‘I’m proud of being a job hopper’: Seattle engineer’s post about company loyalty goes viral::undefined

  • Odelay42@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Most people over-index on maximizing compensation or holding on to stability. But there’s more to work than money and stability. Work is about growth, building connections, working on things you care about, being challenged and creating a legacy.

    Fucking legacy? Is this a joke? Who gives a shit about what shitty products they launch for FAANG companies? I certainly don’t - not beyond keeping my resume and portfolio up to date.

    Compensation and stability are the only things that matter beyond basic working conditions and a non-toxic environment.

    • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Well in my case I created a legacy by helping to unionize my workplace. I don’t even care if I’m ever remembered for that, not many legacies can be beat

      • SK4nda1@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        Very nice! Unionization is the only way to make employera care about workers rights.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      My legacy is my kids, and that’s time no company can take from me

    • morrowind@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      Man we’ve lost something along the way. When did our jobs become purely a means of money and contributing nothing to society.

        • GladiusB@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          100 percent. My work is treated as a commodity. Why wouldn’t I consider the company one as well?

        • morrowind@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          I always found the name of the department “Human Resources” quite demeaning.

      • CrowAirbrush@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Mine turned into that when it stopped paying enough to provide me with basic needs.

        If it’s fuck me, then it’s fuck all y’all too.

      • puppy@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The exact moment the employer only cared about money and not its employees or contributions to the society.

      • RedFox@infosec.pub
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        10 months ago

        Executives used to be stewards of the company. They took care of brand, and people.

        Then we switched to a bottom line focus. Now, profit, stock prices are the only thing that matters.

        Shortcuts, layoffs, benefit cuts, etc are the only way to offset not making continuous market growth, and still rack ridiculous profits.

        Also, great deal of Americans started not giving a shit about where the product comes from or who makes it. We want the cheapest thing, fast. Just has been our personal priorities.

        There’s not much incentive for a company to consider it’s corporate image, contributions to community and public, etc.

        I’d say that’s when.

      • demonsword@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Man we’ve lost something along the way. When did our jobs become purely a means of money and contributing nothing to society.

        This mythic past where our jobs meant “more than money” and we “contributed to society” never existed anywhere

      • novibe@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        When capitalism. That’s when.

        Edit: to clarify, it wasn’t much better before capitalism. But it was less all-encompassing. Feudalism was a shitty structure, worse even than capitalism tbh. But it was much easier to escape it. Not just in the “survivalist hippie camp” that still exists now. But even in everyday life. The system wasn’t shaping every facet of human existence. Only production relations (which is the big one yes). But capitalism has shaped everything around us. Our places of work, sure, but our personal lives. Our inner lives. Everything has been commodified. Mental health, religion, wellness, friendships, love and relationships, families, sickness, children etc. etc. etc… That is the main reason capitalism is worse than anything before it. No other system had the capacity to destroy the planet. None. To destroy all life in it. All in the name of profit. An immaterial, formless concept. Not even a real thing. And there’s not much we can do it seems. I mean there is, and I think it’s pretty clear. But I bet even that gets commodified soon. Bring on the politicians/capitalists death match reality game shows I guess…

    • Static_Rocket@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I don’t know man, I’ve always liked the idea of a project outliving me. Though for the sanity of future engineers I hope that is not the case. Today’s solutions are usually just tomorrow’s problems.

      • nxdefiant@startrek.website
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        10 months ago

        On a long enough timeline, all things end, and tech has hyper accelerated timelines.

        I was once interviewed by a guy who asked for my biggest failure, which was basically “favorite open source project didn’t work out”. He let me know he worked on an early competitor of the X windowing system and really believed in it. And we laughed about that. (He hired me).

        So yeah, I kinda agree with this job hopper guy on everything but legacy, but only because we really don’t get to have a say on what our code ends up meaning to anyone. The sands of time are nothing compared to the brutality of tech stack churn.

    • PhAzE@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Who invented Google home? Like, what’s the person’s name? What about the person that designed the Sonos Move?

      There’s no legacy. There’s business objectives and getting those completed so upper management can move their plans forward. Who gets them there is irrelevant.

    • fidodo@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Seriously, nobody is going to remember you. Like 3 generations down, you’ll even be a tiny blip in your descendents world. Even most billionaires will be remembered through an encyclopedia entry and nothing else.

    • stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Agreed, something has gone wrong if I individually am so important that what I leave at a job is considered a legacy.

      All I want is for the things I work on to be useful for the lifetime of the product and some appreciation from management for putting in the work while getting paid well.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Ain’t nobody giving increases like new bosses.

    You want loyalty? That’s what pensions were for. Fuck your 401k, I can invest myself, thanks.

    You want loyalty? Give better increases.

    • kingthrillgore@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      At the end of the day, software developers desire two things: An interesting technical challenge, and fair pay/benefits for the work done. If you can’t provide either, you have a problem. Not the employee.

        • hansl@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I’ve known quite a few people that were paid under the market value because they liked their job and tasks. I’ve took a salary hit once at the start of my career because I hated my job too much and wanted the job I was interviewing for. Didn’t regret it too. Though two years after I accepted a job at FAANG.

      • go_go_gadget@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Companies like to straddle the technical challenges appeal where they’re innovative risk takers but don’t you dare try to improve on any existing system. If they just want firefighters then say so and accept that people aren’t going to be passionate about it.

        • Bobby Turkalino@lemmy.yachts
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          10 months ago

          Companies don’t even take risks anymore. They wait for some startup to take all the risks, acquire them, and integrate some partial abomination into their existing product

        • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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          10 months ago

          I had one job where the company gave annual 401k lump sums based on profit. Some of those deposits were upwards of $20k. No company before or since has boosted my 401k so much.

        • bus_factor@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          If the new company also matches, it’ll probably make you more money than staying, because the max match is reset. If you really game it you might max out the match for both companies in the same year.

      • foggy@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Often times the ‘match’ isn’t matched fully until you’ve been an employee for x years. Ask your HR department about their vesting schedule! 🤓

        • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Well… yeah. That’s how they use benefits to encourage loyalty.

          When I hit 5 years, I vest and my employer begins double-matching, including retroactive contributions. I put in 7%, so in another 2 trays they’ll put 70% of my annual salary into my retirement all at once.

          It heavily encourages loyalty because it’s genuinely a great benefit. I have no problem with that.

          I work for money, and the reward for loyalty is more money.

          Beats the hell out of a pizza party.

  • kingthrillgore@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Companies get mad when the employees look at their jobs the way execs look at their employees. Cue outrage. The only reason they mad is because they own the newspapers, too.

    The audacity of these removed. I have a mercenary outlook on work too. If you love me, keep paying me good.

    I’m not loyal to anybody, I’m a demon / I have no loyalty for anyone, never did, never will

    • ZeroTemp@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I’ve been practicing the mercenary method for about 5 years now. Since then I’ve significantly increased my salary and I’ve been a lot happier at work. That on top of learning to say “no” has improved my career life exponentially. NO loyalty. No unpaid overtime. No going above and beyond for a company that isn’t going to return the favor.

      • emptiestplace@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        What about when they do return the favour, though?

        As someone who has spent a fair bit of time on the other side of this issue, I’ve found people tend to assume I’m being shitty even as I am actively going out of my way to accommodate and support them.

        One time I moved someone from hourly to salary because he was very receptive to guidance and was learning very quickly - essentially I didn’t want him to be compared on hourly terms as his pay increased, since the cap for more independent salaried employees was much higher. I was kinda risking my own ass in doing this since he had neither experience nor education, but I saw incredible potential, and felt it made sense. As part of this, to ensure he wouldn’t be shortchanged by the conversion, I had payroll add 5K when they switched him. I expected this would be well received, but he had so many concerns that made absolutely no sense. We got through it, but in the end it seems he thought that all of the extra time I was spending personally to teach him a new role and help him get from ~40K to 100K within a year and a half was something to be wary of.

        I have many stories like this. Sometimes when I feel hurt by people I’ve been so loyal to, I get urges to stop being compassionate and stop prioritizing their concerns so heavily. I don’t think I’ll ever change, but it is extra exhausting to go through this stuff over and over only to be lumped in with folks who do treat people like shit.

        Perhaps the model is just fundamentally broken, and there’s no way to win as long as there is any sort of power differential in the relationship (implied or otherwise). More and more I feel that that is what I’m up against, and no amount of concern for an employee’s wellbeing will ever be able to overcome this.

