Paul_Mc1988 wrote: » Electrian working for a company right now is between €24-€28.50 and they do a 39 hour flat week. So €48672-€57796. Overtime which their is an abundance of right now pushes this up. Electricians working for themselves with their own companies is a different story. It cost me €2000 to rewire my own house with the best of gear, I'm a qualified electrician FYI. I know people getting similar rewires and they are paying €10000 and in total its about 5 days work ( 1 day of chasing 2 days 1st fix and 2 days 2nd fix). Some serious cash to be made out there at the moment
Paul_Mc1988 wrote: » You might be able to do one year (final year) of a social type degree as you have a level 6 and get an ordinary degree. I know this is the case with engineering but not too up to speed on the social degree side of things. Worth looking into
anplaya27 wrote: » Ya need to do 3 year level 7 if you only have a level 6. I see she has a level 7 - 3 years. The 1 year add on gets you an honours level 8 degree. Social care area though is poorly paid.
Augeo wrote: » Are you managing people, processes or projects?
Rrrrrr2 wrote: » Technical Manager, Chemical industry- €60 k plus car allowance which is over €9k. They pay my medical insurance and a few other bits. Tax is crippling in my opinion. Is this a ****e salary or not? I hear people in large tech companies often on 6 figures?
wally1990 wrote: » I'm also amazed by some people who have no clue how much they make Brother in law was at college for a period of time during the week so must have had built up unused Cut off points and tax credits because when he went back to work during the year , he was talking about wages and said " I earn a grand a week" (so 52k a year ) Jan 2021 came and I did his tax return and his gross earnings were 34k , I was like I thought your earning 50k a year ? He does " I dunno, sure I was getting a grand a week ' His employer was paying about 650 a week on his payroll submissions every week gross but sure because he had a period of time where he was making 1k over his allowances so he thought he was on 50k Ffs , I take everything with a pinch of salt now
Augeo wrote: » If you gross 650/week you can't come out with more regardless of any periods you weren't working.
Rrrrrr2 wrote: Technical Manager, Chemical industry- €60 k plus car allowance which is over €9k. They pay my medical insurance and a few other bits. Tax is crippling in my opinion. Is this a ****e salary or not? I hear people in large tech companies often on 6 figures?
gameoverdude wrote: » Hard to know. Are you software tech or machine tech? Either way sounds low.
Rrrrrr2 wrote: Agrochemical side, very small sector really. I’m not on production, it’s a commercial role.
gameoverdude wrote: » Bit off topic, but curious. When you say commercial. Bit like a tech manager for a customer?
Rrrrrr2 wrote: Yea it’s quite varied - it’s a mix of technical and sales with customers
gameoverdude wrote: » Crying out for your type in all industries! If you can can organise a project, keep customers happy, get the right team together...don't need to stay in the niche industry.
Rrrrrr2 wrote: » I hear people in large tech companies often on 6 figures?
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.
blacklilly wrote: » I also work in the construction industry as a surveyor. The pressure is off the scale and the expectation of individual output is unrealistic. No one seems to want to acknowledge just how tough it is. A major shift is needed in the industry, it isn't sustainable as it is. I don't have children currently but know I couldn't work the job I do and be the parent I'd want to be. My salary is over €80k, 10% pension, health insurance and 25% bonus
gary550 wrote: » I'd consider myself self employed but I'm a company director of a few companies of which I own. I'll probably finish this year paying myself a very average wage (shy of €30k), I could absolutely pay myself much more but I'm early 20's and still very much building my company so I'd rather leave it in my company and invest back in now while I'm easily able. I'm also planning on putting a substantial amount toward a pension this year too. Quite honestly if someone offered me 100k salary tomorrow to work for them I'd refuse without much thought. I absolutely love working for myself and it's all I've ever done and hopefully won't ever have to work for anyone else. Different strokes for different folks I suppose. Also if you are reading this thread and comparing yourself to others and feeling a but sh*t I'd advise you don't put much thought into it, if I was to go out on a limb I'd say there's a fair bit of exaggeration like most finance threads on any forum :rolleyes: finances are very much individual and down to circumstance so if what you are doing now works for you then rock on (and if it doesn't you can change that!).
HillCloudHop wrote: » You can start AVC to top up your public pension. It's definitely worth it.
Rrrrrr2 wrote: » €60k plus car is prob decent ballpark so on those figures. I’m definitely not Senior!! Especially when I read the above story- I’m never really under any of that level pressure and enjoy a nice work life balance to be fair. So maybe I could be on more but with gruelling pressure attached
Happyhouse22 wrote: » Thanks, have done. More just wondering from an academic point of view how the single pension scheme compares to a private pension
Smee_Again wrote: » This is how I feel at the minute. Previous title included Manager but that was changed to Specialist after we were acquired, but I never managed people or budgets and was mostly project based so wasn't really a manager. I'm on €65K + pension + healthcare and a few other benefits but I've very little stress and can easily manage my workload without any OT or the like. Work/Life balance is great. I could earn more, and I might have to in the not too distant future, but for now I'm happy enough. A bigger salary just means a bigger mortgage in many cases, and then you're paying that off for 20-30 years.
JimmyVik wrote: » In our place they give you a title as a promotion, but what they dont tell you is that you wont get paid overtime under that title. Most people copping on to that, but some have been caught out.