iamwiz82
Lifer
- Jan 10, 2001
 
- 30,772
 
- 13
 
- 81
 
Originally posted by: 300MDemon
What area do you live in? I'm 26 and making nowhere near that so I would be very careful about this situation.
He lives in California. $63k is like $35k everywhere else
Originally posted by: 300MDemon
What area do you live in? I'm 26 and making nowhere near that so I would be very careful about this situation.
Originally posted by: poopaskoopa
See if you can get a better job first, and then ask for a raise.
I've always wondered - do they cut your pay a bit if you move to a lesser cost of living area but stay with the same company ?Originally posted by: iamwiz82
Originally posted by: 300MDemon
What area do you live in? I'm 26 and making nowhere near that so I would be very careful about this situation.
He lives in California. $63k is like $35k everywhere else![]()
Originally posted by: rh71
I've always wondered - do they cut your pay a bit if you move to a lesser cost of living area but stay with the same company ?Originally posted by: iamwiz82
Originally posted by: 300MDemon
What area do you live in? I'm 26 and making nowhere near that so I would be very careful about this situation.
He lives in California. $63k is like $35k everywhere else![]()
Originally posted by: Descartes
Don't listen to the ignorants saying "you are expendable" and "You're making $63k at your age? That's good!" That's nonsense. Not to toot my own horn, but I was making a little over that before I was 20, and I was in your same shoes. The only reason I was able to do it is because I kept moving forward, and I paid no attention to those who said, "This is good money for someone your age." Only YOU know what you're worth, so don't let others try to denigrate that. If you're making this much now, then obviously you're doing something right! Go get what's yours!
Also, those with the "expendable" comments have likely not held a higher position of any importance. There are indeed key people in organizations, and they are not expendable or easily replaceable. That is a seriously pour outlook.
imo![]()
Originally posted by: amoeba
Originally posted by: Descartes
Don't listen to the ignorants saying "you are expendable" and "You're making $63k at your age? That's good!" That's nonsense. Not to toot my own horn, but I was making a little over that before I was 20, and I was in your same shoes. The only reason I was able to do it is because I kept moving forward, and I paid no attention to those who said, "This is good money for someone your age." Only YOU know what you're worth, so don't let others try to denigrate that. If you're making this much now, then obviously you're doing something right! Go get what's yours!
Also, those with the "expendable" comments have likely not held a higher position of any importance. There are indeed key people in organizations, and they are not expendable or easily replaceable. That is a seriously pour outlook.
imo![]()
While I agree with you, it is important to have backups. See if you are able to find a higher paying job somewhere else before you bring up salary increase with management.
In the tech industry, salary increase happens faster when you jump from company to company vs staying at the same company for 10+ years. There is also more risk this way and you somewhat alienate the companies you leave although I've often seen cases of people leaving a company, working somewhere else, coming back in 2 or 3 years and making double what they did when they left initially.
Originally posted by: Descartes
Don't listen to the ignorants saying "you are expendable" and "You're making $63k at your age? That's good!" That's nonsense. Not to toot my own horn, but I was making a little over that before I was 20, and I was in your same shoes. The only reason I was able to do it is because I kept moving forward, and I paid no attention to those who said, "This is good money for someone your age." Only YOU know what you're worth, so don't let others try to denigrate that. If you're making this much now, then obviously you're doing something right! Go get what's yours!
Also, those with the "expendable" comments have likely not held a higher position of any importance. There are indeed key people in organizations, and they are not expendable or easily replaceable. That is a seriously pour outlook.
imo![]()
Originally posted by: amoeba
Originally posted by: Descartes
Don't listen to the ignorants saying "you are expendable" and "You're making $63k at your age? That's good!" That's nonsense. Not to toot my own horn, but I was making a little over that before I was 20, and I was in your same shoes. The only reason I was able to do it is because I kept moving forward, and I paid no attention to those who said, "This is good money for someone your age." Only YOU know what you're worth, so don't let others try to denigrate that. If you're making this much now, then obviously you're doing something right! Go get what's yours!
Also, those with the "expendable" comments have likely not held a higher position of any importance. There are indeed key people in organizations, and they are not expendable or easily replaceable. That is a seriously pour outlook.
imo![]()
While I agree with you, it is important to have backups. See if you are able to find a higher paying job somewhere else before you bring up salary increase with management.
In the tech industry, salary increase happens faster when you jump from company to company vs staying at the same company for 10+ years. There is also more risk this way and you somewhat alienate the companies you leave although I've often seen cases of people leaving a company, working somewhere else, coming back in 2 or 3 years and making double what they did when they left initially.
Originally posted by: Kenji4861
I am 23 and have been working for 1.5 years. I am a software lead engineer on a project now and the project has brought the team over $2 million with my efforts.
Because of the growth on the project, my work load became 5 times as much with shorter deadlines. I have not slept properly for the last 2 weeks.
My pay is currently $63k. The boss has hired a "manager" for the project. He has done nothing for the last 2 months and I found out he is getting paid around $93k. I am actually managing him right now. I explain to him what certain requirements mean. The boss also hired a new "programmer" today that will be getting paid around $85k starting. This guy will most likely be "helping me" or at best "working equally" as me.
I complained to my supervisor and was told that it does not matter what I do or how important I am, it's the # of years experience or masters/PHD that matters. Since I've only worked 1.5 years, I have no luck. I am sure, this project will fail if I leave. I am very upset in the way things are.
Is this how things are in the world outside of my work? Is it normal for me to threaten the boss with a demand for a raise?
Originally posted by: Kenji4861
I am 23 and have been working for 1.5 years. I am a software lead engineer on a project now and the project has brought the team over $2 million with my efforts.
Because of the growth on the project, my work load became 5 times as much with shorter deadlines. I have not slept properly for the last 2 weeks.
My pay is currently $63k. The boss has hired a "manager" for the project. He has done nothing for the last 2 months and I found out he is getting paid around $93k. I am actually managing him right now. I explain to him what certain requirements mean. The boss also hired a new "programmer" today that will be getting paid around $85k starting. This guy will most likely be "helping me" or at best "working equally" as me.
I complained to my supervisor and was told that it does not matter what I do or how important I am, it's the # of years experience or masters/PHD that matters. Since I've only worked 1.5 years, I have no luck. I am sure, this project will fail if I leave. I am very upset in the way things are.
Is this how things are in the world outside of my work? Is it normal for me to threaten the boss with a demand for a raise?
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
Also. A masters/pHD in software makes NO SENSE! The teechnology changes to fast.
