This is why you should NEVER stay at a job for more than 2 years without a promotion! ❌ #moneymindset #moneymotivated #budget #budgeting #wealthbuilder #wealthymindset #wealthy #richlife #quit #quitting
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@LevelingUpOfficial3 ай бұрын
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@gee_emm8 ай бұрын
The best people DON’T always get ahead or get promoted. Sometimes they are just the loudest, fakest, pushy-est or best connected. We’ve all seen that happen, have we not?
@Brezooka8 ай бұрын
Only 90% of my management team is like that. 😆
@SeniorSunday8 ай бұрын
My PM told me that I am one of the two top performers in the company. He "cannot express just how much [I am] valued"... But the company just got rid of bonuses, never gives above a 3% raise, and I was just told I should expect less moving forward because the company needs to "stay competitive." You are right that top performers aren't always valued.
@mariagabbott8 ай бұрын
@@SeniorSundayI've been told that too! I hope you get appreciated and paid your worth (whether at your current job or at a future one)
@SeniorSunday8 ай бұрын
@@mariagabbott Thank you! I've been here for two years and only stayed because I love the work and am genuinely learning something new. I got the news last week and am already looking for other jobs.
@TheOwlQueen8 ай бұрын
If you're too good at your current job, you'll NEVER get a promotion.
@Nate.V8 ай бұрын
The ppl who do the best job always get rewarded with more work in my experience.
@Greg-oi6vh7 ай бұрын
Fact. If you're exceptional, the people above you will get more money because of your efforts, and you will get more duties added to the job you agreed to do in the first place. No pay raise though, obviously. Who do you think you are, an executive who counts money for a living? Go back to work and act happy.
@Muunchiez7 ай бұрын
I CONCUR
@zitimotleyxxjmxx7 ай бұрын
Because you have never learned to say No the right way. If you are in a company with good core values and culture, it is in their best interest to know that you are taking in more work than you are being paid for. One thing you need to learn in life is that if something is not going your way, you do not just make a 180 degree turn. You do certain actions that compliment what you are doing now and see if that works. In your case or your company's, communication can be improved. This Woke girl saying you need to leave after 2 years is giving the wrong message to the already lost Gen Zs
@Kris-h5z7 ай бұрын
Yup, the saying is if you want something done give it to a busy person.
@treeroofgrass7 ай бұрын
Yup… and the better employees get reprimanded. slackers: no disciplinary action.
@amoechan24557 ай бұрын
My friends from college were job hoppers. As they say, they get 20% at each job change. For seven years, I was mulling over if I was doing something wrong with staying on an underpaid and overworked job for seven years. But you know what? When I changed jobs, I got a 260% jump in monthly pay because I was able to use the skills and experiences to fix a lot of issues on the new one. I even have time for part-time jobs for extra cash because I'm finding my full-time 80% easier than my previous one and I'm paid 3.6x higher. Sometimes, it pays more to fill your attributes before your wallet.
@jasenswalley39857 ай бұрын
Not to mention that if you're a specialist of any kind you're burning bridges because there aren't that many places to work overall in your area. Yeah you can move, but there is a ton involved in that.
@xxjunedamogulxxlopez31127 ай бұрын
Yall just scared lmapooo 20 percemt each jump 3 times in 6 years yeah that's way better its work not a relationship grow up
@noap1n1on7 ай бұрын
@xxjunedamogulxxlopez3112 so your 60 % increase is somehow better than his 260% increase that explains more than what I need to say
@zomfgeclipse7 ай бұрын
That's an awesome jump. Your skillset was probably way high for that previous pay. I did lateral moves several times to gain experience then finally landed a 90% pay bump with the right job
@didierduplantier83597 ай бұрын
If I scan your resume and notice that you have the tendency to jump job every 2 o 3 years, your resume will automatically go in the trash bin.
@K.L.-8 ай бұрын
Rip introverts who don’t like to brag about themselves
@calmingbabysleep12568 ай бұрын
I'm an introvert. I don't brag. But I do make sure my work quality and effort is seen. Management will notice. Plus you don't need to brag to leave and search for a better job. Learning this now after settling and being quiet/ too humble/ shy for too long. Now I just think of it as a transaction. Cost benefit analysis. Does it benefit me to stay here.
@WishfulProject8 ай бұрын
I get what you mean.
@K.L.-8 ай бұрын
@@calmingbabysleep1256 I’ve been in the workforce for 15 years and I’ve learned at 4 different corporate positions that management rarely care or can do anything about good work quality. They see it, they know it, they have a boss and they can’t do shit about it. They’re there to get their hours. Also I live in Washington, and with the current economy, finding another position that pays me better with good job security is next to impossible. I’ve been searching for 3 years, going on 4 now. I’ve had workmates that found new jobs and were laid off the same year. That is not something I can afford to let happen. I’ve been constantly getting my pay upgraded but the pay up from either raise or job change can barely catch up to how fast inflation is happening. The only solutions at this point is a second job, start a small business, or move. With elderly in the house, moving just isn’t realistic. Small businesses take investment and may flop, and second job means no life and more stress. If you have the liberty to leave a job and then search for a new one, you’re living a luxury most Americans (and Canadians, I’m both) aren’t. I don’t think I’ve ever stopped searching for jobs. I may take a year break in between when I first start a new one but after that, I’m looking. It’s not about benefits of staying, it’s about the consequences of leaving and having no income even for a couple of months.
@itsnevertoolate51238 ай бұрын
How does bragging correlates to what she said
@calmingbabysleep12568 ай бұрын
@@itsnevertoolate5123 it's an excuse. Easy to stay in the comfort zone and blame introversion OR maybe lack of life experience and confidence
@withwilk74738 ай бұрын
As someone that has changed jobs regularly, chasing money isn't always the answer. A lower paid job you actually enjoy with colleagues you like actually improves your life more than the money.
@Doors0678 ай бұрын
I'm still trying to find that lol
@Dweeble2338 ай бұрын
@@Doors067the lower pay part is easy!😂😂😂
@kellyfrancis89998 ай бұрын
Yes, the whole package. Makes a big difference
@tyreecox48758 ай бұрын
If you’ve changed jobs regularly and still haven’t met colleagues that you enjoy. You just might be the problem. I’ve met great ppl and enjoyed them at most of my companies. I’m actually going back to a job that I left that had a great team and now I have even more pay. The current job, they love me as well. Sorry, I don’t have those problems
@dinobite52098 ай бұрын
I did this and money follows me, its not always about money, its about environment you prefer were you trully grow, you need to grow out of your comfort zone my ass, are always lines of loudest bitches but no substance
@professional.commentator7 ай бұрын
Two years is also when a job starts to get boring and you start feeling like a slave if it's not your dream job.
