Curiosity

Mar. 1st, 2004 03:32 pm
lnr: (window)
[personal profile] lnr
A friend of mine recently wondered why they weren't earning 30K in programming, when it seemed like most of their friends were. So I'm curious as to what various people on my friends-list do. If you're not currently working but have done in the past feel free to fill this in with your most recent job in mind. If you don't want to reveal who you are, or if you don't have a livejournal, I'd still be interested in answers as comments instead.

NB Salary in UK pounds please, sorry for not making that clear in the question.

[Poll #256200]
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Date: 2004-03-01 03:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chickenfeet2003.livejournal.com
Are the salary figures GBP?

Date: 2004-03-01 03:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pseudomonas.livejournal.com
I haven't filled it in, given I'm a student.

Date: 2004-03-01 03:41 pm (UTC)
simont: A picture of me in 2016 (Default)
From: [personal profile] simont
(I'm extremely close to the bottom end of the salary band containing me...)

Date: 2004-03-01 03:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meirion.livejournal.com
of course, i had 4+ years as a PhD student prior to beginning my working life, so change the answer appropriately if you think that counts.

-m-

Date: 2004-03-01 03:47 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Can't tick the 'anonymous' box for polls, so:

GeekProg, 30k, four, sometimes, probably about right

(http://www.jobstats.co.uk/ is relevant)

Date: 2004-03-01 03:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imc.livejournal.com
I'm extremely close to the top of the experience band containing me. :-)

The RS1A scale has ten points on it (officially). No more increments for me, then. :-(

Date: 2004-03-01 03:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gnimmel.livejournal.com
Geek (other) == I spend most of my time programming, but that's not my job title and I'm supposed to do other things as well. I'm also right at the bottom of the poll salary band I fall into....

I say about right

Date: 2004-03-01 03:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ghoti.livejournal.com
but I've had other people be extremely surprised at how low paid people who work in preschool care are. So whether the norm is enough is another matter enitrely, but I was basing my answer on the norm, and knowledge of how stretched the preschool budget is, from my mother being a playgroup supervisor.

(OTOH, it's incredibly fun and fulfilling, and I'm currently in the process of looking into doing it more formally/longterm. And the hours are good, given that I have to work around school hours anyway.)

Date: 2004-03-01 04:04 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Geek, programming, >40k, 4.5 years experience, mostly happy with the job, too much.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sweh.livejournal.com
Where you work and in what industry also has an impact. When I was working in London I worked for a Greek shipping company (from University, for 5 years) then a magazine publishing company (for 4 years). I was pulling in pretty good money, especially since I was living with my parents and so had limited expenses! Definitely enough for me to put a 20,000 pound deposit on a house.

Then I joined an outsourcing company working in a bank in the City Of London. I got paid close to bank salary rates for a senior Unix SA/engineer (but without bonuses and benefits and stuff) and within 6 months my pay had increased by 50% (pay rise and promotion and thus also qualified for company car allowance or equivalent in money) over the previous job. The industry standard (City geeks) is that much higher than geeking in most other areas. If I worked directly for a bank then I could probably have been paid even more.

Having seen a lot of the programmers in this place, most of them ain't worth 30K :-)

Date: 2004-03-01 04:07 pm (UTC)
ext_22879: (Default)
From: [identity profile] nja.livejournal.com
Programming's part of it, but this afternoon I'm scanning ancient slides of what I suspect is Brazilian medical equipment.

At one of my schools the majority of the teachers are earning >40k. At the other, the only one earning less than me is ~15 years younger than me. I'm probably slightly less likely to get punched in the face or accused of abuse, though.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beingjdc.livejournal.com
Notes:

- Technically I suppose I am a geek, insofar as that my job requires pathologically in-depth knowledge of one particular aspect of the world, but it's not a computer-related part so...

- I don't feel terribly underpaid, but my equivalent job is being advertised this week in SE1 at the band £32,682 to £34,974, so I'm thinking maybe I am.

