| > And why would I care about that as an employee? You don't, the company cares. And whether or not you're a part of that company affects how much you care. > It is ridiculous to assume I should have interest in helping you make me work harder for the same amount of pay. You are making yourself work harder. Not the company. I guess we're having a miscommunication here because you're thinking in terms of "value of labour" and all that cruft. > So there's this pool of magical workers who can do twice the amount of work for the same salary as the current employee ... We have people on our team who don't know what CSV files are, and who spend 3 or 4 days on typing out things from spreadsheets, rather than using copy paste. Labour is not inherently valuable for the sake of labour. The value from a software engineer isn't from hours worked. It's the quality of the result. Man is more than machine. As long as you can produce twice as much quality software from two companies, then there's no issue with moonlighting a job. But I'm saying that you're painting yourself into a corner, because now you have to negotiate and do all the "non-labour-related" BS twice as much, and I would argue that the quality of your output degrades, not improves. It would be more effective to double your money with the current employer as it gives you and them (and you) more space, vacation, room to slow down and speed up when you need, etc. |