@SasukeFan217 ай бұрын
Second to that. I told them some days lol I felt this comment of yours 🙌🏾
@Diywithjenn7 ай бұрын
💯
@nelsonmartinez81366 ай бұрын
Facts 💯👌
@SharJones876 ай бұрын
That is literally always my issue. I get that itch to leave once two years hits smh
@Tortolita2346 ай бұрын
More like 6 months
@ashipper82238 ай бұрын
My husband did that and it was exhausting for us. Yes, he made more money but it took a toll on us.
@Chris-tg3qy8 ай бұрын
Yes, it sounds very exhausting. My first year or two at any company was exhausting because it takes a while to learn the ropes and the culture. Plus a 10 or 15 percent raise with a terrible medical plan that has a high deductible sun really a raise. Sometimes, staying put is just fine.
@Shahyee8 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing that. I concur. That is not really a peaceful process all the time.
@lydiapetra12118 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same...who has the enery , ambition to deal with that ...not to mention the stress..
@SL-lz9jr8 ай бұрын
She said raise or leave. People can stay so long as they do what they can to stay. Sometimes that means moving to another team or department. And if you’re the lucky few working at a job that regularly gives real raises and not just cost of living raises, good for you. We all have to make the best decisions for ourselves and our families. My friend needs stability in her life because she battles medical and mental health issues. She knows she’s losing out on higher income but job stability is what she needs. Nothing wrong with that. Her advice to us is not intended for everyone. She is simply stating statistics for those who care about money.
@SacredDiety8 ай бұрын
@@lydiapetra1211You’re essentially losing money every year by not getting pay bumps due to inflation. Both scenarios may be considered difficult. Choose your hard, someone who wants better for themselves and want to improve their lifestyle and impact on the world if they’re that type of person is going to choose to improve.
@arialaw94568 ай бұрын
I've been working in my company for the tenth year this year. In my entire career there is no promotion, no salary increase, no incentives Nada at all but I still stayed because it was the easiest place where I can be at peace with myself (no competition, no "deadline" and even if there was, overtime work is not requirement). For someone like me who has multiple conditions and maintenance meds, I can only be grateful 😊😊
@Andrea-vr2eq8 ай бұрын
That sounds great. May I ask what you do for a living?
@arialaw94568 ай бұрын
@@Andrea-vr2eq Simple office work. We generate bills for an energy company.
@am3ria8 ай бұрын
This obviously doesn't apply to you, this is for people who aren't broken, lifelong worker bees
@brittanyhalstead60348 ай бұрын
@@am3ria True probably for single, unattached, flighty people.
@maylin19868 ай бұрын
@@brittanyhalstead6034 Sadly, I've seen married couples hustle to very challenging degrees as much as single people. The environments and the people surrounding them can also break a person to a degree, too. ☹️
@CitizenoftheWorld17 ай бұрын
My friend used to do this, then got called out by potential employers in interviews because they noticed in his resume he never worked for more than two years at any company
@nectarinepie9527 ай бұрын
Yes, as a hiring manager I see it as a red flag when people jump around too much. I would rather see a history of promotions at the same company.
@artificiallyunintelligent45376 ай бұрын
@@nectarinepie952What if there’s literally zero room to grow at said company? Like in my case, they have some BS rule where only one team member per year can get a promotion and I’m the newest one on a team of 9 people…how am I going to outperform 8 other more experienced employees?
@borntodoit87446 ай бұрын
@@artificiallyunintelligent4537don't worry about what a company wants to do to limit your career you manage your career actively (jump ship every 2 or 3 years). when everything boils down to what important THEY don't give a damn about you. take what you want & move on. get used to travelling lite (no attachments). your personal life maintain separately from professional...that way you have consistency of relationships when you move around you always got friends
@jenster296 ай бұрын
@@artificiallyunintelligent4537then find another company with more opportunities. But if you're leaving every company after 2 years, it's not a good look. And she's bullshtting A 10-15% increase ? That has NEVER been the case
@TrueVintageRnBFan6 ай бұрын
Exactly. One of the first things they look for is consistency.
@upasanapati81688 ай бұрын
I like how confidently this lady is saying all the things that could be ‘wrong’ for so many people. Let’s not generalize and pretend like we are ‘ know it all’
@TheOwlQueen8 ай бұрын
She got a 6 figure job on Wall Street straight out of college. I'm honestly sick of hearing the same advice time after time from people who started out with a higher wage than many people will see in their lifetimes.
@wendyalban8 ай бұрын
@@TheOwlQueenplenty of people do the same, you could too
@kos29198 ай бұрын
She also gave advises that felt only one sided and she never actually living as middle class
@evefoodie87988 ай бұрын
Omg I thought I was the only one who doesn't like her know-it-all attitude😂
@KlaudiaShaefferr8 ай бұрын
She sounds like she’s pulling sh&t out of thin air and immediately contradicts herself
@annad80198 ай бұрын
she’s not wrong BUT remember that her advice is focused on optimizing pay and a strategy for making the most money you can - she’s not taking into account work satisfaction, work/life balance, or just overall happiness with your job/career.
@etf428 ай бұрын
Exactly. What a short sighted and shallow view of work
@annad80198 ай бұрын
@@etf42 I was also thinking that as a hiring manager, if I see a pattern of job hopping, that candidate would be at the bottom of my pile.
@juliehenshaw55588 ай бұрын
She's not taking into consideration family life either. It's rough on children to uproot them every 2-3 years and often times a job change means a location change.
@willettemcmillian84208 ай бұрын
Depends on the profession
@nurse9738 ай бұрын
Well put
@coupleofreacts82467 ай бұрын
2nd year at a job I asked for a significant raise (as I literally turned a dept around from red to green) and got told no because it’d make me one of the highest paid people at the company. Quit, found another job, I’m on the low end of comp here and making 40% more then my last job. I haven’t got a massive raise here in my 2nd year but work/life balance is great and I’m not over here saving depts lol. My advice is don’t get greedy.
@amariah19807 ай бұрын
Do you know what happened to the department that you turned around after you left? What about the company?
@a55tech7 ай бұрын
huh? u got greedy and it worked out good so what’s the issue
@mopillo887 ай бұрын
@@a55techif you really cant understand what this guy is saying then you shouldnt be taking advice from the video
@Sourandsweet7497 ай бұрын
@@mopillo88but he said hes getting 40% more at his new job than his last job, then says not to get greedy even thought thats what led to him getting a new job?
@adam73497 ай бұрын
Her advice is horrible. If you leave every two years your 401K is not going to grow and you will be stuck with 10-15 vacation days a year. Most companies have 401K fully invested after 5 years. MY advice is to work at a company where you can grow and learn. If your are stuck doing the same redundant task you are not going to grow and will not get a raise.
