active questions tagged salary - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-01T14:07:30Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/salary http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1806501/how-to-convert-salary-to-hourly-rate -1 How to convert salary to hourly rate? [closed] Michelle 2009-11-27T02:30:41Z 2009-11-27T02:51:35Z <p>$90k base salary, health benefits worth around $1200/month, 6 weeks paid time off (including vacation, holiday, personal &amp; sick), 40 hour work week with some overtime assumed. This for an employee who is returning to work after maternity leave and wants to cut her hours to 20-25 hours a week.</p> <p>Here are a few different ways of making the calculation:</p> <ol> <li><p>Paid time off and health benefits are perks given to full time employees only.<br> $90000 / 52 = $1731 a week / 40 = $43 an hour.</p></li> <li><p>Health benefits are perks given to full time employees only.<br> $90000 / 46 actual weeks of work = $1957 a week / 40 = $49 an hour.</p></li> <li><p>The entire package needs to be considered.<br> Salary + benefits = $104400 a year / 46 actual weeks of work = $2270 a week / 45 hours (including overtime) = $50 an hour.</p></li> </ol> <p>Management is saying #1, and that in addition, the rate should be even lower since such a part-time employee is not nearly as valuable as a full time one.</p> <p>The employee is arguing that it should be viewed from the perspective of #2 or #3.</p> <p>Any thoughts on the issue?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1767957/paying-great-programmers-more-than-average-programmers 8 Paying great programmers more than average programmers Kelly French 2009-11-20T02:32:45Z 2009-11-21T20:19:58Z <p>It's fairly well recognized that some programmers are up to 10 times more productive than others. Joel mentions <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/HighNotes.html" rel="nofollow">this topic</a> on his blog. There is a whole blog devoted to the idea of the "<a href="http://blogs.construx.com/blogs/stevemcc/archive/2008/03/27/productivity-variations-among-software-developers-and-teams-the-origin-of-quot-10x-quot.aspx" rel="nofollow">10x productive programmer</a>". </p> <blockquote> <p>In years since the original study, the general finding that "There are order-of-magnitude differences among programmers" has been confirmed by many other studies of professional programmers (Curtis 1981, Mills 1983, DeMarco and Lister 1985, Curtis et al. 1986, Card 1987, Boehm and Papaccio 1988, Valett and McGarry 1989, Boehm et al 2000).</p> </blockquote> <p>The way programmers are paid by employers these days makes it almost impossible to pay the great programmers a large multiple of what the entry-level salary is. When the starting salary for a just-graduated entry-level programmer, we'll call him Asok (From Dilbert), is $40K, even if the top programmer, we'll call him Linus, makes $120K that is only a multiple of 3. I'd be willing to be that Linus does much more than 3 times what Asok does, so why wouldn't we expect him to get paid more as well?</p> <p>Here is a quote from Stroustrup:</p> <blockquote> <p>"The companies are complaining because they are hurting. They can't produce quality products as cheaply, as reliably, and as quickly as they would like. They correctly see a shortage of good developers as a part of the problem. What they generally don't see is that inserting a good developer into a culture designed to constrain semi-skilled programmers from doing harm is pointless because the rules/culture will constrain the new developer from doing anything significantly new and better."</p> </blockquote> <p>This leads to two questions. I'm excluding self-employed programmers and contractors. If you disagree that's fine but please include your rationale. It might be that the self-employed or contract programmers are where you find the top-10 earners, but please provide a explanation/story/rationale along with any anecdotes.</p> <p>1) Why aren't the top 1% of programmers paid like A-list movie stars? </p> <p>2) What would the industry be like if we did pay the "Smart and gets things done" programmers 6, 8, or 10 times what an intern makes?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1749038/salary-rise-how-to-get 0 Salary rise - how to get [closed] Chris 2009-11-17T13:52:12Z 2009-11-17T13:54:00Z <p>What is the best way to ask your boss for a salary rise? And get it!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/197139/fair-contract-salary-compared-to-permanent-salary 4 Fair Contract salary compared to permanent salary Ngu Soon Hui 2008-10-13T09:48:22Z 2009-11-03T04:19:05Z <p>Let's say I have a position open, it can either be contract or permanent position. The question is what is the fair amount of money I should pay for the contract position, if I am willing to pay X per month for the permanent role? Contract pays are inevitably higher, because the contractors are not entitled for a lot of benefits, and not guaranteed of a job. I know the exact ratio of contract to permanent varies from person to person, but I need a rule of thumb here. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/878181/is-programming-generally-an-overtime-exempt-field 16 Is Programming generally an overtime exempt field? mrblah 2009-05-18T15:02:56Z 2009-10-31T05:27:22Z <p>My manager told me that the industry doesn't pay overtime for programmers.