> Nobody cares about gaps in resumes. I swear people think it's 1990 still.
False. I took five years to explore personal projects and then couldn’t get a callback to save my life. After landing a menial temp job, suddenly I got calls and interviews and landed a real job in no time. A huge gap can torpedo your efforts.
Not possible because their $500k/year likely only materializes after vesting. Leaving after only 3-4 years on the job would mean the realized yearly comp is closer to 200-250k.
Sorry but that's not how it works. $500k/year would mean roughly $250k base+bonus and $1 million of stocks vested over four years. And at most companies, the vesting starts after 1 year. So at the end of year one, you would have made $500k in base+bonus+stocks. And after that you would usually get the stocks every quarter so $62.5k worth of stocks every quarter. I am not sure where is your figure of 200-250k Total Comp coming from?
When someone says $500k/year, they usually mean a package like $150k base + $350k stocks with yearly grants.
For the standard 4-year vesting schedule, and assuming a new $350k grant every year, this means actual earnings are:
Year 1: $150k + $0 $150k
Year 2: $150k + $87.5k $237.5k
Year 3: $150k + $87.5k*2 $325k
Year 4: $150k + $87.5k*3 $412k
If you leave here, at year 4, and lose all unvested options (expected), your actual average was $281k/year.
Only by year 5 you'll finally actually earn the $500k/year, and the vesting schedule has such an impact on the early earnings that even after a decade, your yearly average is still $400k.
Not to forget taxes. So the idea to "save for one year then take 6 years off" is kinda off the menu unless they've been at the company for a long, long time, or are willing to spend those 6 years living in Thailand.
Except now you have a 6 year gap on your resume to explain and probably a 6 year degradation of skills unless you're really disciplined.