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    Staying at your shitty employer is your fault

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    • dave247D
      dave247
      last edited by

      Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

      JaredBuschJ IRJI 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch @dave247
        last edited by

        @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

        Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

        Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

        dave247D jt1001001J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • dave247D
          dave247 @JaredBusch
          last edited by dave247

          @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

          @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

          Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

          Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

          I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

          I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

          ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • IRJI
            IRJ @dave247
            last edited by

            @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

            Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

            LinkedIn and they mostly come to me via inbox on Linkedin. Even so, LinkedIn is mostly crap like most job sites, but I find that most top tech companies use it for recruitment.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • ObsolesceO
              Obsolesce @dave247
              last edited by Obsolesce

              @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

              @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

              @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

              Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

              Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

              I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

              I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

              The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

              DashrenderD gjacobseG dave247D 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • DashrenderD
                Dashrender @Obsolesce
                last edited by

                @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

                Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

                I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

                I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

                The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                How much of that salary is cause of location?

                ObsolesceO IRJI 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ObsolesceO
                  Obsolesce @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @dashrender said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                  @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                  @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                  @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                  @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                  Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

                  Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

                  I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

                  I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

                  The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                  How much of that salary is cause of location?

                  It depends on scale. You won't see that outside the US, not even close. With-in the US, fully remote, and depending on the company, an extremely small percentage if any.

                  DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DashrenderD
                    Dashrender @Obsolesce
                    last edited by

                    @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                    @dashrender said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                    @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                    @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                    @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                    @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                    Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

                    Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

                    I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

                    I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

                    The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                    How much of that salary is cause of location?

                    It depends on scale. You won't see that outside the US, not even close. With-in the US, fully remote, and depending on the company, an extremely small percentage if any.

                    The need to pay that amount to someone living in the midwest who is fully remote is completely different compared to someone who lives in LA/SF/NYC and working fully remote.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • gjacobseG
                      gjacobse @Obsolesce
                      last edited by

                      @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                      nd some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                      This - has not been a problem I have had to worry with. And I'm okay with that. I got into computer and such in the late 1980s... first job being 1990 with the State using a Green Terminal to the mainframe - it had four sessions - Those were the days..

                      After thirty years, forgetting more that some of my current co-workers have ever learned, I've never gotten out of being an IT Generalist.. I enjoy being apart of all aspects of the company network... keeps me from being too bored with one subject. That is also a problem with how much things have advanced...

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • IRJI
                        IRJ @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @dashrender said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                        @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                        @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                        @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                        @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                        Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

                        Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

                        I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

                        I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

                        The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                        How much of that salary is cause of location?

                        The higher paying the job, the more likely its remote and location doesn't matter. Some companies choose to pay more based on remote workers location. However, it's always better to be in tax free state either way 😎👍

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • dave247D
                          dave247 @Obsolesce
                          last edited by

                          @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                          @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                          @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                          @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                          Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

                          Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

                          I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

                          I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

                          The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                          Can I ask what kind of IT jobs those were and the general requirements? That seems a little hard to believe unless you're talking about jobs in the major US technology hubs... but I have limited knowledge and experience in this area.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • IRJI
                            IRJ
                            last edited by

                            @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                            @obsolesce said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                            @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                            @jaredbusch said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                            @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                            Where is everyone searching for quality IT job postings these days?

                            Word of mouth. I've never gotten a good job from a random posting.

                            I suppose the correct answer to myself is a wide net of every combination, including word of mouth, job posting sites like Indeed, Monster, etc, direct job postings on the website of the company, LinkedIn, etc.

                            I managed to get my first IT job using my state's job network website. I got a call-back from HR and had some awesome back and forth and landed a great gig. My friend and past co-worker got an amazing job from a head-hunter on LinkedIn. Another friend got a job from a company website post...

                            The last several good jobs I was either offered or have started were directly from LinkedIn, and some of them are $300K to $500K jobs.

                            Can I ask what kind of IT jobs those were and the general requirements? That seems a little hard to believe unless you're talking about jobs in the major US technology hubs... but I have limited knowledge and experience in this area.

                            He's referring to total comp in which you get a base of $150-200k and then have bonuses and stock incentives.

                            Here's an example of one that recently came across to me. This came via email, but I get most of these through LinkedIn.

                            '''
                            I’m the Talent Sourcing Partner for the world’s first API security unicorn🦄, NoName Security. We just announced our billion-dollar valuation and we’re looking for a Lead Attack Surface Management Architect (or Engineer - title is flexible) who can continue driving us to the next level!

                            Primary responsibilities will be establishing and maintaining a vulnerability and patch management program for all of Noname, working with our incoming AppSec lead to identify and address issues in the core platform, understanding the perimeter and identifying concerns with the perimeter security, and establishing / operating tooling, dashboards, and reporting

                            Salary will depend on your experience, but to start us off I can tell you our target comp range for this role is $175-200k base + bonus + equity and fantastic benefits including 401K with 4% match and unlimited PTO.

                            Check out the job details below, and let me know if you’re interested in learning more, applying, or just asking questions about us!

                            '''

                            https://www.comeet.com/jobs/noname/86.001/lead-attack-surface-management-architect--engineer/5C.726?coref=1.10.uAF_01A&t=1639674771037

                            Hope to hear from you😁

                            gjacobseG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • gjacobseG
                              gjacobse @IRJ
                              last edited by

                              @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                              He's referring to total comp in which you get a base of $150-200k

                              Lol - Guess I'm in the wrong LinkedIn circle as I don't get anything in that base range... And I'm okay with that (twitch).

