Lydiaa wrote:
Lex, from your track record, you're venturing scarily close to the perception of unstable employee. When a person job skips, they are either exceptionally good, or exceptionally bad, and your last firing/letting-go doesn’t help with that perception.
A big company prefers a talent who’s willing to stick around and be developed than one who jumps ship at the sight of the first big number increase.
While you can get away with job skips pre 30, as you reach that age, companies become less and less forgiving. Consider a stable job with slightly less pay, but high job security and pull out a good 4 year stint. You’ll be much more desirable at the end of that than you would if you continued with your yearly hop.
Good luck with your career, it’s never easy to be let go
That's definitely good advice! On the other hand, job hopping teaches you all sorts of skills that are hard to acquire otherwise. However,
my current plan is to stop f*cking job hopping. I'm done with it. Seriously.
Anyways, I just accepted a job offer at a Fortune 500 company. (neither Google nor Facebook). At first they were only going to hire me as a junior engineer, but then after the interview they upped my pay grade by two levels! Which is a great sign that they bent over backwards for me.
The accepted offer was:
Salary: $110,000
Bonus: $5,000 - 10,000ish I think, based on performance, but they were ambiguous about this
Signing Bonus: $10,000 after 30 days of employment
Company stock: $25,000 granted with a 4 year vesting period (and more stock will be given to me as a bonus every year)
Health plan: basically free since the company foots 90% of the premium (the other 10% is taken from my compensation)
Vacation: unlimited within reason
Stock purchase: 80% of original price with a 15k limit
401k: matching up to 2%
Other perks: free soda from the fridge. Also a cubicle instead of open office space
The only real drawback to working here is that the commute is 45 - 50 minutes away. Oh well.