@Quiblets8 ай бұрын
I'm 6 years in where I work. I haven't moved to another company because no matter how much they are paying me, I know I will be flooded with work and I will be stuck in traffic every single day. Plus add the tolls, gasoline and the cost of eating out. I rather enjoy working from home and not have to drive anywhere. I've saved so much just by staying home. And yes, I have WAY BETTER BENEFITS than what I have been offered by other companies. I've been contacted by many recruiters and none have matched my benefits. I travel non-stop to different countries and I get time off from work (one month per year- this is not counting vacation time) to pursue higher academic goals. I have the option to decide if I want to jump to another city in another continent to work on a new project. And I get free health care. The company I work for pays for my yearly checkups. Win-win.
@Wim-Bella-ina8 ай бұрын
You got it right.
@Whoisthatgirl21218 ай бұрын
You can get other work from home jobs…
@DavidMay2nd8 ай бұрын
Comfort Zone is the dream killer.
@Wim-Bella-ina8 ай бұрын
@@DavidMay2nd this isn't necessarily a dream killer. Health must be a priority. Stress on the body comes at a cost. It's not worth it.
@patdo44528 ай бұрын
Money isn't everything
@lindaplaylist95608 ай бұрын
This info is misguided…it doesn’t apply to all professions …
@Nikkioq8 ай бұрын
Nope.
@Brutus-co9dt8 ай бұрын
Agreed. She couldn’t be more wrong.
@writerchick948 ай бұрын
Also this idea that those people get their bag and have since the dawn of time just isnt true.
@Islandgirl068 ай бұрын
I love the work-life balance you have when you stay at a place long enough though. Sure, in some parts she’s right…I’ve been at my work for 17 years and probably over my lifetime I might not make as much as someone new, but they also don’t get to accrue the benefits of seniority by hopping around. My seniority gives me up to 272 PTO hours a year and I’ve been paying into my 401k for 17 years with a 100% match of 5%. Staying with the same company has also given me other benefits such as free healthcare and a solid schedule. In my youth, I hustled and did all the shifts that work needed covered and by staying there I earned a better work-life balance with my family. So…if money is your motivation then cool. But there’s more to life than money. What’s the point of making all that money but not having enough PTO to do anything with it? Also, me being senior and also not commanding 10-15% raises and just accepting my 2-5% annually allows them to keep my expertise instead of paying a junior and retraining every 2 years.
@AK-jt9gx8 ай бұрын
@@Islandgirl06you realize how that last part of your comment is LITERALLY you explaining why your decisions give your employer an advantage instead of giving you an advantage? You said “it allows them to” cheap out by keeping your high level of expertise without normal retraining expenses or necessarily keeping salary pace with the market. They’re profiting off you. I understand what you mean about PTO, healthcare and everything else, and if that is worth more to you then that’s great. However, keep in mind that people who simply earn more money often have the chance to retire early… that’s 365 days PTO.
@Lemonblue1827 ай бұрын
In 2019 I was an Operations Manager for a company in NJ. I was making 41k a year working salary, 6 days a week no health. I asked for a raise to be at 45k a year. Boss at the time said no cause I be making as much as him. Never got a raise at that job. Moved to a new job in 2021 making 45k a year, Sales Coordinator, 40 hours a week, with health. Ended that job making 52k a year. Moved to a new job in 2023 making 60k a year, salary, health, and remote.
@williammcneill27537 ай бұрын
Up and out.
@goforbroke27 ай бұрын
My sister is an operations manager in Philly, she clears 130-140k a year. You were severely underpaid.
@zitimotleyxxjmxx7 ай бұрын
@@goforbroke2 depends on the industry i guess. I was an OM for about a decade. The only time i really felt i made it financially was when i moved up to director post. OMs these days have varying salary range especially for US companies.
@vicvic20817 ай бұрын
Woww criminal.
@AB-nt3il6 ай бұрын
No ma’am! Your may need to change industries. You should be paid at least 110k in NJ
@alyahamzah19528 ай бұрын
As a doctor myself, I'll be so scared of any doctors who leave a job every 2 years for a better pay. It takes time and practice to hone your skills as a doctor and to gather enough experience to become a specialist. Sometimes we stay at a job that may not pay very well but it is the one that gives us the best clinical exposure.
@seanthe1008 ай бұрын
Why? If you're doing the same job why should it matter
@janek.58868 ай бұрын
I agree, this does not apply to the more technical fields like architecture or engineering where a single building project spans two to three years, so quitting in Year 2 shows a lack of commitment. Not to mention, a year is hardly enough to even learn the culture of a new work place. She also doesn't know how ridiculously easy the economy has been in the last 12 years. It's been nothing except "boom" so people have the luxury of moving around in this manner. Once the bust happens, and we have a prolonged recession, it will be: remember that crazy time when people would jump from job to job every two years? (that option will not even exist anymore).
@madant228 ай бұрын
@@janek.5886but this is good for minimum wage workers and those who jobs doesn’t have much job growth. It’s best to get the experience for a few years then move on to something more high paying. It the fastest way of going to earning $20k a year to your salary becoming $50 and possibly a $100k a year. And when you do it when you’re much younger working age. It’s more beneficial for you in the long run to start making more than $50k or $60k a year in your lifetime. You retire more quickly earning more retirement money by doing this strategy. It’s smart very smart.
@carolj28968 ай бұрын
Not necessarily having to leave a job, but level up the one you’re in every 2 years. How can you increase the returns in your practice by 15% every two years? Taking on a partner? Changing the office location? Delegating a service?
@mst-pierrem57298 ай бұрын
It depends on the job. If you are a super specialized field like doctor, surgeon ect... It would be terrible if you switch every two years after committing so much for that type of job. However, other type of less specialized job I agree, especially if you are not recongnized and aren't paid much to begin with. In this day and age you need alot of money just to survive. Can't blame people to chase for that instead of job stability after all they have gone through since Covid-19 !!
@MjStos8 ай бұрын
At every place of employment I’ve been to there’s always been 1 employee that I’ve noticed that would continuously go above and beyond for our employers. But each of those employees were never paid what they should have received and were often overworked to compensate for other terrible coworkers. So I’d say not every situation is the same.
@Ashnesss8 ай бұрын
lol I’ve never seen that. They probably were incompetent and needed more work to get mediocre results.
@chynawall85008 ай бұрын
This message of hers is for those people.
@lizzyisbored98828 ай бұрын
Under capitalism the only reward of a good work ethic is more work. 😂
@monayunita61638 ай бұрын
@@AshnesssNah, you’ll be surprised how many people just slack off and how their colleagues have to pick up their slacking, sometimes because that person is more liked by the boss the other when you both are being assigned the job and it becomes a join responsibility, etc (they suck up to them).
