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While I can appreciate that you're staying for the quality of life, don't let the 5 weeks of vacation (coming in 2 years - yikes that's a long time away) keep you there. My husband works for a Silicon Valley-based company, and many of those have switched to a new system for vacation time. My husband got paid out his accrued vacation several years ago (all exempt employees did) and now he does not accrue vacation time at all. He just works out with his boss his vacations. No one keeps official track of it. So far (3 years at least), he just tells his boss when he needs a day off, or tells him when he wants to take a week off, and the boss is fine with it. It's awesome. This will be coming to more companies in the next few years, as they don't have all this accrued vacation (a huge liability) sitting on their books.
Not saying this will be the case for every company, but plenty do have generous vacation packages built into their benefits packages.
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Inteljustice2 Wrote:SO I work in a fairly well paying job for my area and make decent money. The company has a poor organizational structure, the business decisions made often are head scratchers which over the years has resulted in resentment, bitterness, anger.
I get great benefits and I'm 2 years away from 5 weeks of vacation time, I get 4 weeks a year right now, which I consider above the norm.
Does anyone have any experience leaving a job with the golden handcuffs and successfully transitioning with a new company in a new position that you have passion for?
I have a job offer out of state for a completely different career field that I've always been interested in but it has its cons:
1. High Stress
2. Lower Pay about a 20k a year paycut
3. Mandatory OT and crazy hours like 4 days of 12-16 hr days.
4. High Degree of Burnout within the Field
Pros:
Challenging, Non Routine, Each day will bring a different challenge.
Going from Midwest to Southwest would be completely awesome since I could partake in hiking activities around the mountains.
I'm really struggling having to decide on which direction to go in. I do have to make up my mind soon as the academy starts in August.
My question is would you take a risk at an older age vs. the younger you, even if you have no earthly idea if it will even work out when in your current position you are in a gravy job that is super easy and low stress.
Its funny I saw this. I would like to put my two cents in. I recently decided to leave the old company I was with because of the issues I was having which all happen to be the same issues you listed that you are having. I can tell you what I did before I made the move:
I did a lot of research on the companies I was applying to.
When I went on job interviews I made sure to talk to current employees if possible.
I brought my wife with me on my interviews. This way she could experience the new area (while I was interviewing) and I would get full buy in if the opportunity was offered to me. (this was very important since majority of the time the biggest excuse for not changing is your spouse and how they feel about it.
I made sure to negotiate a higher salary, vacation time and even a signing bonus
I have found that the new position is more challenging and it is in a field I enjoy working in (which happens to be the same field I was in) and in a new state that I am more happy in. I found that you don't necessarily have to change fields or professions to be happy, changing companies can make a huge difference in and of itself. So my suggestion to you is try a different company first and negotiate. It can't hurt. Gretzky loved to say that every shot that you don't take will always miss.
PS. Yes I was afraid of something new and a change especially in a new state with a new company, but I knew myself and I knew that I could do just about anything I put my mind to. Don't create your own road blocks, life creates those just fine without your help.
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I completely agree with the above responses.
But everyone's situation is different. For me I came to the realization that the grass isn't always greener on the other side.
The career I'm in doesn't have the high demand i.e. Silicon Valley type of job where I can just switch companies and get amazing benefits elsewhere.
My biggest obstacle is the pay is great, vacation time is great, and most companies would pay me about half, put on more stress, and cut my vacation time in half. So in my personal opinion even if I don't enjoy my job, doing it for the paycheck, quality of life, and freedom to take 4-5 weeks of vacations a year is more than enough to deserve my loyalty. As well the raises I'm getting which are all guaranteed as the work I do is on a union contract. Luckily I work for an engineering union that has been around for a long long time and the workers in my union do their jobs very well.
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