</p> <p>Is this true? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/716275/software-vs-network-engineer-salary-difficulty-learning-happiness 1 Software vs Network Engineer (Salary, Difficulty, Learning, Happiness) B Z 2009-04-04T01:27:07Z 2009-10-22T04:09:34Z <p>What are your thoughts on being a Software Engineer vs a Network Engineer?</p> <p>I've been on the software field for almost 10 years now and although I still have a great deal of fun (and challenges), I am starting to think it could be better on the "other" side. </p> <p>Not to degrade network engineers (i know there are many great ones out there), it seems (in general) their job is easier, the learning curve from average to good is not as steep, job is less stressful and pay is better on average.</p> <p>I think as software developer I could make the switch to networking and still enjoy working with computers and feel productive.</p> <p>I spend an enormous amount of time learning about software, practices, new technologies, new patters, etc...I think I could spend a much smaller amount of time learning about networking and be just as "good".</p> <p>What are your thoughts? </p> <p>EDIT:</p> <p>This is not about making easy money. Networking and Software are closely related, I love computers and programming, but if I can work with both, make more money and have less stress in my life and can spend more time with my family, then I am willing to consider a change and hence I am looking for advice that Do or Don't support this view.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1595257/work-experience-internship-years 1 Work Experience - Internship Years James Jones 2009-10-20T14:58:34Z 2009-10-20T20:15:54Z <p>I interned at my current place of employment for 2.5 years while I was an undergrad. During that time, I worked 40 hours per week during the summer and averaged 20 hours per week during the school year. I have since been hired full-time and I have been with the company a little over 3 years now.</p> <p>How many years of work experience do I have?</p> <p><strong>Background info:</strong></p> <p>There is a significant income disparity between someone with 1 year of experience vs 3 years (as per salary.com). I have job responsibilities equivalent to that of someone who has been at my company for about 5 years. I am trying to determine what I should expect in terms of income, raises, etc.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/704301/does-a-programmers-salary-vary-depending-on-language 13 Does a Programmer's Salary Vary Depending On Language? Brock Woolf 2009-04-01T06:26:00Z 2009-10-18T00:50:36Z <p>Hi, I am not nor have I ever worked in industry as I am a university student atm. I have heard in certain places that Java and PHP programmers get paid less than say C# or other programmers.</p> <p>The correlation in my mind seems to be that the verbose languages pay less, this may not be the case but when you compare C# to Java, the former is definitely less verbose.</p> <p>In any event, based on your observations do you get paid more according to the language that you program in? If so, based on your observations what languages seem to have a higher or lower general pay scale?</p> <p><em>Update:</em> I did find a <a href="http://tinyurl.com/c5byfl" rel="nofollow">comparison of different programmer types</a> here, complete with pretty graphs. It is however no means a definitive answer but it does provide some clues.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1566093/salary-comparison-it-trainer-vs-sr-programmer 0 Salary Comparison: IT Trainer vs. Sr. Programmer [closed] virsum 2009-10-14T13:01:57Z 2009-10-14T13:01:57Z <p>In general, how do salaries compare between someone in a software development role vs. someone in a corporate IT training role? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1552848/which-one-is-important-job-satisfaction-or-compensation 0 Which one is important - job satisfaction or compensation? [closed] PJ 2009-10-12T05:21:36Z 2009-10-12T05:33:10Z <p>Hi,</p> <p>I am having a debate with one of my friends regarding which one is important - </p> <p><strong>1. Job satisfaction</strong></p> <p><strong>2. Salary</strong></p> <p>For me Job satisfaction comes first as if you are not satisfied with your job that you have to perform on your day to day life then it becomes bosesome to stay in that organisation.</p> <p>But according to my friend, we all are woking for the sake of money and if the company doesn't provide me a good compensation then what is the use of staying there. If there is no job satisfaction at all and the organisation provides me a good package then it is good to stay there instead of looking for job satisfaction.</p> <p>Please advice who is right as we both are arguing in this topic for the last one week.</p> <p>Thanks in advance.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/320716/how-much-should-a-contractor-charge-as-a-day-rate 9 How much should a contractor charge as a day rate? Ciaran McNulty 2008-11-26T13:38:25Z 2009-10-08T11:29:02Z <p>I've spent my career in full-time employment in the UK, on an annual salary.</p> <p>I'm interested to know how contracting rates compare to salaries, specificially how to compare the two.