@chynawall85008 ай бұрын
@@monayunita6163 This does happen and when you’re not the favorited one, it’s time to leave.
@thechosenone938 ай бұрын
Don’t listen to everything you hear - you won’t benefit from listening to this persons advice but you CAN benefit from listening to people in YOUR field
@Jaysi_NY0037 ай бұрын
Totally agree.
@AFO_AnalyRics7 ай бұрын
Exactly. Advice like this is useless because it applies to just as many as it doesn't. 50/50...and the silent, suffering, regretful 50 won't be around to tell Forbes their side of the story.
@thechosenone937 ай бұрын
@@AFO_AnalyRics absolutely,that’s the problem with social media these days. It’s too easy to be influenced by people who are hyper successful and you’re at home thinking you’re a loser because you haven’t achieved as much. It’s so bad man
@divadbat8 ай бұрын
Don’t forget about seniority. In an unstable market you’ll be the first to be laid off if you change jobs every 2-3 years. Advice is never a one-fits-all situation.
@meep98738 ай бұрын
Not true. If you’re competent and a good worker. A company will keep you as a newer higher over someone that has 20+ years and gets overpaid for their position when looking at compa ratio pay
@azucar246018 ай бұрын
Correct. As a small business owner, that kind of pay raise don't exist, especially during the recession. This may work for corporate but not for small businesses. Average raise is 2 to 5% every year. It takes longer than 2 years to "move up" position.
@jameskiewitz67598 ай бұрын
Seniority excuse is for union folks and not for private industry most of the time.
@thenameisthiago8 ай бұрын
Since when do companies value seniority? lol maybe for the first round of layoffs but if they get rid of your entire department which happens more often than not, you are gone
@nikki14008 ай бұрын
Lol, acting like companies reward seniority. How cute. That hasn't been the case since pensions were a thing. You'll be replaced in two seconds if someone can do your job better or for less, you being there for a long time means nothing to then. Companies are not your friend and do not have your back.
@ShG20228 ай бұрын
I would say not every situation is same. Money is important but a good working environment, good understanding and appreciative boss/management and a good team of co workers are equally important. What if u have a higher paying job but a more toxic work environment? Besides leaving a job every two years will create a negative impression on ur resume.
@dvdgalutube8 ай бұрын
Agreed. Your job is as good as your first line manager.
@12monkies1238 ай бұрын
That is very true. If you do it consistently like clockwork, then it tells an employer you’re not going to stick around and hiring/training is a resource drain, you become the horse people won’t bet on. The problem is , if you become a person like that , you’ll end up finding yourself in a position you’re grossly unqualified for eventually.
@supremacy20408 ай бұрын
I took a pay cut just to work at a place with a better environment. I don’t care, my sanity was way more important and I’ll just reboot
@jacquelinenetto16978 ай бұрын
Fully agree with you. Money should not be the only criteria is switching jobs
@ItsTinNotTim8 ай бұрын
@supremacy2040 I'm considering on taking a paycut for a better work/life balance. I do have anxiety on making less but desperately need to take care of my mental health.
@CamberRockerCamber7 ай бұрын
Nah... i had a friend who jumped jobs once every year or every other year and did that for about 7-8 years. He was getting significantly more money as he moved but it got to a point where he moved around so much the next employer didn't want to hire him. They wanted stability and they didn't trust that he wouldn't bounce after a couple of years. Hes now stuck at a job he hates for the last 3-4 years because no one else wants to hire him. He bitches about it every time we hang out.
@23calvken7 ай бұрын
Just don’t quit before you have another job
@dantheman22227 ай бұрын
He could just... omit from his resume lmao
@AnansitheSpider87 ай бұрын
@@dantheman2222 But then he would have gaps in his resume and potential employers would wonder why.
@dantheman22227 ай бұрын
@@AnansitheSpider8 mom got ill and I had to take care of her, my own medical issues, shit find a friend who can sound professional and fake a listing 🤷♂️ these companies don't care about you and actively work against your best interest in 99% of cases. As long as your competent who cares how you get your foot in the door, fuck em.
@pinkfuture82756 ай бұрын
Somebody will want to hire him. Dude needs to find a better job.
@Thallea8 ай бұрын
That's all in an ideal world. We don't live in a world where everyone always gets what they deserve. A lot of times, those hard workers are taken advantage of and never promoted
@adelyna898 ай бұрын
That is why you need to leave. If they don't appreciate you enough to give you a raise or a promotion when you're a hard worker and stayed with them for 2 years they never will see your worth and they'll keep getting you for granted. You need to look for another job so you may get a better salary and new oportunities.
@kolyxix8 ай бұрын
@@adelyna89, just ignore what she said. Not everyone is willing to relocate to another side of the country for 2% increase in salary.
@dream__soda79008 ай бұрын
The average person doesn’t have the luxury to just “Oop! Look at the time, I gotta find a better paying job now. See yah!” Not that easy sis. 👏
@thissupernova64918 ай бұрын
True, it is not easy buuuut will it ever be? Whilst it is not easy, one should definitely cultivate a foundation in which they can remove themselves from a workspace that will not allow them to grow in the way they deserve to.
@UsrNmTkn8 ай бұрын
She never said it was easy. In fact she said it's not easy.
@dream__soda79008 ай бұрын
@@thissupernova6491 yeah I’m trying to change jobs now. It’s currently sucking the life out of me, it’s been a process but hopefully all goes well.
@Mini-ge9sm8 ай бұрын
Exactly
@Showmatic8 ай бұрын
The point is not the you can't just easily find another job, but at a certain point, you need to start SHOPPING for a better opportunity if you're not getting it at your current job.
@aprildanae74878 ай бұрын
As a nurse this is what many nurses do because they feel they have to…but it sucks. It sucks having such high turnover. It sucks for most of your staff to constantly be in training. It sucks for the patients who can’t build rapport with providers.
@cmale1237 ай бұрын
Yep you need get paid alot
@teamboozt7 ай бұрын
What sucks for nurses is that the hospital they work for will start a permanent worker at $40 an hour but pay a traveling nurse $85 an hour.
@TA-np4mc8 ай бұрын
I've worked hard for my company and in return, I get to work from home, 15% pay increase every year, 20% for my promotions, and very flexible when I want to use PTO. I always tell people to work hard the first year, if they still treat you terrible, leave. If they reward you, stay.
@mmowec81598 ай бұрын
I agree
@crypticsailor8 ай бұрын
Yes but that will be true up to the end of your pay band.
