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I am ready for another $10K jump myself, but I would like to stay at my current employer for another year, at least, to become fully-vested in the match that is 10% my annual salary. Honestly, though, unless some company is out there that does something similar on the 401(k), they are going to have to do better than a $10K bump for it to really be worthwhile. With the match and profit sharing, my employer contributes 14% of my annual salary if I contribute 5% or more. It is a tough one. And in a year, they will cover 100% of my insurance premiums, as well. This is a tough one... because I want a position like my boss has, and he is not going to be departing from his position until he retires, methinks, which would be about another 14-17 years. He has a great job, and they are not going to get rid of him because he is good at his job... and I wouldn't want that either, because I think he is good at his job and he is pretty good to work for... I just want a job like his. Otherwise, I would stay where I am... but I cannot stay somewhere all that long. Once two years comes up, I am always open to new offers.
However, the cash, contacts, and easy ride into the top 10 business schools are worth the sacrifice of 2 years of sweating it. Just having a top 10 investment bank on my resume is enough to land me a job anyway. In some respects, to human resources office it's better than having a Harvard undergrad diploma.
It's ridiculous how much they pay us on Wall Street as entry-level, fresh-out-of-college grads, but if you work 100 hrs/wk. and put up with mid-level manager shit, you deserve it!
no kidding, the big money is in the finance field. of course, they also work a lot of hours. you spend more on housing, but you have no automobile expenses.
i changed job recently because i got bored at the previous. the new job not only pays $12,000 more, but also more managerial responsibility.
what do you think is a "i made it in the real world" salary?
In all likelihood, I may use an offer as a bargaining chip, though I'll have to be prepared to take the job if my current employer doesn't budge.
I don't know what it will take for me to feel like I've "made it..."
Oh, and if you decide to go, sell your car. Don't even try to drive in New York. It's a city made for walking, bus-riding, subway-taking people. Driving a car in New York is like wearing pajamas to work. Don't make yourself end up paying $200-$300/mo. just for parking and wishing you could get rid of that nice hunk of metal that no one wants to buy.
Few people own cars in New York, and there's a reason for it. Most of those people who do drive cars in New York actually live in New Jersey and drive a long ways to work.