</p> <p>Basically if someone would make a certain salary, what would they equivalently charge as a day rate?</p> <p>day rate * X = annual salary</p> <p>What is the X factor?</p> <p><strong>Edit:</strong> Some people have suggested that the X is 365, or something like (365*5/7 - holiday), but that doesn't seem to tally with the rates charged 'in the wild'.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1534510/is-programmer-pay-worth-the-time-and-energy 0 Is programmer pay worth the time and energy? [closed] Zak 2009-10-07T22:07:08Z 2009-10-07T22:07:08Z <p>There are a lot of factors that go into pay rates for programmers. However, typically I am seeing 40 - 60k starting salaries for Junior programmers, and senior programmers are making up to about 120k with 10 years experience.</p> <p>On the other hand, a close in-law relative just graduated a masters nursing program in anesthesiology and makes about $160k/yr. She had to work hard to get through the program, but now she puts a needle in a surgery patient arm, turns on the gas, then watches a few gauges for the few hours the procedure lasts and goes home.</p> <p>She showed me the typical coursework she had to complete which involved calculating rates of titration and half lifes of various medicines so you can gauge the rates at which to apply anesthesia during procedures. It's pretty much all just basic algebra applied to various medicines, backed up with some memorization of drug interactions.</p> <p>I know I'm using a specific well-paid field as an example, but I did go into this profession to make money. Is everyone else out there just in it for the love of programming (I do enjoy my work) and is that the reason pay is relatively lower for what I currently see as more mentally challenging work? Am I just overestimating the amount of effort it takes to manage and develop software projects profitably relative to other professions?</p> <p>I know programmers get stock options and nurses don't, but isn't the relatively small number of payouts on stock options overall worth less?</p> <p>One thing I've noticed about the nursing field in particular though is this: there are far far fewer incompetent nurses than there are incompetent programmers. Nursing school does flunk out the "killer nurses". should we be flunking out the "failure programmers" to make our rates of pay higher?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1435883/is-75k-too-low-of-a-salary-for-a-lead-software-engineer 1 Is $75k too low of a salary for a lead software engineer? [closed] wsb3383 2009-09-16T22:38:38Z 2009-09-16T22:41:28Z <p>I was told in Oregon, this is pretty much what to expect for such a position, is this true?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1428226/should-i-just-graduate-or-should-i-pursue-a-second-degree-more-courses 0 Should I just graduate, or should I pursue a second degree/more courses? [closed] Stefan Kendall 2009-09-15T16:31:13Z 2009-09-15T17:40:27Z <p>With my absurd levels of AP (IB) credit and rigorous academic scheduling, I have the unique opportunity of graduating with a BS in CS in 3 years. Now, I have four years of paid (+large stipend) school, so losing a year would be cutting out about $10,000 in stipend money, or about $20,000 worth of value, classes included. Now, I could probably make much more money than I do now out of college (I have a reasonable amount of work experience), but I was wondering if anyone thought that it would be better to pursue a second degree with my remaining time than to just graduate.</p> <p>Thoughts? Has anyone else been in the 3-year graduation situation? What are my pros and cons?</p> <p>Thanks.</p> <p>Edit: How is this question not relevant while masters/MBA questions are? Is programming separated entirely from business? I don't think so, and if you do you're foolish.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1247679/what-is-an-appropriate-salary-for-a-young-new-developer-in-canada 0 What is an appropriate salary for a young, new developer in Canada? [closed] Carson Myers 2009-08-08T01:18:25Z 2009-08-08T01:34:50Z <p>I wasn't really sure <em>which</em> forum this belonged in, but it has to do with development so I'll put it here.</p> <p>each application form I come across has an 'expected salary' field. What is reasonable? $30,000? $40,000? I'm looking for my first development job, and don't have a degree (yet). I'm a fast learner and good coder. So what's an appropriate salary?</p> <p>I suppose I'm worried about going too high and not getting considered, or going too low and making way less than I could have been. Any suggestions?</p> <p>I know this isn't strictly programming related and is subjective, so I'll make it CW.</p> <h2>--edit--</h2> <p>okay, thanks for the suggestions everyone. Ah, the first question I have voted to close, it is my own.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1181606/who-earns-more-php-or-ror-developers 0 Who earns more: PHP or RoR developers? [closed] James 2009-07-25T08:35:28Z 2009-07-25T09:06:09Z <p>What do you think, who earns more: a PHP or a RoR developer? Let's say both have an experience of 3 years.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/213057/5-years-experience-100k-salary-really 26 5 years experience == 100k+ salary? Really? Mobi 2008-10-17T17:28:41Z 2009-07-23T14:28:46Z <p>There are ads like that all over the place on different online job boards for software developers. My question is: is that really a realistic goal for most developers? Are recruiters just flat out lying, or does a typical programmer (i.e. non-rockstar) really command that much in today's job market?