@Tie5098 ай бұрын
15% pay increases per year is amazing. You're clearly not the target of the advice. I've been there and know what she means. Those nonsense 3% "inflation raises" year after year will have you grossly lagging your market value after 5 years to the point where you are likely making 20% below market value if you stay. The only way to get that extra 20% is to leave.
@karenj58808 ай бұрын
Salary is important but there are other factors to consider before leaving a place.
@comfortzone56188 ай бұрын
Agreed!!!!
@RDawgs7 ай бұрын
Kinda agree 50/50. Current job pays me abit average but I get to work from home time to time, chill, cool workers/company world wide and work is easy comparing to my older job higher pay. Also i live 10-20min away depend on traffic vs 1 hour
@boomkingg7 ай бұрын
This Is How People Think In Relationships Nowadays Too🤣
@StephenIC7 ай бұрын
Especially if you already have more than enough. What's the difference in quality of life between. 80k and 90k? Not much (depending on where you live but you get them point)
@TwinBladeFury7 ай бұрын
@@StephenIC 80k and 90k is a pretty huge difference, that's nearly half a year of rent where I live. Although almost nobody is making 80k, lol.
@gvue43968 ай бұрын
I'm a recruiter and this is true, it's bc companies don't give good raises. It's easier to move jobs and get a better pay increase. Just keep in mind eventually you will hit a cap. After the cap, higher pay will be a management position.
@choncha237 ай бұрын
The point is to hit the cap fast while you are young. By 45, you should be knocking at the door for management to drive you into retirement.
@NoctLightCloud7 ай бұрын
@@choncha23or into burnout😅
@diligenceeke30237 ай бұрын
@@choncha23 I guess everybody should become a manager.
@johnirby88477 ай бұрын
I'm a hiring manager...a job every 2 years = flake, no point in hiring
@tjt50557 ай бұрын
@@choncha2345?? I’ve been in management since I was 25… and it was 7 years at that company with 3 promotions, then 3 1/2 years at the next one so now I only get contacted for executive positions
@KayAnn21218 ай бұрын
My ex boyfriend hopped jobs like this for years. He has currently been unemployed for over 3 years. This doesn’t quite work the way she’s presented it. But switching up every 4 to 7 years might make more sense if you’re in a profession where you will actually earn more job hopping, although less frequently than she’s advising.
@JSinuYasha8 ай бұрын
@donk8105 Same. It's a red flag.
@boutux8 ай бұрын
Jumping ship before you have your replacement job is just plain stupid. When you realize you are not happy with your job, work conditions, salary, whatever, you start applying for new jobs. Stay in your current position until you have confirmation that the new job is yours.
@mecanuktutorials64768 ай бұрын
@donk8105wouldn’t it be 5 employers in 10 years? That’s not THAT crazy.
@masterchief92918 ай бұрын
@donk8105 contract work doesn't exist?
@extraincomesuz8 ай бұрын
@KsyAnn2121 did he do online courses to improve his skills during the 4 years?
@Autumn_Blessings8 ай бұрын
Depends on the career.
@jesusisking51638 ай бұрын
And where you live
@_Hollie_8 ай бұрын
Yeah it’s definitely not for all. But she did used to work on wall street so its defthe case in a field like that. It’s definitely very dependent though, also depends on your level of training
@BassBwoy38 ай бұрын
This worked wonders for me. Job 1: 7 months (55K); Job 2: 4 months (9% increase from prior job); Job 3: 1.5 years (12% increase from prior job); Job 4: 1.5 Years and one promotion (18% increase from prior job and left making 23.5% more than when I first joined); Job 5: Started my own business making double my highest salary in Job 4. If you're in a field of high demand and low supply, level up and job hop.
@TheBoxingNinja7 ай бұрын
What field are you in?
@BassBwoy37 ай бұрын
@@TheBoxingNinja - Tech Consulting
@daniellean57698 ай бұрын
This is EXACTLY the advice the system wants us to take- big corporations are always wanting to put the liability on the consumer. This country is ran like a business. They don't not have citizens, they have consumers. This advice negates the real issue at hand- cost of living and corporate greed. I want my neighborhood teachers to get raises and STAY. Not everyone is meant to be a principal, or a CEO or management. Now, with that being said, this advice has merit solely because we refuse to pushback on this system. And since we won't, we will have to do anything and everything that is advantageous to us. We have entered the era of self-preservation.
@zaro337 ай бұрын
👏🏿 well said.
@panashemugadza25907 ай бұрын
This the realest comment I've read in a while
@DiamondFlame457 ай бұрын
At the end of the day, we have to do what’s best for ourselves because the system won’t.
@JonathanVachon7777 ай бұрын
The world always have been about self preservation, its a fallen world.
@CarlosMartinez-tt4qp7 ай бұрын
We need to learn to refuse to stay in conformity. Every social relationship we are in is constructed around being in confort, which in the ends makes the one in power abuse those who feel are okay to push down. And this works at every sphere, in any place, and is specially notable to those who try to change things and are repressed for doing so with a reason. But for the moment, the most we can do is to manuever through those spaces (which are specially enabled in work environments).
@recuerdos24578 ай бұрын
Remember she s talking about the group of ‘best ppl’ not the group of ‘we think we are the best ppl’… most positions honestly are replaceable and most companies have guidelines for promotions
@IEdjumacate8 ай бұрын
@@M-WG agreed.
@abbyjohnson38517 ай бұрын
I think the key here is “do I deserve a raise.” Not everyone is entitled to a 15% raise just because they’ve been clocking in for 2 years.
@nikhileshk70478 ай бұрын
Yes. Kill experience, kill quality, kill mental health and go for money. Yes👍🏽
@EHnter7 ай бұрын
If only money isn’t tied to quality of life. Sure you survive with minimum wage, but that’s just surviving and not living. Chase that bag until you’re comfortable and enjoying life.
@robbyx68467 ай бұрын
She never once talks about mental health or physical fitness and well being . Yes you can make more money but at what expense ?
@EHnter7 ай бұрын
@@robbyx6846gonna be honest with you, most people’s problems are solved with money. Includes mental health. If anything just get a chill remote office job.
@hongmeiling60657 ай бұрын
Changing jobs isn't going to kill your mental health. Working >40hrs a week for 30% less than you could be making though?
@vancelewis94967 ай бұрын
I would argue you gain more experience and skills by working in different organizations with new people consistently. And changing jobs doesn’t mean blowing up your mental health, boredom and staleness have ruined many people’s mental stability.
