Squeeonline wrote: » It's a thing I love about working in austria. Job ads by law have to have the minimum salary for that position. It really helps filter out crap or stuff that I know is farrrr above me.
Akrasia wrote: » ... being asked to negotiate your salary before being offered the job is ridiculously unfair
Interested Observer wrote: » What an utterly bizarre post, honestly it just sounds like straight up jealousy. Imagine actually wanting to supress wages in an timeline where MNCs make billions of clear profit every single quarter. They should be paying people more not less. As for your site manager comment - you've obviously never been near a site in your life.
salonfire wrote: » Some of the salaries mentioned here are shocking, why are we paying ourselves so much? It can't be sustainable and will cause MNCs to look elsewhere. India is improving all the time in Software and will do your job for a fraction of your salary. Their infrastructure is 1st class in the dedicated cities built for IT companies. Why would people study their a*se off to become doctors when glorified builders ("site managers") earn 100k+ without a quarter of the knowledge required of a doctor. It causing everything to become far too expensive - look at housing. Ireland is not a rich country, we should be paying ourselves far less and praying MNCs will continue to operate here with competitiveness our main selling point. These salaries don't even cover the cost of Employer PRSI + other employee costs. What could possibly go wrong?
salonfire wrote: » It's called being a responsible adult. Looking at the facts and identifying risks and weaknesses and asking some hard questions. I guess that's why I am a manager and you are not. I'd love to pay myself €1m a year but don't because of the knock on repercussions that would lead to. Why do you think these companies are making billions? Hint, it's because they always look at the bottom line and if employee salaries damage that, they'll take steps to protect it.
TheUnderfaker wrote: » IT project manager. 56k
[Deleted User] wrote: » Think about it. 'We'd like to offer you the job. How much do we need to pay you?' It's a tough question, but if you have previous experience in a previous role and know the job spec you should have a good idea. It'll likely be more than you're currently on. Just because it's a tough question, and you'd ultimately like to maximise the most they WOULD possibly pay you, it's nowhere near unfair.
salonfire wrote: » Why would people study their a*se off to become doctors when glorified builders ("site managers") earn 100k+ without a quarter of the knowledge required of a doctor.
billyhead wrote: » It just goes to show a lot of people would be better of doing an apprenticeship or trade than going to 3rd level.
mloc123 wrote: » One thing is for sure ... Some people get very annoyed at the thought that others earn more money then them.
salonfire wrote: » Ireland is not a rich country, we should be paying ourselves far less and praying MNCs will continue to operate here with competitiveness our main selling point.
Tacitus Kilgore wrote: » Cross country boxing coach - €25k pa. construction management, 65k, long hours, relentless stress, not even close worth it but the bills just keep coming and need to be paid. I'll be dead from stress by 40 if i keep at this crap
arsebiscuits82 wrote: » I feel your pain, working construction 7-6 on average Monday to Friday with 45 min commute both ways, so I'm gone after 6 in the morning and home for 7 usually. Was up to midnight last night and currently processing data for monthly valuation due in for Monday, which will eat into tomorrow and Sunday as well. I love my job, but with young kids I'm thinking of changing. It's not worth it. I was like a bear coming home this evening. It's not fair on my kids coming home in bad humour. I met a former colleague today and he commented that I'd lost weight and looked beat. A topic for another thread maybe but construction, the expectations and the hours along with it need to change. Any wonder it's hard to find staff.
mloc123 wrote: » Graduate developers are starting on ~55k in my current company... base salary. They then get stock and bonus on top of that.
Akrasia wrote: » It’s extremely unfair because you’re negotiating blind while still competing with an unknown number of other candidates that the you have no visibility over. In an auction, you can see other bids, in a tender, you get to provide detailed coatings and breakdowns of your value proposition, but in an interview/application form, you get very limited time and space and it’s a very lobsided process. They know exactly how much they are prepared to pay, and if there are 2 candidates who are roughly the same but one of them sets their salary expectation at the exact amount the employer is expecting to pay, but the other offers to work for 10k a year less. It puts the person who undervalued their experience at an advantage in the selection process but a disadvantage in their career and income progression The minimum salary should always be advertised to allow inexperienced workers to sell themselves at a lower rate while experienced candidates can offer themselves at a premium There is a reason why employers rarely advertise the salary except for minimum wage jobs, and that’s because not advertising the salary gives the employer a big advantage when negotiating the salary In any negotiation the first mover has an inherent disadvantage as they set either the floor (buyer) or Ceiling(seller) in all future negotiations If the floor is way too low the other party walks away, if it’s close or even way better than the other party expected, the 2nd mover can still haggle that price to their own advantagw
onrail wrote: » Not belittling the skills and experience of a doctor, this is complete nonsense. 1. It's a general trend in construction that the greater the educational level, the less you're paid. (Not belittling trades, theyre simply worth more on site) 2. Try manage a construction site sometime. If you think you've seen stress, you havent even scratched the surface
masterboy123 wrote: » I started this thread. I am a doctor working in HSE, and I earn less than €80k, and I work about 60 hours a week I am happy to see software engineers are earning very well. Thanks everyone
masterboy123 wrote: » I started this thread. I am a doctor working in HSE, and I earn less than €80k, and I work about 60 hours a week
onrail wrote: » When you break that down as an hourly rate over say 33 weeks worked, its €55/hr. Scale that up over normal working hours and weeks, it's nearly a €100k job. Excellent gig if you're good at it!