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I've been a bit stressed out about this for a while, and figured I'd post here to see what other developers think.

I'm with a startup company... a very small one. In fact, it's just me, my boss, and his son. I'm the only Software Engineer, as our only other Engineer (understandably) left for a much better job at an established company. As the only Engineer, I'm our Architect, maintainer, QA, Tech Support (which gets REALLY frustrating when I'm trying to get actual development done), Web Admin, and DBA.

Been here for almost 5 years now, and I still don't have health insurance (I'm 27, but not in great shape physically... my wife is 25, and has some minor health problems stemming from a prior term in the military). I'm making $48,000 per year, which my family survives on but hasn't given us enough additional money to pay off my student loans, get our own health insurance, or anything like that.

The thing is, if I leave it pretty much means the death of the company and the unemployment of my boss and his son, who have given me what they can (the company can't actually even afford the $48,000 per year I'm getting right now), and even let me recently begin working remotely when I told them that I had to move out of town to help some of my friends in their business (which I now am on evenings and weekends... and no, they don't have money to pay me a salary at all =) ).

Anyways, I feel like I need to leave this company and seek one out that at least will provide health insurance (if not a pay raise... I need to get rid of these student loans before I can even think about starting to get more to pay for my wife to go back to school again)... but I feel like I am in an ethical dilemma because my leaving will mean the death of the company and unemployment for those currently in it, and I feel like they've tried as hard as they could to appease me when they could.

What I want to know (since I have no co-workers that I can ask) is: what would you do in this situation?

EDIT: Also, more information about the company. We've felt like we were on the "verge" of making it for the past three years, but despite that we can still count the number of customers we have on one hand. We are being strung around by a company that is promising that they can get us more customers, but they're basically using us for free tech support with that promise... which I've tried to tell my boss to no avail. We've never had money for marketing, and though we were approved by the SBA for loan backing, no one will give us an SBA business loan so we can actually do marketing. If this extra info helps. I'm sitting on the fence between thinking "this will never work" and "it'll work if we somehow got an SBA-backed loan".

EDIT 2: Someone was wondering if I have a stake in the company. I have an unwritten one. They have a verbal agreement with me that if we ever become profitable, we'd split it three ways... that was enticing at first, and I still feel like the company might make it, but my feeling that it will has lessened severely in the last year.

FINAL:

Okay, it looks like all that's needed to be said has been said. Thank you all again for your advice. I think, based on what everyone's said, I will:

  • Start looking for a new job in earnest
  • Once I find a new one, make sure they know that I need some time to transition from my current company.
  • Talk with my boss and let him know that he needs to find a replacement, and that I'll help him on weekends after I transition out officially to make sure that happens.

Thank you all again, I really needed this input. Hopefully I'll be able to find something out here.

EDIT: It looks like I can't give the "answer" to multiple people, but if I could I would. There's been an aweful lot of extremely helpful advice here, and I deeply appreciate it.

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35 Answers

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I hate to say this, but in my opinion you need to scoot. I'd start looking immediately. Even in this economy, you should be able to find something new, but a startup is likely to have real issues for a few years, at least. Venture capital might be hard to come up with.

I know it's gotta be difficult, because you probably feel some ownership, but it's not your company. Staying there, if it does fail, will leave you without a job, trying to find new work.

As far as telling them before you find something new, that's a tough call. if they're strapped for cash, they're likely not going to be able to hire your replacement and keep the both of you going for any meaningful time. The fact is, though, it's business.

You have a family, and your family has to come first. I'd get yourself out of that mess and back with a reputable company, earning what you're worth and caring for your family.

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If the company has been operating for 5 years and can't afford to pay you at least 75k in salary for all the stuff you're doing, then the company won't die because you leave, it's already dying. You'll just be putting the last nail in the coffin.

Keep in mind that you are in business as well. You've been operating at a loss essentially for several years. For what? Do you have a stake in the company? Didn't say that so I'd say no.

I'd have left 2 years ago. Even if they pitched in $150 a month in health-care costs, you're still losing a lot of money.

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I think the best plan in these situations is to have exactly this conversation with your boss. You are not morally held to keeping the company going. It is important to decide between is this the job you want and with the benefits you need for you and your family's happiness.

In this situation, I like the honest approach of sitting down with your boss and saying this isnt working for me. I feel bad because I dont know that the company can survive without me but my family and I cant survive. Then you can ask him for how he thinks you should both proceed. You guys may decide to cut now or you may set a timeline that says if you dont have insurance/raise in 6 months you are walking.

If the company is so underfunded it cant even afford your salary, a good question is whether you think it has enough money to survive. It takes money to market, sell and create a successful company. Does the company have what it takes to succeed in a resonable timeframe and will you get compensated for the risk you are taking with your life and career trying to get it there? This has to be weighed against keeping the family happy.

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vote up 7 vote down

I'd probably feel terrible about it, but I'd leave. My advice would be to talk to your employer about your feelings. Explain you'd really like to leave, but maybe offer to give them a lot of notice -- a few months, maybe -- while you find another job and they find someone to replace you (if they can). That way you can help train your replacement (fun!) and hopefully they can ease your workload a bit for the final few months. This will also mean they'll be more flexible about you going for job interviews.

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vote up 7 vote down

Cry.

When it comes down to it, you're deciding between the welfare of your family or your boss' family. It sucks, but there's really only one way to come down on it.

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