        So, my question is not rhetorical - I realize this isn’t my post, but I’m super curious about others’ perspective on this: are you open to the idea that at some point in your career someone might actually care about your wellbeing? Will it matter to you, or just … get whatever you can, and never stop trying to fuck the system?

        • Kedly@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          I’m currently at a job that just leaves me alone to do my job and gives me opportunities to learn new skills as they present themselves, none of these extra roles have came with a pay raise, but I havent had an OK paying job in YEARS where I actually look forward to showing up to work the next day (which I do feel about this one). There are different things a job can provide once the bills have been paid, and I’m sure SOME of your fellow co-workers/employees notice you giving a shit about them

        • GrindingGears@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          I think the answer to this is actually fairly simple. When the bossman tells me something’s in my best interest, I’m just immediately suspicious. Like I know in your example it maybe is, you’ve laid out your logic and all of that. But you have to realize that for every good boss, there’s probably 15 bad ones. Western economic, labour systems and power structures have been so lopsided for generations, that it’s literally hard coded in us to be suspicious. Whenever someone comes at me from work with a big smile and excitement, my flags FLY to red alert. Because I’m statistically far more likely to be on the raw side of the deal.

        • ZeroTemp@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          If I truly felt a company, or someone at the company, cared for me and my career I’d have no problem putting in the extra effort. Unfortunately it is a rare occurrence and most of the time decisions are revenue/cash flow related and it doesn’t matter how much a company cares. At the end of the day, no matter how good things are where you work, it’ll always come down to the bottom line and what value you provide vs what you are costing the company.

    • frostysauce@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      We’re soldiers of fortune we’ll fight for no country but we’ll die for good pay. Under the flag of the greenback dollar or the peso down Mexico way…

    • ferralcat@monyet.cc
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      10 months ago

      I’m fine with my reports taking better offers if they’ve got em. I don’t get how these people get hired though. When I see these resumes that flip jobs every year, I immediately just kinda figure it’s a waste to invest time in this person.

      • GrindingGears@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        I look at it differently. It’s my job to invest in, and create an environment that people don’t want to ever leave. It’s a two way street. If people are only hanging around for a year, something is up, and it probably ain’t their fault.

  • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    “Having hired over 500 engineers personally in my career, if your resume came across my list, I would definitely pass.”

    Heh. A job seeker with three FANG companies on their resume does not give a shit if this random person would bin their resume.

    Also, I’m trying to imagine a scenario where having needed to hire 500 people, personally, in a single career isn’t embarrassing.

    Edit: “You think you suck at retention? Let me tell you how my year went!”

    • thesmokingman@programming.dev
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      10 months ago

      Your second paragraph tells you who you’re trying to find in your third paragraph: FAANG. Hiring 500 engineers and bragging about it something you can do when you’re just interested in shareholder value not customer experience.

      I wouldn’t hire the guy in the article because I haven’t seen strong candidates come from FAANG and I’ve been very happy to lose the people I did to FAANG because they weren’t good engineers, they just knew how to leetcode and tunnel vision trivia.

      • stoly@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        IMO this is exactly what happens. the sort of person who acts this way isn’t interested in becoming a better person and learning, they were in it for the diploma and the paycheck. this person stopped growing somewhere in high school.

    • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s not about having FANG in your job history. It’s about switching companies three times in three years.

      Where I work, we tend to lose money on new hires for an average of the first six months. That’s time where not only the new engineer isn’t very productive, but other engineers on the same team aren’t very productive. They’re sinking time into difficult conversations like “yeah you need to go back and redo the last two weeks of work — it’s perfectly good code, but you used library X, and we decided four years ago to is use library Y because X has this rare edge case issue when combined with library Z which we also use…”.

      If someone only works with us for a year… we haven’t made enough of a profit to cover the losses in the first half of their employment with us. If you want to work for us, we’re not going to force you into a multi-year contract but we do want to be as confident as possible that you’re going to stay here long term.

      I wouldn’t turn someone down for changing jobs three times in three years… but I would definitely ask what happened. And they better answer with something that will happen at my company.

