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If I leave the company, everything that is unvested is lost. Plus, I have to excercise any stock options I have outstanding within 30 days. If I stay with the company, stock options don't expire for 10 years. If I left the company for another company affter being here 5 more years and weht to another with the exact same compensation, they would have to give me a starting bonus of 1/2 year's salary to compensate for what I lost.
This also affects my retirement. If I leave the company at any time before age 55, I loose anything that is unvested. If I wait till 55, everything I have will immediately vest (but I only get 1 year to excercise options). That will give me nearly a full year of salary immediately vesting. If I wait till age 60, I can take the full 10 years to excercise options. I also am incented to wait till age 60 to retire for pension and retiree health care benefits.
So, not only do they try to stop me from going to another company, they also want me to retire later.
#1 - When possible, I tried to max out my contributions to 20% of my salary. I have had to cut that back at times. Right now, I'm contributing on 17%.
#2 - Generous company matching. It's pretty standard, 50% of the first 5% of salary, which is about what I got at my old company.
#3 - Rockin' the salary negotiations at the outset when I got hired. There's no way I'd be doing this great without that as the cornerstone.
#4 - Very aggressive investing. It's all stock funds. There's another post on the blog about ROI. I think my worst return over last year was still double digits.
#5 - My company lets me contribute part of my annual bonus to the 401k. My old company didn't do that. It's money that never hit my bank account and I never saw it. This is definitely going to help me max out to $15.5K (or very close) despite putting only 17% of each paycheck right now.
Short answer - absolutely.
Longer answer - anyone who invests in a 401(k) has some inkling about personal finance and funding their retirement. A person like that is, of course, going to weigh all financial aspects of a job move. And losing matching money because you're not fully vested is definitely a financial aspect.
Since then I haven't left as the work has improved and the people are as great as they always have been. Should it turn sour again I might hesitate to stay though.
The financial analysis should only be part of the equation. I can think of many reasons to leave cash on the table: you want to move to another city or be closer to family or take a different career path or start you own business or take an offer with better long term growth potential, etc, etc. etc.
It is a personal decision that gets into the core of your values. What is more important? Lay out the pros and cons on paper and decide.
He'll ask for a signing bonus (which he would have gotten anyway) to make up for it, and the new company also has a matching program that vests immediately, so we figure it's worth it not to take the chance of having to accept a lower salary by beating street during a slow economy.
At the end of the day, money should not be our main motivation. I'm 30, so basically, I won't even see this money for another 25 years or so. I may have to become more investment savy and try to make it up in some way.
Sometimes good decisions have bad consequences. They forget to tell us that