@susana_yo8 ай бұрын
It’s not bragging! The best piece of career advice I’ve ever received was to keep a running list of your work accomplishments - big or small! Projects finished, processes you improved, quotas reached/exceeded, instances I overcame a conflict/impasse with a coworker, etc. The first promotion I applied for, I assumed since my manager was interviewing me for it, she knew what I had accomplished. So I was completely caught off guard in the interview when she asked for a few examples. I came up with a few stats on the spot but I didn’t advocate for myself nearly as much as I could have if I had that prepared list. She’s the one that gave me the pointer after giving me the news I didn’t get the promotion. Since then, the list I’ve kept has helped me promote and “job hop” my way into doubling my salary over the last four years. She is spitting facts.
@mattsocal20108 ай бұрын
Her perfect example is of the most annoying person in the office, she's probably that person and people get so annoyed with her she has to leave her job every 2 years, now she acts like everyone should do that 😂😂
@serabimontague8 ай бұрын
This advice is ok if you're in your 20s, but there's a lot pitfalls - most companies start to think you're unreliable when they see every job you've done is 2 years or less -if you get the job, you might not get full benefits, including health insurance, till you've been there at least a year Job hopping is a lot harder with marriage, kids, aging parents, mortgages, car payments, student loans - Let's not forget about ageism. Your resume can be great and skills sharp, but many 40s, 50s, 60s, + get overlooked for a 22 newbie.
@lauraboudreaux65818 ай бұрын
You are right on it. Ageism is real and very much alive at this time.
@James-xd1rf8 ай бұрын
I’ve only had one job where I worked for almost 5 years, every job following has been for less than a year… I’m in my early 30’s and just hit my first full year in what has been years of poor work history 😢
@Dweeble2338 ай бұрын
When in your 40's if not is Sr mgmt, the target is now on your back. By 50 you sd hv your house paid off and sufficient cash set aside to cover 1yr of expenses should you get laid off or even better be able to say eff you and retire. At 60, either have hit or very near your investment/retirement goals. The corporate reaper will be looking for you.
@ST-rj8iu8 ай бұрын
Also, when you are trusted, you get more flexibility. You don't always get that as a new hire. It took me years to be given flex work time.
@mng86808 ай бұрын
How would employers even know your age just by looking at the resume? If you put on only recent job experience from the last 10 years at most unless youre applying for senior position, they would not likely discriminate you by age.
@brittanyr94718 ай бұрын
My mom taught me this. Every 3 years either move up or out. Or at the very least evaluate where I am and if I am content where I am. I've always stuck to that. Sometimes it's been 2 or 4 years, but around there I've always either gotten a promotion with a raise or new job all together
@Electric_7 ай бұрын
I agree, leave a company if you’re not making more (10-15%) and/or getting promoted every 2 years. Only rare exception might be an enterprise sales job where you’re pulling $350-$1M and going elsewhere doesn’t really change that. You don’t have to quit your job to start looking either. If you aren’t moving in the right direction in an organization just start the search and take your time finding the perfect new role.
@misjuiceefroot8 ай бұрын
I work in local government with lots of opportunities for upward mobility. So, while I don’t change employers every 2-3 years, I definitely promote. I’ve been here almost 7 years and I’m in my 3rd role. That’s best for me because I don’t lose vacation seniority, my retirement contributions, and if a role doesn’t work out, I have 6 months to return to my former position … so there is no risk to trying different jobs. I have definitely out earned my peers who stayed in the original role we were hired for by about 40%. But as many are mentioning here, I can definitely see a downside in private sector to changing so frequently.
@p.c18928 ай бұрын
I worked in local government and became so obese :(
@chilady0078 ай бұрын
Sounds like we work for the same local government 😊 ...but true, in an industry where there are always promotional opportunities plus continuous benefits no matter where you move among the agencies sounds great to me! I'm currently on a hybrid remote schedule and cannot complain at all🤷🏽♀️
@natalynne8 ай бұрын
Yay a fellow local government worker ❤
@viktoriyadan43288 ай бұрын
I think it depends on the industry. I work in a medical field, and I have been with my company for 10 years. My hourly wage is about $10 less than what is offered next door hospitals. However, I work 4x10 T,W,Tr, Fr. No calls, no weekends. All holidays paid. I am on a top of a seniority list. I make 10 PTO hours per pay period. I have pension and 403 B pension plan. My commute is 20 min. I don't give a shit about $10 extra bucks an hour.
@emilybyers6298 ай бұрын
Exactly. I also work in the medical field too. I've been working at my hospital for 18 years. I probably could make more somewhere else but I make at the top of my pay range. I have the most seniority. My health insurance is top of the line with extremely low premiums. I have generous PTO. No holidays or weekends. I work 4 10s with every Friday off. Opportunities for overtime if I want it. I also work remote/hybrid. Plus a decent retirement plan. I'm not going anywhere as of now.
@jordanedwards51688 ай бұрын
You’re taking comfort now and not thinking long term. What if you take the $10 (20k per year) this time and in another 2/3 years it’s another $10. Now a few years later you could be making $40k more and who’s to say the next jobs won’t have better perks. Employers tend to treat employees better the more they pay them.
@maylin19868 ай бұрын
@@jordanedwards5168 Sure, people can make the additional $10/hr, but I experienced the opposite 2yrs ago with a better paying company. In my experience, I've learned better pay in some companies are used as a "bait and switch." For all we know, the person who sacrificed the extra $10/hr is possibly making $20/hr currently. I do not blame them for keeping their current job & benefits. Sometimes, peace of mind and a calm environment is worth so much more to your mental health and well-being, than a company that can pay more, stress you out and are most likely chaotically disorganized because it's likely a revolving door company. Revolving door companies are terrible to work for, because people are constanting coming and going. Hired and leaving. The company doesn't get the structure it needs because of the toxicity of the environment they allow, and have created in the workplace for their employees.
@sandrolorini8 ай бұрын
@@jordanedwards5168 ive worked for years in an industry thats running 24/7 like the medical field. in these types of fields, a theoretical 40k isnt free money to do the same job with the best schedule. its not a one sizs fits all type deal. its more of a value proposition. is the worth my time or not? or better yet, is this a good deal or not? if you want to spend your entire working career at the bottom of the senority ladder, stuck working swing or grave shift, working weekends + all the holidays. on top of that get stuck working OT, and get bounced around to cover other shifts in an effort to get all that theoretical cheese, be my guest. im over it. im not trading the family time im enjoying now for the stress of chasing money that i may or may not get. im ok with letting others stick that needle in their arm. 🙅♂️
@NomadSupreme9117 ай бұрын
She sounds like someone who has a rich daddy/husband who will bail her out if this strategy doesn't work😂
@animusanima30948 ай бұрын
This applied to me really well. My first, job 38k, second 50k, one year only had 52K, third job 65K in span of 5 years. Yeah, I did get passed on one - two occasions because of hopping, but It's not ideal job anyway, why I slave myself and blindly loyal to a company that doesnt pay me well and can replace me any moment if I am sick. If they want people to stay & reduce turnover rate, they need to increase the pay & treat people well. I would say if you are competent & skilled, you will receive job opportunities.