      I’m trying to imagine a scenario where having needed to hire 500 people, personally

      It takes, what, 10 minutes to read a resume? 30 minutes interview someone? Lets round that up to one hour to cover discussing two promising candidates with a colleague… it’s still only 500 hours of work. Or 12 weeks. Obviously you also need to read all the resumes and do interviews with people who were turned down but over an entire career working in HR for a large company… 500 people isn’t that many at all.

      • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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        10 months ago

        500 can be a lot unless you’re talking about one of these companies with 50,000 employees. If it’s a smaller company, that means they’re hiring over 4 new engineers a month over a 10 year period.

          • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            And how many were hired? I think people keep forgetting he said he hired that many. That means many times more interviews and maybe many times more than that in resumes read.

            The real question is over what time period we’re talking about. Too short and either you work at a huge company or can’t retain employees. Could even be both.

            • stoly@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              You know I missed the “hired” part there. That does sound like someone who never actually gives any particular candidate any time or attention and rather looks for a series of arbitrary checkboxes to fill.

    • fidodo@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Sometime who’s hired that many people would understand how job hunting works more. If you’ve worked at 3 FANG companies in 3 years, you’re not quitting your job then interviewing, you’re interviewing while you’re employed and only quitting when you’ve secured the next job. Also, with a beefy resume like that, companies will be reaching out to you to poach you, and in those cases they can’t complain about the work history because they’re the ones trying to steal you away.

    • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It certainly wouldn’t be unreasonable for someone over a few decades who’s built several teams at a number of different companies. That would be about one person a month over forty years.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      “Having hired over 500 engineers personally in my career, if your resume came across my list, I would definitely pass.”

      Heh.A job seeker with three FANG companies on their resume does not give a shit if this random person would bin their resume.

      You’d be surprised. Anecdotes what they are, I know a stunningly-capable dev with an ROTC accelerated BEng degree and a BSc+MSc chaser, an international resume including Snap, FB, Apple, A-I shops, instruction, leading teams; it’s heroic.

      Been out of work for months after a start-up imploded and ghosted the dev and didn’t send the RoE nor apparently also tax withholdings and all manner of retroactively-shady stuff. Start-ups are risky, kids, even if the idea is amazeballs-great.

      It happens in this job and this market. It’s happened before, and it will happen again if we live or have lived long enough.

      Also, I’m trying to imagine a scenario where having needed to hire 500 people, personally, in a single career isn’t embarrassing.

      Consider a career that spans more than a year.

      At my last dotcom, a vPBX 10 years ago, they were hiring 2 people a day for a year. Every damned day. The niche was huge and they were gutting the local market of sound and kernel and Kafka and mqtt people. Very minimal ditching, all new nerds.

      So that’s 700+ in just a year. And people work at their jobs for often far more than that: sometimes they make a career out of it, my dude.

      “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

  • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Companies are forcing return to office policies as a covert way of doing layoffs without compensation, if they’re not kicking people out with the thousands and are shocked to discover workers are now not particularly loyal to employers.

    They also hate it when employees use the exact same economic reasoning as they do to maximize revenue and take opportunities.

  • Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Companies: “You are nothing but a cog in a machine. You will be placed in the machine if and only if you help the machine generate maximum profit. If your presence ever causes the machine to generate less than maximum profit you will be summarily discarded.”

    Employees: “Okay, so you try to get the maximum profit for you and I try to get the maximum profit for me.”

    Companies: surprisePikachu.jpg

  • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    I’ve averaged ~12 job hops in the last 6 years and I wouldn’t change a thing. Compensation growth has been roughly 6.05x. The previous 6 years was…maybe 3? And maybe 2x.

    I owe the big corps nothing. I meet expectations and deliverables and I support my team however I can, but that’s about it.

    • billwashere@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      But eventually don’t you risk being unhireable with this sort of work history? We recently hired someone who had a similar work history and I remember that being very much a red flag when we hired them. Turns out the red flag should have been payed attention too since history is a good predictor of future behaviors.

      As a hiring manager I would think twice about investing anything in an employee who jumps around THAT much. I mean I don’t blame you, I’ve had the same job for 23 years and I could be making a lot more money. But salary is not everything and I love my job. My mental health is very much an extra benefit.

      • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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        10 months ago

        Even assuming that it’s all W2, it’s a self-resolving problem- if no one will hire you because you’re unstable, you stay at the existing job. That works until either you’ve been there long enough to appear stable, or you find an employer that’s not concerned about it.

          • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            10 months ago

            Being laid off may be seen as a mitigating factor. It’s a no-fault termination and can easily be explained to the next hiring manager.

            • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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              10 months ago

              Even if I got laid off twice in a row in six months though? In this market? Both times it was with around half the company as well. One was an acquisition with the new US owner preferring people in India, the other one was a “pivot” after sales sold something that they themselves couldn’t really describe.

              I didn’t get to hiring managers and explanations in the first place. I got told at one point by a hiring manager that they would rather hire some Googler who recently got laid off, since the pipeline is full of those. The fact that six months later they laid said hiring manager off with his team as well does not really make me feel vindicated either.

              No worries though, I got my plans sorted out, no better time to get more specialized, go back to uni and get into a niche but growing field I like.

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        I could see that if they were all W2. But near the tail end of my more aggressive efforts I started branching into 1099 work and they don’t mind at all.

        I also have a much wider breadth of technology experience now so it really opened the doors on the opportunities I qualify for.

        I’ve shaved something like 5-7 years off my retirement age with this short stint. Even if I just coast at a single job from here on out, I think it was worth it. You are 100% correct that salary isn’t everything. I’m really hoping to grow the 1099 portfolio at this point, there’s something a little freeing about it, weirdly enough.

        • StereoTrespasser@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          C’mon, if you’re an independent contractor you’re not “job hopping.” Why did your original comment call them hops? You’ve just got new and different clients.

        • billwashere@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I hadn’t thought about this. Yeah if its contract work it’s expected and that’s a totally different situation.

      • stoly@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Also hiring manager here and I agree with you–I wouldn’t hire even the best person if they displayed this behavior.

        For most people, this is the case. But for the super elite tech worker, this is not the case–they are sought after. The stories you read here are from the elitest of the elite CS/CE program graduates.

          • stoly@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Entitlement, narcissism, chose your poison. This person believes they deserve more and more and more and finds ways to justify their behavior.

            That said, I agree that corporations are bullshit so I get it. This person isn’t a hero, though.

            • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              I’m all for job hopping, it just doesn’t make sense that after 2-3 times that a company would say, “sure, come work for six months” knowing the person will waste 1-2 months of that onboarding and getting up to speed with how things work at that company.

              • stoly@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                I suspect that a lot of these get into companies during those gigantic hiring waves that result in massive layoffs a year later.

    • douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Easier and more straightforward to get a position and salary promotion by way of hopping jobs than it is to do within the same company.

      It’s really sad that this is the state of things but it is how it is.

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        Sadly true. In my earlier years I watched new hires sometimes start at the same or more than I was getting after 1-2 mediocre raises.

        At one of my last longer term jobs, I was miffed at the lack of compensation increases over the last 2 years, so I told them I was quitting. I even said I don’t have anything lined up, but I just can’t continue knowing the market is paying more. They ended up magically finding a 20% increase for me - where was that before?

    • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      How do you even explain that during the hiring process? That’s not even enough time to figure anything out

    • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      Can I ask what you do for a living? In Canada, such gains are basically impossible on income. If you were earning $70k as a low level software developer, there’s no way you could, in 6 years, without skill upgrading and promotions, change that into $400k+

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        Software Dev/Eng. Largely Angular/Vue, C#/Go, SQL Server/Postgres, and Azure/AWS/GCP full stack development.

        I’m not sure how tech pay works in Canada. I know in the UK and surrounding that tech pay is significantly lower than the US.

        I am in the US and tech pay here can be criminally high (or criminally low). A lot of people chase RSUs, but I chase base pay.

        My friend went from a $15/hr IT Support job to a $500k+ (TC) in 4 years hopping 4 times.

        It’s stupid money that I assume won’t last forever so doing my best to save/donate what I can now.

      • stoly@lemmy.world
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        Please don’t extrapolate based on what you read here. The people who are saying they do this are among a very elite group of people who came out of high-end technical programs. They have the pedigree and are sought after so they can do this as much as they like. You most likely cannot get away with this.

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          10 months ago

          This is also the internet. So people lie. I wouldn’t be surprised if a number of people claiming they job hop and get these huge pay bumps were lying about it.

        • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          I graduated with a 2.8 GPA. I learned everything on the job(s). My first few years were 80 hour weeks not because I had to, but because I wanted to learn [everything I didn’t learn in school].

