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by dogma1138 3090 days ago
Why work for a company that you wouldn’t like to work for for those 2 years rather than work for the company you want for the same time period and gain seniority?
2 comments

What does "seniority" buy you as a software developer? I stayed at one company for 9 years and between bonuses being cut and 3% raises my pay at year 9 was only 8K more than year 2. Over the next 9 years and 4 companies, I'm making $70k more. This isn't anecdotal:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/cameronkeng/2014/06/22/employees...

There is a term for it "pay compression"

https://definitions.uslegal.com/p/pay-compression/

That’s true nearly anywhere your strongest negotiation position is during pre-employment.

But money isn’t everything and those pay rises suck I get 5-6% p/a without asking, must have been a heck of a bonus cut then.

This was between 1999 - 2008. Our quarterly bonuses started out at 20% and the yearly raises were 3%.

But even at 5-6% raises, that doesn't compare to the roughly 11% "raises" I've received by jumping jobs 4 times since 2008.

As far as money isn't everything. Yes there is a trade off between how much I'm willing to accept and commute times. All in all, the only reason I go to work every day is for the compensation.

As far as I can tell, the gravy train is over as far as being able to make 10K to 20K+ to switch jobs if I still want to be an active developer and I'm not willing to relocate. I'm okay with that. Now the criteria for jobs are what new skills I can learn, comparable compensation, new challenges, and work life balance including the commute and work for home opportunities.

I'm not surprised. As far as I'm aware, larger companies don't top up your on-hire stock award once it has fully vested.
parent didn't say s/he wouldn't want to work for Netflix. just sayin'