@SamuelJ8888 ай бұрын
At my firm in a span of 5 years, I went from $52K to $125K. Now that Im at 10 years, Im making $210K. Loyal does pay off too.
@jaeshasway8 ай бұрын
Every person I know who took this advice is not making any more money than they were 7-10 years ago. Unless they’re still where they went when they left the original job. It only works for a select few with select skill sets. This is not advice for the masses.
@Madrespect8 ай бұрын
Hmm. I left my receptionist job of twelve years, a decade ago, and then hopped around every couple of years to gain new skills and more exposure. I've now secured a government job and am making around 3x what I made when I first left my original job. All of this without any degree. So, I definitely do think it can work. And I don't think I'm select, by any means. (I live in WA state and am in accounting/finance now, for reference.) I think that when you're in the private sector and have kinda topped out where the raises aren't coming or are measly at best, it's up to YOU to create your own raises, you know? Go out and get them! Do it until you get to a place where you're comfortable and then bunker down until retirement. That's my plan, at least. While I don't love where I am (my immediate team is trash) I do love that I'm in the WA DRS now and as long as I stay a WA govt employee, my retirement will follow me wherever I go.
@walterhoward55128 ай бұрын
It worked for me. But it probably does depend on the industry.
@Rachel-hb5zx8 ай бұрын
Agreed, my dad changed jobs about every two years and he’s worse off than if he had just stayed. Constantly chasing the buck made him miserable and eventually his constant moving just proved to employers that he wasn’t someone they wanted to put time and effort into training and meshing with the group. Since he was just going to leave anyway. Now, he’s 63 and can’t find a job despite 40 years of experience and at one point making $250k a year.
@MidwestBoom8 ай бұрын
@@Rachel-hb5zx If your dad was making that kind of money with that kind of age, he should be retired already Not looking for a new job.
@Rachel-hb5zx8 ай бұрын
@@MidwestBoomhe should’ve, he made bad financial decisions a lot. 6 months before he lost his last job, he had just switched jobs and cashed out his 401k for a down payment for a new house instead of staying in the house they had that was almost paid off. He tried to be a landlord without learning how that works first and got terrible tenants that wrecked the house. Then he lost his job and he used his savings to stay afloat until he found another job. He didn’t and he ended up short-selling the first house and losing the other to foreclosure. He hasn’t found a job since and now does handyman work where he can
@jcstang89527 ай бұрын
I think she skipped over this little part: you have to be worth it to obtain it.
@DeniseMorganArt8 ай бұрын
I’ve been in my job since 2017. No promotion, no pay rise! They are taking the Micky… but I like my job, my co workers and our customers. Oh well,… my happiness is more important than money
@Here_Today_8 ай бұрын
Have you asked for a raise?
@Just4AZ18 ай бұрын
I agree. I retired from a job I loved so much I was willing to make less than what I could have if I had accepted other offers.
@kevinng17028 ай бұрын
Don’t compare to yourself with others, compare yourself who you were yesterday…be grateful for what you have, and others don’t have…she is materialistic girl…don’t listen to her crab…Good luck…😊
@drew90738 ай бұрын
I agree with this. I used to make 6 figures as my first as an engineer very toxic environment, on-site and like to burn people out. My second job took a pay cut less than 6 figures but it’s fully remote, awesome manager/team, great work life balance and very chill job less stress. Still here over 3 years now.
@HaiLe-rd7ho8 ай бұрын
Agree. I have the best boss and the best coworkers
@brittanymauck59138 ай бұрын
I get the sentiment of this video. If $$$ increase is the #1 metric, you must be flexible and strategic, work hard, and change work setting if necessary. Monetary increases for many are not the #1 goal of job satisfaction. For instance, since we make “enough money” in my family, I keep a job compatible with my “mom life.” It would be unwise for me to hop around, risk health insurance lapse, work longer hours starting over, hire someone to get my kids to their practices, and such. It is the whole perks package, not just salary.
@Doug56148 ай бұрын
She's absolutely right. I haven't stopped to think about this in a long time, but there's a lot of truth in what she's saying. I'm going through several late-stage career changes myself right now with different organizations.
@AlexFrank028 ай бұрын
Companies will always take advantage of you and squeeze you for all your worth never paying you enough I completely agree with her
@ashliej65578 ай бұрын
I work for a large corporation and the first 4 years, I worked hard and waited for promotions that weren't available in my office (only small annual raises...25-75 cent small and a couple of hundred dollar bonuses throughout the year). By the end of year 4, I decided that I would force my promotions by doing just that (every 2 years or less), I apply for higher paying positions with the same company (but different departments). 5 years later, I make more than double what I used to make and I am still climbing up the corporate ladder. I promote myself now, instead of waiting for someone else to do it. Last year they gave me a raise and a $5000 bonus just to stay in their department for an extra year.😂 You have to know your worth and be willing to walk if they're not talking your language ($$$).
@pacan73807 ай бұрын
That’s great advice 👌👌
@ellenmcdaniel15507 ай бұрын
I always leave after 2-3 years, because that's when I get burnt out, get too much work put on me, or there's too much workplace drama that I just don't want to be around.
@channyrose8 ай бұрын
Don't forget about loving your job or the mission of your company. Happiness and fulfillment mean more than $$
@ioidt8 ай бұрын
and family commitments ...
@PhoenixFiyah8 ай бұрын
Yeah you can love the job ands mission but when it’s crunch time and they gots make a cut they will fire someone because the company will never lose to keep an employee
@ufuomat32958 ай бұрын
Exactly 💯
@cop25068 ай бұрын
lol the company will give themselves a FAT check and give your a$$ a cheap pizza party with ONE slice of pizza. And a cup of soda for your “hard work” and for “loving your job or the mission of the company”. Get real. You’re just a number to them
@mimiw16268 ай бұрын
OK boomer
@cielostack26988 ай бұрын
Nah fam…the company I work for allows me to grow and have been compensated accordingly. I have soft skills and intellect that has enabled me to work for departments that usually need extensive work experience. The Internet is full of people presenting their version of end all and be all solutions when each person and each situation is different.
@joylastname30358 ай бұрын
So, you're essentially repeating what she said but still trying to negate her? She said you need jobs in companies that give you the opportunity to grow and give you a raise periodically (which you said in your first sentence that your company offers you).
@DiamondFlame457 ай бұрын
Yep! Especially after the layoffs from last year, companies don’t pretend they care about loyalty and tenure anymore! Do what’s best for you.