          My friend never graduated and makes way more money than I do (I believe post-tax $600k but I’m only about 90% sure). Software Engineering is a booming arena right now if you have the right buzz words on your resume and soft skills for the interview. I say booming now, but Sep-Dec last year were rough. However, the market for CS job opportunities is bouncing back.

          It’s a game that can be played and succeeded at, regardless of pedigree, but aptitude matters. Even my favorite bartender at my local dive bar is studying it in their free time and, frankly, they’re getting pretty good at it fast. I think they’ll be just fine.

      • BaldManGoomba@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Data Center Engineer now. But I have an associate in electronic engineering from a community College.

        2010-2013 Walmart. Started $7.65 an hour Ended $10.60 only reason I got a raise because of minimum raise increases Graduated college 2013-2016 left for a niche small electronics company (laser tag) $10 an hour. Got experience in my degree 2016-2018 left to work for Perdue chicken manufacturering plant 15.10 ended at 15.65 2018-2020 casino started at 15 ended at 15.65 2020-2022 data center for bank started at $24 ended at $26 2022-now data center different bank with a union started at $30 now at $32.30

        Most the companies want to give me 3% or less every year one company kept putting off talks of raises. I kept taking more and more responsibility and no one would giving me a decent raise or pay me what I was worth.

        I got $8.45 in raises from companies lots of the big chunk amounts came from minimum raise increase and work place adjustments. Every increase that they gave me for a yearly raise was 3% or less. Me leaving to another company got me $16.20 of pay increases.

        111% increase from raises and 212% increase from job hopping in the last 14 years

        • odelik@lemmy.today
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          10 months ago

          I umm, think you could possibly get 50-70% more salary jumping companies fairly easily. $67k (base) is sorely underpaid for a skilled data center engineer. A quick search confirms my suspicion that a data center engineer makes on average ~$145k a year.

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            10 months ago

            This dude is working at a bank. They don’t pay well, but job security is decent. Banks rarely go out of business. He should go elsewhere to earn more. But yeah, that’s literally nothing for his job. He could easily double it.

          • BaldManGoomba@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            I am also not qualified to be an engineer despite having it in my title I am more like a data center technician or cable/server installer. Which is more inline with my salary

            But give me a couple years with it in my title and tons of learning and a certification I can hit network engineer with 6 figures.

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      That can vary widely across industry and circumstance. I’ve stayed with the same company (granted through a couple mergers) and grown my comp more than 10x in that time.

      And while I’m not at all advocating for being any more loyal to a company than they are to you, I can definitely say seeing a big string of quick flips in jobs in their resume is a big red flag for me when hiring people.

      I don’t mind people having a practical attitude to comp, but in my line of work at least I find it takes a good few months of orientation for someone to start adding real value anyway. Definitely not something I’m looking to repeat all the time with folks I hire. Granted, I also work damn hard to earn some loyalty and put “my money where my mouth is” for my people, I’d often not the case.

      In any event, I’d definitely agree you’ve got to keep a close eye on your own self interest. You may run into bosses and companies that will do right by you like I have, but there is sure as hell no guarantee of it and precious little way to tell the difference till you’ve spent time there.

  • jimmydoreisalefty@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    He also noted higher pay and easier promotions. “I had a 20% pay bump moving from Amazon to Microsoft for the same role and job responsibilities,” Nguyen wrote.

    • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      Industries promote this, especially the publicly traded ones, whether they realize it or not (I’m sure they do). It looks worse on a corporate balance sheet and subsequent earnings quarterly earnings report to pay someone 20% more than to hire someone at a new pay scale. It’s absolutely insane that we’ve gotten ourselves to this point as a society, but here we are.

      • grabyourmotherskeys@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I think it’s also very acceptable to have full time contractors on the payroll with no end date for the same reason.

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            10 months ago

            Contractors can be paid out of project budgets, they don’t need benefits and other perks aside from cash and they can be hired and terminated quickly with no severance

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              And afterwards they discover the payroll is much lower while overall costs are much higher compared to the fixed employee era, and the same people they fired are back but now on s freelance base.

              • pelya@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                When the company’s CEO cares more about cutting employees’ bonuses than saving money and reporting more cost-saving measures to the board.

