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Ask HN: How much of a pay cut would you take?
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1 points
by username317
4520 days ago
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I'm a software developer with around 10 years of experience doing mostly server side development with some client-server and a few web apps thrown in. I work at a company where I make a decent amount of money for the area. I think the average here is around 95K and I make around 35-40K more after bonuses. Unfortunately I'm not happy here. My job has become tedious and frustrating and it's getting harder and harder to get out of bed and go to work each day. I recently talked to a recruiter in my area and he confirmed what I was suspecting - I am not going to find that very easily. I don't have any of the hot skills like iOS or Android but plan on doing some things in my spare time to boost that. However it is hard to motivate myself when I get home tired and somewhat depressed to do anything other than throw back a few beers and stare at the TV. I can afford a pay cut. We don't spend a ton of money. I just can't get over the thought of taking a step backward. Even though I could still be paid well at my next job, knowing it probably won't be as high as it could be is worrisome. My logical side says that happiness and less stress is worth a cut in pay but my greedy ego doesn't agree. So how much of a pay cut would you take if you weren't happy? And how would you get over it? Or would you wait it out until you found something comparable? Or are you still just hanging on to that good paying job because you don't think it will be better elsewhere? I think I've worked with those people from time to time and I don't want to become them. |
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Being laid off caused me to pursue freelance more seriously and made us realize how excessive we were living. We cut back on wasting a lot of money on everything from going out to eat to movie rentals, to buying garbage we didn't need.
Because I was unhappy, I felt like I was dieing at my old job; like the world was passing me by. I was there for almost 8 years...
If you can take a pay cut and be happier somewhere else, I'd say do it. Money is not everything. I'd say learn some new things on the side and pad your resume a bit. Maybe it helps you get a job you do like with the same pay your accustomed to.
Money is a tough thing to figure out. We all want to get paid our value, but living expenses, family, kids, retirement all come into play.