- No, I'm not applying.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:28 pm (UTC)
vatine: Generated with some CL code and a hand-designed blackletter font (Default)
From: [personal profile] vatine
FWIW, when I last worked full-time as a developer (C, writing crypto goop for EDIFACT routers for the Stockholm board of healthcare, back in 1992-or-so), I was paid a whopping 12000 SEK/month (that would be about 10K-12K UKP/year using an approximate exchange rate). I was responsible for all coding, most implementation design and found bugs in the specification requirements documentation (they used some spectacularly *bad* mistakes in the initial design for signed transmissions). At the time, I think the going industry rate for "newly-baked MSc CompSci" was on the order of 18-20 KSEK/month.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Programming geek, 30-40K, 3-4 years, sometimes, about right or too little.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:32 pm (UTC)
sparrowsion: tree sparrow (tree sparrow)
From: [personal profile] sparrowsion
teachers are earning >40k

I passed my father's final salary (as Head of Sixth Form and Examinations Secretary) several years ago.

"too much" is an interesting question -- I think I'm paid about right by industry standards (particuarly as I haven't actually had a rise for over three years), but I also think that those industry standards pay programmers too much.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] arkady.livejournal.com
I've been accused of being a Tube Geek in the past, but I don't think my job really counts as geekery - though I'm unofficially the IT-bod at work as well. To be honest, considering what the job entails I suspect I am actually overpaid - but on the other hand my pay is probably commensurate for my age and experience.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sampiano.livejournal.com
I'm employed in Academia - so filled it in.
Salary: about 12K when converted into pounds. And ICTP is one of the better paid places in Italy...

Date: 2004-03-01 04:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hsenag.livejournal.com
No more increments for me, then.

Is moving through the scale bar(s) a possibility?

Date: 2004-03-01 04:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ceb.livejournal.com
Assuming PhD=job; physics=non-geek (could well be geek but I was assuming you meant sysadmin etc.)

Date: 2004-03-01 04:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bopeepsheep.livejournal.com
In 1996 I worked for Oxfordshire County Council Education Department, primarily as a secretary but also updating teachers' pay records for pension purposes. (Special DfEE database that no one else could apparently understand even though I thought it was easypeasy.)

The average salary of a teacher then was about 5K more than I was being paid as a non-graduate secretary (and I was temp-to-perm, originally paid through a temping agency, so what I was worth to the department was about 40% more than I was paid). The majority of teachers were on about 2K more than I was. This is just before all the 'incentives' started (a friend now gets an extra 2Kpa for being an IT specialist - she teaches five-year-olds who don't care a whit about IT but never mind).

I once wanted to go into teaching. Never again after working there.

Date: 2004-03-01 04:58 pm (UTC)
reddragdiva: (Default)
From: [personal profile] reddragdiva
My salary's precisely 30k. I ticked 30-40 because there's a theoretical on-call allowance, but I'm not on the on-call roster (and very pissed off - I want the cash!).

This quiz is incomplete without a location entry. London is not Melbourne is not New York is not Sheffield is not Dogshit, Nebraska.

Date: 2004-03-01 05:13 pm (UTC)
ext_44: (treguard)
From: [identity profile] jiggery-pokery.livejournal.com
2nd level Geek, prestige class Other, £10/hour working part-time from home, far too few hours per year. (Was being paid a rather higher rate than that by the same company at one point, but that was the point where the company went bankrupt; a little money that I actually do receive is better than a lot of theoretical money that I don't.)

I do pretty elementary webmonkeying and minor tech support but have a relatively long history with the company and my limited knowledge of the company's field turns out to be extremely good relative to almost all others. 4 years, 8¾ months. Not very happy, though I like and respect the other people involved in the comapny. Being paid... probably about the right rate (*), but just far less employed than I would like to be.

(*) The sort of webmonkeying that I do is nothing that I couldn't have done at about the age of 14 and so is probably really a minimum wage job these days, but being knowledgeable and informed in the field, moderately able to get along with people and having a reasonably good reputation can justifiably command a premium.

</rant>
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