            • 800XL@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              And that goes back to the engineer’s original ask to show him what companies have employee loyalty.

              Replacing full time employees who at least have a slight stake in the company with easily replaceable contractors there to complete a project doesn’t put the best foot forward in the loyalty regard.

              • Nomecks@lemmy.ca
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                10 months ago

                I make no judgements on the intelligence of these decisions, I was answering why companies do it.

                • 800XL@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  Right on. I did ask why after all and even tho I wanted to know something specific from the post above mine I was generic with my question.

              • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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                10 months ago

                My work let all the contractors know that they can comvert or their contracts will not be renewed again. I know at least one guy that would be taking a 40k pay cut.

                I was just hired on along with another guy. We found out that one of our team members who has been with the company for 10 years is making less than the new hires.

                Another oddity of the situation: I worked with her in the same department 10 years ago as new hires. I left the company to double my salary and 10 years later came back and was hired at the same salary I had left for (took a pay cut for a better life).

                I get so pissed off on her behalf. 8 years of mysoginistic managers screwing her over for raises, and now that she finally has a good manager, his hands are tied to give her a decebt, an deserved, raise or even salary parity with new-hires.

              • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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                10 months ago

                original ask

                When you leave the car lot, you need to use regular words like ‘request’ or ‘question’.

            • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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              10 months ago

              My old job did this with me. Let me go for “personnel reasons” (playing well with others, specifically an older cranky guy), and hired me back as a contractor now making about 6x what I made while there. Old guy left, and a management spot opened up about the same time, they lowballed the shit out of their offer, to which I laughed and said I’m happy where I’m at.

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        10 months ago

        I don’t understand how it works out for them though. Hiring is so much more expensive than retaining staff, not just the higher salary, but the loss of productivity from losing someone with institutional knowledge and needing to train the new person which can take a really long time to get them up to speed.

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          don’t understand how it works out for them though. Hiring is so much more expensive than retaining

          You’re using logic, and that may trip you up here.

          Hiring is spread out into different cost buckets, whereas a 20% hit to one resource’s payroll stays in payroll.

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          10 months ago

          Many of the most wealthy and powerful companies in our world have never made a profit. Many times, companies succeed by currying the favor of the rich and powerful more so than anything else.

      • NekuSoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de
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        10 months ago

        Yup. I obviously don’t hate the people doing this, quite the opposite if anything, but it’s so silly that it’s a thing in the first place.

    • friend_of_satan@lemmy.world
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      When I moved to Silicon Valley the HR guy at my company was an old hippie who looked out for people. He told me the silicon valley way to get a raises is to tell your company that you have decided to take another job because it pays more, and you don’t want to leave, but you have personal obligations like your girlfriend being pregnant that mean you have to take a higher paying job. Then if they don’t give you a raise you find a new job that will.

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        And when you take the raise they’ll give you all the shit work until they find a replacement for you. If you legit have an offer from a different company take it.

        • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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          10 months ago

          Do you really think they’d try to drive you out after giving you a raise to stay?

          I think most of these companies as a whole are pretty evil, but your middle-managment boss or random HR rep is probably happy that you got more money out of the deal. They’re a cog in the machine just like you.

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          If you legit have an offer from a different company take it.

          No way. You might walk through the door at the other company, realise it’s a horrible place to work, and hand in your resignation at lunch time.

          Take the pay rise. If they fire you a month later, you’ll at least get a big severance package to cover your living expenses while you look for a new job. If you quit, then quit again, you’re going to be delivering pizza’s or something while you look for a decent paying job.

          • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            You might walk through the door at the other company, realise it’s a horrible place to work, and hand in your resignation at lunch time.

            Do you not have any references at the company? Because that is the only way this could really happen. Personally I don’t blindly apply to a company without having any inside references.

            Once you strong arm your employer to giving you a raise you’ve painted a big target on your back and you’ve announced that you’re willing to walk over money. It spells insecurity to them and the next thing you’ll find is the door hitting you on the way out.

  • inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    So been working as a software engineer for twenty years now and seen the steady decline of workers. Started out as the last straggler for a pension, rapid decline of insurance, crap ass 401ks, the lack of employee investment and the chacing of the median salary.

    I tell every new hire to spend a year here, get your experience, then look for another job, come back a few months later if you really like the work.