</p> <p>Assuming 5% increase every year for fiver years, one would have to have a starting salary of $78,353 in order to reach six figures!! I know MIT CS grads fresh out can go to Oracle, Google and such for $80k (but then san jose living cost is mad expensive), BUT (and this is my question), do they get $100k after 5 years? If so, would they be demanding $128k after 10 years? </p> <p>My follow up question for the old-timers: was it like that in the 90s (or even 80s), where one could expect a salary almost twice the national median after only 5 years? Or is this yet another lingering consequence of the dot-com bubble? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26292/salary-com-accuracy-for-software-developers 5 Salary.com accuracy for Software Developers Craig H 2008-08-25T15:50:10Z 2009-06-30T22:37:03Z <p>I have used Salary.com in the past to get a feel for what the base salary for someone with my experience is in my area. I personally have had jobs that deviated greatly in both directions from the average given by salary.com. I was just wanting to see if anyone else out there saw the same thing, or if I am just an anomoly.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/217231/economy-and-programming-jobs 7 Economy and Programming Jobs Paul Mendoza 2008-10-20T00:46:33Z 2009-06-12T13:02:57Z <p>Programming is considered by many to be a recession proof job but with the recent downturn in the economy and how severe it's been, will this still hold true for this recession?</p> <p>Are people seeing their salaries go down?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/917221/how-do-you-decide-on-a-salary-expectation-in-a-new-city-outside-the-us 1 How do you decide on a salary expectation in a new city outside the US? [closed] Andrew G. Johnson 2009-05-27T18:13:35Z 2009-05-27T18:16:47Z <p>Well I am considering moving and have some interviews in other cities and if the question of salary comes up during the interview I have no idea what to say. How do you guys determine a good range? Just search on monster.ca for similar postings or is this some kind of intelligent way for me to do this?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/543666/how-to-know-how-big-a-salary-you-can-expect-in-new-job-and-demand-it-during-inter 3 How to know how big a salary you can expect in new job and demand it during interview? pbrodka 2009-02-12T22:11:42Z 2009-05-20T23:40:16Z <p>Hello Where I live, job adverts are without range of earning that interviewee can expect. So during interview I have to say how much I want to earn - which is risky, while demanding too much will end the interview, and if I say small number - I can work for half of others pay. </p> <p>What is key to know how much could I ask that will satisfy both sides? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/499256/what-are-the-most-important-factors-which-determine-your-salary 4 What are the most important factors which determine your salary? [closed] Ahmed Said 2009-01-31T18:09:48Z 2009-05-11T07:52:14Z <p>For example if we consider years of experience, consider this case "There is a junior developer but his skills are like or better than senior developer".</p> <p>So is it fair to pay for senior more than junior for just the years of experience? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/400865/developer-salaries-to-rise 14 Developer salaries to rise? rmbarnes 2008-12-30T17:08:37Z 2009-05-07T12:08:04Z <p>I have heard people say that the large fall in people graduating with CS based degrees will soon cause developer salaries to rise due to the effects of a smaller supply but ever increasing demand.</p> <p>Do people really think that this is true?</p> <p>To my mind there are a couple of reasons this won't happen:</p> <ol> <li>Outsourcing</li> <li>With 'DIY' style languages like PHP and the attitudes of many of the communities behind these languages becoming ever more popular (e.g. the learn yourself, don't need to go to university way of thinking) not many employers will care if developers have degrees in CS or not.</li> </ol> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/329322/programmers-income-potential 12 Programmers: income potential.. Anon 2008-11-30T20:36:18Z 2009-05-01T07:22:37Z <p>I am stuck in a 9-5 cubicle/programming job. Is this how my career would end in 20 years from now? I am in my mid 40s and have been programming for about 15 years now. In the early days, I dreamt about opening my own consulting firm and hiring whole bunch of programmers to do great projects and make lot of money. Years later, I am earning a little more, have a little better title but still stuck in a 9-5 rut. The only difference is that I have kids , wife, house , and huge stack of bills to pay. Do you guys feel trapped some times like I do? This really depresses me and its too late to find another career with such a depressing economy. Is there a way to increase income potential? I hear all the great stories about other micro isvs and read articles and think that it only happens to others. I don't feel excited about writing any new application. I exercise and took some vacation but still no use. </p> <p>Thanks for reading my rant and any advise will be greatly appreciated. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/807304/how-much-should-i-pay-a-university-student-for-a-holiday-project 2 How much should I pay a university student for a holiday project? Andrew Whitehouse 2009-04-30T14:49:33Z 2009-04-30T15:10:14Z <p>It's been a while since I was at university ...</p> <p>I have a project that I'm currently struggling to devote sufficient time to, so am considering paying a student to develop it for me (I'm based in the UK).</p> <p>So, what would be a reasonable hourly/daily rate to pay a student during the summer, probably based in London, England.</p> <p>Some (optional) side questions:</p> <ul> <li>Is it reasonable to expect them to have comparable experience in terms of development process to those of us that do it as a job? And a similar skillset (assuming they enjoy what they do)?</li> <li>Is cold hard cash likely to be more appealing than some sort of revenue share?</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/723046/how-much-salary-should-i-expect-with-my-first-job-as-a-software-engineer 5 How much salary should I expect with my first job as a Software Engineer? [closed] Mishon 2009-04-06T20:20:53Z 2009-04-07T16:29:41Z <p>I'm a senior at a decent university majoring in Computer Science.</p> <p>Soon I will be interviewing for Software Engineer positions.</p> <p>I have had two good internships with will known tech companies, my grades are decent and I was active during college (president of ACM chapter, etc). I'm not sure if those things are even relevant though.</p> <p>I'll have interviews in the pacific northwest if that makes a significant difference.</p> <ol> <li>I'm curious about what kind of salary is typical for straight out of college? </li> <li>Is it typical for Software Engineers, even first year ones to negotiate their salary? I know in the sales industry they are almost expected to negotiate their salary but with the IT field I didn't know how prevalent that was.</li> </ol> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/723110/is-it-typical-for-programmers-to-negotiate-their-salary 17 Is it typical for programmers to negotiate their salary? [closed] Mishon 2009-04-06T20:36:17Z 2009-04-06T22:21:17Z <p>In some industries salary negotiation is almost expected (sales for instance), but I'm not sure how prevalent this is in this IT industry. </p> <p><strong>Is it typical in the software industry for software developers to counter salary offers made to them?</strong></p> <p>Edit: My <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/723046/how-much-salary-should-i-expect-with-my-first-job-as-a-software-engineer-closed">previous question</a> was closed, so I'm attempting to extract anything too localized from my question and reduce it down.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/406885/knowing-or-not-knowing-the-salary-of-your-co-worker 11 Knowing or not knowing the salary of your co-worker? Orkun Balkancı 2009-01-02T14:16:52Z 2009-04-05T11:47:34Z <p>Which is a better option? </p> <p>Knowing that your co-workers code sucks (which makes you work more and gives you headaches) but makes more money than you or is ignorance bliss?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/665910/financial-and-monetary-leverage-through-programming -1 Financial and monetary leverage through programming [closed] yoitsfrancis 2009-03-20T12:20:59Z 2009-03-20T12:28:58Z <p>First of all, let's make this clear, this is NOT a question on how to get rich.</p> <p>Ok, as a programmer, I'm just wondering, what are your techniques and strategies in <br/> 1. finding<br/> 2. negotiating and<br/> 3. making a deal</p> <p>of a programming project that has a significant leverage in its monetary value. What I mean by significant is you and have projects that have at least 2X the equivalent of your salary. Let's have a range, 2X - 10X your salary.</p> <p>Again I'm not interested on how to get rich, I just curious and want to know strategies of successful programmers.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/568635/new-programmer-learning-curve-to-fulltime 3 New Programmer Learning Curve to Fulltime Sheldon 2009-02-20T07:52:22Z 2009-03-05T04:43:08Z <p><strong>I know there are a lot of variables in learning speed and experience</strong> just give me what you'd consider the norm</p> <ol> <li><p>What do you believe is the average time needed (years or months wise) for a beginning programmer with no other languages yet to be able to get an entry level position as a developer? </p></li> <li><p>I desperately want out of my current career field, but need to be able to support my family. I'm in Houston, good economy, pulling in about $45k with bonuses of about $10k (so $50-55k).... pretty decent for being in a "non professional" position I'd say. How many years of experience would it take before I'd get to that range in programming with C# in a market like Houston? Everyone throws around big numbers all the time, but in the realistic economy, I want to know if I should expect years and years of scraping the bottom before I end up getting back up to at least that level as a newer programmer. </p></li> </ol> <p>I need the pro's opinion. I've done my googling, but its muddled and not specific to C# developers.</p>