I hope this doesn’t cause FT to have a heart attack.
So about six months ago, I left my old job (which I loved) for greener pastures. I enjoyed the old job, but I felt like I wasn’t going anywhere. The old boss never really bought into the investment advisory thing, and after three years, a lot of the clients still didn’t even know that I existed. I understand the old man not giving me the keys to the firm on the day that I start, but after three years, the clients should at least have a vague awareness that he has an assistant, and that I can at least take a message for him.
So I left for a place where I thought I had a future to become a partner. Granted, I took a 12% pay cut, but I thought it was worth it for all the extra benefits.
Nonetheless, I went to place where many things were promised and vastly underdelivered.
- I was told that we left at noon on Fridays (during the offseason). In reality,we have only left early once, and that was at 4:00.
- I was told that the hours were very flexible. In reality, he likes to lord over the fact that I took an afternoon off when I was sick. (“I paid you for 40 hours, even though you weren’t here for 40 hours. I expect you to make that up.” Well, what about the 65 per week that I worked during tax season?) And we’re also expected to work 50 hours a week - even during the holiday season.
- I was told that holiday time was generous. In reality, he is giving us Friday afternoon off for Christmas, and no time for New Year’s.
- I was told that I would be doing a lot of complex financial statement compilation, so bankers could rely on it. In reality, all I have done is data entry into Quickbooks.
- I was told that I would be handling all the investment work, and would be paid on my production. In reality, that means that I fill out applications while he gets all the face time. And I haven’t been paid anything.
- I was told that we would get an extra paycheck for a Christmas bonus. I got about 10% of that.
- I was told that we would get bonuses after both tax seasons (spring and fall). Never happened.
- I was told that I would be paid a portion of revenues for clients I brought to the firm. Never happened.
- We are expected to work 50 hours a week, even during the offseason. In other words, we’re expected to work 50 hours a week for six months out of the year, and 65 hours a week the other six months. That’s right–3,000 hours per year.
That being said, I still don’t hate this job. But I felt like I was underpaid at the last job, and I feel like I’m way underpaid now. And I think he’s about to get on my case for not putting in 50 hours last week (right before Christmas).
I want to (politely) tell him: My salary really doesn’t pay for 50 hours a week during the offseason. I thought I was about 15% underpaid at my old job, and now I feel like I’m about 33% underpaid–for a 40 hour work week. If you want me to work 50 hours a week, offer no holiday time, and offer no benefits, you need to be paying me about 75% more than what I’m making.
Moreover, this is a small firm. Big firms offer big firm bullshit with big salaries. Small firms offer a (relatively) bullshit-free environment, with good work-life balance, because they don’t pay as good as big firms. Your firm pays small-firm salary, but has the big-firm bullshit. We need to figure out how to reconcile the two.
For the record, I was making $75k at the old job. I started here for $66k. Conversations with partners in big firms around town indicate that I’m worth $90k (for a 40 hour week during the offseason) plus benefits. Payscale, Indeed, and Robert Half’s salary guide all agree. And if he expects 50 hours a week during the offseason, the price needs to be in the $105-115k range.
Any idea on how to do get him to agree with me? I think it’s difficunt to ask for a 50% pay raise in one year.