    I mean honestly, fuck these corporations, they don’t care or have loyalty to their employees and you can be screwed with a 401k anywhere so get you pay bump and fuck their expectations of loyalty.

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    Nguyen previously wrote a guest post in Business Insider that detailed his post-graduation move from New York City to Seattle for a tech job and how it “turned out to be the loneliest time of my life.”

    Sounds like The Seattle Freeze.

    Anyway. Yeah, if I’m looking at a candidate and see they had three jobs in three years, that’s a minus. Are they insufferable and they’re being fired? Are they actually bad at their job? Even if they are good at their job, are they going to stick around here long enough to be worth the resources spent onboarding them?

    It’s a risky move.

    Would be better if employers made more effort to retain people, but here we are.

    • realitista@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yes, however recruiters see someone like this and see a great opportunity to fill their quota, so it all balances out.

    • Lexi Sneptaur@pawb.social
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      I live in Seattle and honestly have never experienced any freeze at all. Maybe it’s because I’m queer or maybe it’s because I have good social skills, but I have had no issue integrating myself with the community here and have made lots of friends. Seattle responds well to those who put themselves out there and aren’t republican weirdos.

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        10 months ago

        In my experience, you can only make friends through work or through shared activities like skiing or the knitting club. Otherwise people aren’t interested in you. If you’re super active, then you’ll have tons of friends. If you’re an introvert, you’re probably better off somewhere else.

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        I’m just glad I have a name for what I’d also agree was the single most lonely time of my own life, hunkered-down in a North Seattle apartment for 18 months before bailing on my green card and h1 and going back to Vancouver.

        Because the weather wasn’t the issue; but I’d suggest improving the rail transit and rolling the shitty moldy wet-wood lowboy apartments into something more dense to allow for beneficial green-space. This emerald city needs a little more greenery!

        But transit and greenery may be a little avant-garde for a country still undecided on the issue of felons as kings :-\

        • Lexi Sneptaur@pawb.social
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          I wanted to thank you for sharing your experience and make sure to validate you in this, because it really sounds very difficult to go through. Hopefully things are doing better for you recently.

    • stoly@lemmy.world
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      People in Seattle are seriously the coldest mofos you’ve ever encountered. They really don’t want anything to do with anything outside their bubble. As a result, the only way to make friends is to share activities like sports or whatever.

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      How’s it risky? Normally you secure the next job before quitting.

  • festus@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    I think jumping after 1 year is a bit extreme, but after 3 years (my target was 2) I landed a new job I start soon! 47% salary increase plus better benefits and more time off - there’s no way my current employer could ever match that!

    • GrindingGears@lemmy.ca
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      I got a 73% raise for jumping ship after just under four years at my old job, back in 2021 2022. I was getting nothing but gaslighted when I pointed out that my salary was becoming a bit under the indicated going rate. Which to me quickly indicated that they saw me as disposable, as they refused to respond to clear and well laid out backup. Then the phone rang, so I mean that was that. I did what disposable people do, and jumped out the window.

      I’ve since gotten one promotion and about another 30% increase from my starting rate, which means I’m making more than double what I was just two years ago. But I’m not resting on that. I’m always watching and thinking about what’s next. It’s a competition for my labour, and I will more often than not side with the highest bidder. I don’t give a shit about tenure, or my potential growth, or my so-called future within your company. Unless you show me the path, a well laid out timeline with mutually defined goals that you clearly will stick to, and the money. Then I might care. But even then, I’m always a bit weary, and it’s almost always more rewarding to chase external opportunities and promotions. That said, I’ve also never had an employer that’s truly believed in me and actually been legitimately concerned with my growth before. It’s always been take take take, false promises and failures to actually deliver on insinuated opportunities when the chips fell. Ones mileage may vary though.

  • Alpha71@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    How is this even considered an article? The title is half the length of the article.

  • GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    there absolutely is no loyalty from an organisation.

    This is why I jump ship without any further thought or feeling of remorse. They would throw you out on your butt without a second’s hesitation whenever they feel like it.

  • The Menemen!@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    This is something that is still better in Germany. Companies are forced to have somewhat of an employee loyalty and some corporation go well above what the law forces them to (like VW). The way things are going lately, it feels like this won’t be like this forever. But atm it’s still one of the good things about Germany.