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/biz/ - Business & Finance


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20980733 No.20980733 [Reply] [Original]

Job Offer:
>12 Hour shifts, 11am-11pm
>Base wage of $35 an hour
>Average of $2.67 an hour evening differential
>$2.50 an hour department differntail
>total hourly wage average of $40.17 an hour
>$10,000 dollar sign on bonus
>Max 5% match of 401k with 6% deposited

Current job:
>12 hour shifts, 11am-11pm
>Current base hourly wage of $36.32 an hour with a yearly raise (likely somewhere between 3-3.75%) in November
>Average of $2.50 an hour evening differntial
>Average of $38.82 an hour before before yearly raise
>Max 401k match of 3% after putting in 6%.

I am 25. How much would my current employer need to raise my hourly wage to make staying at my current job worth it despite losing 2% match on my 401k and a 10,000 dollar sign on bonus. Keep in mind that if I leave my current job I lose $3000 dollars in employer contributions to my 401k and since differentials don't raise every year, only the base hourly wage, I will get larger raises every year at my current job. Assume the same percentage for a yearly raise each year.

I was thinking I'd need a raise of at least $1.35 so that my average hourly wage would be the same as my job offer. To make up for the 2% less match in my 401k I can just put in an extra 2% myself into my 401k or a roth IRA, and then eventually since I will have a higher raises and a higher hourly wage at my current job it will eventually make up for getting 2% less of a match by my employer and missing out on a $10,000 dollar sign on bonus. But is $37.67 to low? I will try to get them to give me more, but what is the lowest offer I should accept from my current job?

>> No.20980881

none of this will matter when everything crashes soon

>> No.20980932

What do you do

>> No.20980946

>>20980932
Operating room nurse.

>> No.20981000

Maybe an angle you hadn't considered but you looked for another job to get this offer right? What's to say you wouldn't get offers in the future to take you away from the now job? Don't just factor in this one job offer, but also the offers you'd receive if you did leave the current job. Give a nice round number like $42, accept $40. Enjoy the bigger raise that's based on percentages, then leave them in a year after the company with original offer felt the sting of lowballing you. Make them come in with the same offer but hourly is $45. Big balls deals here. Worst that happens is current job says no and you jump ship and see if they'll give the raise after another offer and you come in swinging your nuts like a wrecking ball. People rarely make it as a wagie through raises and promotions. They get there by changing companies often and moving up 10% annual income each move.

>> No.20981080

get the sign on bonus, put half of it on link, other half into gold

>> No.20981112

>>20981000
this, my dad calls it "moving up the ladder"

>> No.20981143

>>20981000
>Maybe an angle you hadn't considered but you looked for another job to get this offer right?
The main reason I looked for this new job is for 12 hour shifts. Currently I worked 3-11pm 5 days a week and I only wanted to work 3 days a week, 11am-11pm, but my employer would not give it to me. Now that I went back to them with a new job offer they have agreed to gibe me the shift I wanted, but we are going to negotiate a raise and I am not sure what the lowest offer I should accept is. Also, I don't plan to get a new job since the only other hospitals in the area that I live are owned by the same health system and pay the same, except for the the one I got an offer from, so it's either my current hospital or the new offer since I don't want to have a long commute or move. I already told my current employer that the offer I got is offering me more money to give me more leverage, and whatever their final offer to me is I will go to the other place and give them a chance to make me a better one.

>> No.20981392
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20981392

>>20980946
They pay you $35 an hour to put IVs in peoples arms?

>> No.20981419

>>20981392
That's called a picc nurse. They make more than $35/hr.

>> No.20981449

>>20981392
No. I do even less work than that. I spend the vast majority of my time sitting behind a computer screen reading manga, play games, watching twitch streams, or shitposting on 4chan on my phone while doctors perform surgery, or I do so in the break room while watching TV because there are no surgeries going on. I spend at most 6 hours of my shift actually working, but usually less than that.