                              IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • IRJI
                                IRJ @gjacobse
                                last edited by

                                @gjacobse said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                He's referring to total comp in which you get a base of $150-200k

                                Lol - Guess I'm in the wrong LinkedIn circle as I don't get anything in that base range... And I'm okay with that (twitch).

                                It's generally based on skillset and experience. 2-3 years cloud experience is super valuable right now. I posted about this in 2019 here.

                                https://mangolassi.it/topic/19837/you-need-to-get-cloud-certified

                                dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                • dave247D
                                  dave247 @IRJ
                                  last edited by

                                  @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                  @gjacobse said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                  @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                  He's referring to total comp in which you get a base of $150-200k

                                  Lol - Guess I'm in the wrong LinkedIn circle as I don't get anything in that base range... And I'm okay with that (twitch).

                                  It's generally based on skillset and experience. 2-3 years cloud experience is super valuable right now. I posted about this in 2019 here.

                                  https://mangolassi.it/topic/19837/you-need-to-get-cloud-certified

                                  I'm 6 years into IT (network admin, sysadmin, security (generalist)) and have my Security+ and am making $70,000 in Wisconsin right now. Is that low/normal/high?

                                  IRJI scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • IRJI
                                    IRJ @dave247
                                    last edited by

                                    @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                    @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                    @gjacobse said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                    @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                    He's referring to total comp in which you get a base of $150-200k

                                    Lol - Guess I'm in the wrong LinkedIn circle as I don't get anything in that base range... And I'm okay with that (twitch).

                                    It's generally based on skillset and experience. 2-3 years cloud experience is super valuable right now. I posted about this in 2019 here.

                                    https://mangolassi.it/topic/19837/you-need-to-get-cloud-certified

                                    I'm 6 years into IT (network admin, sysadmin, security (generalist)) and have my Security+ and am making $70,000 in Wisconsin right now. Is that low/normal/high?

                                    It seems low, but it depends on industry, size of company, company competitors, and of course good directional leadership in IT.

                                    DashrenderD gjacobseG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • DashrenderD
                                      Dashrender @IRJ
                                      last edited by

                                      @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                      @dave247 said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                      @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                      @gjacobse said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                      @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                      He's referring to total comp in which you get a base of $150-200k

                                      Lol - Guess I'm in the wrong LinkedIn circle as I don't get anything in that base range... And I'm okay with that (twitch).

                                      It's generally based on skillset and experience. 2-3 years cloud experience is super valuable right now. I posted about this in 2019 here.

                                      https://mangolassi.it/topic/19837/you-need-to-get-cloud-certified

                                      I'm 6 years into IT (network admin, sysadmin, security (generalist)) and have my Security+ and am making $70,000 in Wisconsin right now. Is that low/normal/high?

                                      It seems low, but it depends on industry, size of company, company competitors, and of course good directional leadership in IT.

                                      Based on what? I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just wondering what you are using for a baseline?

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • gjacobseG
                                        gjacobse @IRJ
                                        last edited by

                                        @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                        I'm 6 years into IT (network admin, sysadmin, security (generalist)) and have my Security+ and am making $70,000

                                        You are doing better than a fellow I worked at the state - who was two years from retirement (28 years of service)... By almost $20k... At $70k I think is is more an exception than the rule... Location is a big key here.... Yes - State Employees generally make less...

                                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • DashrenderD
                                          Dashrender @gjacobse
                                          last edited by

                                          @gjacobse said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                          @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                          I'm 6 years into IT (network admin, sysadmin, security (generalist)) and have my Security+ and am making $70,000

                                          You are doing better than a fellow I worked at the state - who was two years from retirement (28 years of service)... By almost $20k... At $70k I think is is more an exception than the rule... Location is a big key here.... Yes - State Employees generally make less...

                                          This is my general belief as well - location is king!

                                          Now - today after Covid, location is a bit less, but I wouldn't say significantly less important, assuming the company moved a position to fully remote.

                                          Living in SF, LA, NYC all cost 2-4 times what it does in Wisconsin.

                                          I've read that west coast companies are now starting to have a new baseline salary for a position, then up it based on where you actually live. So the base might be $80K, but if you live in SF, you get $40K/y more, but live in Wisconsin - you just get 80K.

                                          I have no personal experience in that happening - so no idea if it's true.

                                          And those that are seeing high prices around here on ML - I think most of you live in or near those expensive cities - correct me if I'm wrong.

                                          stacksofplatesS scottalanmillerS IRJI 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • stacksofplatesS
                                            stacksofplates @Dashrender
                                            last edited by

                                            @dashrender said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                            @gjacobse said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                            @irj said in Staying at your shitty employer is your fault:

                                            I'm 6 years into IT (network admin, sysadmin, security (generalist)) and have my Security+ and am making $70,000

                                            You are doing better than a fellow I worked at the state - who was two years from retirement (28 years of service)... By almost $20k... At $70k I think is is more an exception than the rule... Location is a big key here.... Yes - State Employees generally make less...

                                            This is my general belief as well - location is king!

                                            Now - today after Covid, location is a bit less, but I wouldn't say significantly less important, assuming the company moved a position to fully remote.

                                            Living in SF, LA, NYC all cost 2-4 times what it does in Wisconsin.

                                            I've read that west coast companies are now starting to have a new baseline salary for a position, then up it based on where you actually live. So the base might be $80K, but if you live in SF, you get $40K/y more, but live in Wisconsin - you just get 80K.

                                            I have no personal experience in that happening - so no idea if it's true.

                                            And those that are seeing high prices around here on ML - I think most of you live in or near those expensive cities - correct me if I'm wrong.

                                            I live in a small town in western PA.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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