn about going backwards in salary. The new employer did say that they have a bonus program, which I don't have now and a scheduled raise program to encourage getting the certifications they want their engineers to have. This means I can mitigate some of the loss of salary over the next 2-3 years. I'm also worried about losing the title manager, although I'm told I will still be the team lead and have a managerial role. Other than that I'm pretty excited to be back working with more/larger technology as my current role is in a small shop (3 servers and a SAN).
I'm thinking about asking them for an extra week vacation as I know they can't offer any more in terms of salary. Any thoughts?
It's about a 11% drop in salary. Benefits are basically identical. I would be gaining a week more vacation/sick time at the new job (and maybe a 2nd week if I can negotiate it). That would be great because I lost a week for this current job (went from 3 weeks to 2 weeks)
It's about a 11% drop in salary. Benefits are basically identical. I would be gaining a week more vacation/sick time at the new job (and maybe a 2nd week if I can negotiate it). That would be great because I lost a week for this current job (went from 3 weeks to 2 weeks)
It's about a 11% drop in salary. Benefits are basically identical. I would be gaining a week more vacation/sick time at the new job (and maybe a 2nd week if I can negotiate it). That would be great because I lost a week for this current job (went from 3 weeks to 2 weeks)
Considering you are effectively taking a title "downgrade" and if you're honestly going to go through with it on an 11% pay drop - I would highly negotiate.
Not sure if you can make a clause for promotion within a certain amount of time, personally I think it just looks bad on paper (resume) to be going from manager to senior. But it is closer, and you do get more vacation.
that is a good point about a signing bonus. when i landed my current job, i told them i had another offer that was like $15k more. they couldn't match it, but they gave me $6k more + a $10k signing bonus.
and now, being here 3 years later, i'm making $15k more than I was when i started, so in the end it worked out great. plus the company owns.
:thumbsup: Concurred.depending how significant the salary drop is, i'd definitely go with the new job.
you are saving 5 hours a week in time + saving quite a bit of gas money. time = money, and obviously gas money = money. all of that stuff adds up quick when you start doing the math.
then calculate the 24/7 on call time that you won't have to worry about and won't have to work during those times, that will also be some set amount of time (on average).
it also depends on the percentage drop and where you are. a 10% drop when you are making 75k is a lot more significant than a 10% drop when you are making $150k.
but from just the info in the OP, i'd go with the new job.
It's about a 11% drop in salary. Benefits are basically identical. I would be gaining a week more vacation/sick time at the new job (and maybe a 2nd week if I can negotiate it). That would be great because I lost a week for this current job (went from 3 weeks to 2 weeks)
Between the commute time and vacations, it's a MORE than 11% drop in hours worked, so it's actually a raise from what you currently make!
I would take it in a heartbeat.