@ilovemoviesyes8 ай бұрын
I hear her and it’s true- my last job would only give 5% raises- everyone that left got 20% raises -- however in 2024- the market reset wages… if you don’t leave in 2024- then target 2025… we call it the BBD - always looking for the bigger better deal. As for seniority- that means 0 to so many corporations - I’ve seen 20 year veterans get laid off because they say they make too much… ( and the got away with legally by saying we reclassified job- meaning they but those job duties on jr position and pay them less… in the end no one is going to take care of your money- except you!
@dday33228 ай бұрын
🎯
@sony32468 ай бұрын
I'm witness to someone who was senior lose their job because they made "too much as well". Currently, we are in a world where you have to keep your head down, don't do too much, but don't do too little either...
@42Nyx8 ай бұрын
So true. Working from home saves so much more money and headache. Seriously the stress of a workplace cost me so much more and I noticed my medical bills always came on the 3rd year of any job I have ever had. Stress
@wintthu66856 ай бұрын
Exactly 100% true based on my experience 😍 you stick longer with the company not going to promote you at the end, the company will keep you hiring the higher position staffs and you still have to train them to lead you. What’s the point of sticking? Rather move to new company offered you high status and paid. Overall years you spending with new company is the same the one you going to stick with but you become higher and get a status. That’s called taking a risk to improve your career ❤️
@Danyruddy76 ай бұрын
In this case it makes perfect sense.
@CookHernandez9158 ай бұрын
I basically triple my salary in the last 8 years She's not wrong... look for a job while you still have a job its the key
@boutux8 ай бұрын
From my experience she is correct. Longest I've stayed in any job is 3 years. On top of staying in your job while on the job search, I think it's always important to be constantly improving your skills. Education and skills certifications / trainings will help to ensure that your salary will be higher for each consecutive job you seek. Job hopping doesn't have to be considered as this frivolous thing that these comments are making it out to be.
@pillsberrydopeboy8518 ай бұрын
what's your occupation
@anthonynguyen17018 ай бұрын
@@pillsberrydopeboy851professional BSter.😂
@wing37898 ай бұрын
Same 3.5x in 10 years here, while knowing I'm underpaid and can likely jump again for work that make that 5.8x based on industry standards. especially in corporate jobs, this rings true. It's not easy and I'm pretty burnt out, but I'd rather earn higher while younger and invest. Each move made the next slightly easier too with diverse experiences gained
@StarPanda78 ай бұрын
Depending on a lot though. Most jobs never pay for experience... so you gotta be that 1% that talks the talk but can you walk it
@haileyturner51408 ай бұрын
I’d rather stay at one job and make a little less of that one job is great. If I love the place I work, I’m not leaving unless they become corrupt or the pay is so low I can’t make ends meet. My current manager has been on my unit for 30 years. She started in this unit and she plans on retiring in this unit because of how much she loves it. I’d rather have a career like hers instead of finding a new job every few years with employers who don’t care about anyone but themselves.
@YaNeK925 ай бұрын
The truth is that in life you can either focus on building a *"resume"* or building a *"business"!* 💯
@jamalcole19858 ай бұрын
I started my electrician apprenticeship in 2020 at $22.42 per hour. Currently at $53 per hour. Top out at$ 70 per hour
@xliquidity39148 ай бұрын
She is 100% right. If you have a goal of your ideal salary than you'll likely get that switching jobs. This advice is not for: 1) People who care more about work/life balance. 2)People who just love their current work environment (coworkers, boss, clients). 3) Government employees who will receive a pension.
@Musicsinger2996 ай бұрын
This is so money focused. I wish they were talking about finding jobs with purpose.
@webguy9436 ай бұрын
They dont care about that 😂
@ConstantlyRepeatingMyself8 ай бұрын
If you hop from job to job every 2 years your resume will be less likely to be considered. No one wants to hire an unstable employee.
@barbthegreat5868 ай бұрын
It depends on the industry, job market and market situation. In my industry, it's a normal.
@sarahteunissen50168 ай бұрын
Exactly
@Taylor-f5s8 ай бұрын
That might be a good thing lol they know you not going to take their bs and you’re not a person who bow down
@SunShinesBlessing8 ай бұрын
AI doesn’t care…. Humans don’t check resumes anymore. The recruiter only reviews what AI qualifiers pull!
@DC-pp8xf8 ай бұрын
@@Ark-ys2upOR they could assume you’ve been fired from those jobs or that you weren’t competent.
@Nijilove788 ай бұрын
i got fired after being at the company for 2 yrs (supervisor denied my sick days when i was out with the flu). i was upset but my new job is a 160% pay increase… so i say thank you
@kingsgambit70987 ай бұрын
Yes, moving around will make you more successful, but more importantly, it makes you more valuable.
@SunShinesBlessing8 ай бұрын
She’s right! My cousin is in the same field as me, shorter time by 10 years and makes over $12,000 more than I do because she job hops. I have only switched jobs twice in my 16 year career. I only receive a $1,000 raise each year. Faithful employees receive nothing compared to job hoppers! Yeah, I’m calling it what it is! It’s a job hopper!
@Breenndda8 ай бұрын
When a company I used to work at merged with another, a corporate rep came to talk to the employees about what changed and overall wage raises. Someone asked if they'd be compensated for their 10+ years of loyalty over someone brand new and the rep asked her why she thinks she deserves that...there was a mass exodus about a month later.
@zeyv45518 ай бұрын
New employees with hardly any experience usually get paid more than oe about the same as employees who have been there for years. My oldest sister works at Intel, for more than 15 years, my younger sister started there a couple of years ago, with approx. 1 yr experience in the same field, and she started with the almost the same pay as my oldest sister. It's ridiculous.
@tauseefahmad878 ай бұрын
Start looking for a job in 3 years ..
@dewi_malam8 ай бұрын
my husband had been 2 years work in same company, haven't given any raise 😞
@cmg258 ай бұрын
What she is right about is the fact that salaries must increase to attract top talent in the new crop of job seekers, lateral movers, or career changers. The clip leaves a lot of nuance out.
@wrcinc8 ай бұрын
If your resume shows that you’re leaving jobs every 2-3 years, a company may be less likely to hire you 😂
@PsychonautSaiyan8 ай бұрын
Facts it’s what I look at with new hires
@SiriusV218 ай бұрын
Disagree. I think people who job hop are more likely to be hired. They like that you are diversified and have experience in many different positions versus someone who spends ten years at one job
@PsychonautSaiyan8 ай бұрын
@@SiriusV21 Depends on the industry in my field of work (IT) we seek out specialized masters of one people. All of my clients also look for those with long job holders. I pass up on any candidate that leaves their jobs after 2 years cause I want someone that will stick around. It takes 2 years just to master our ecosystem…..
@CorporalDavis7 ай бұрын
One of the worst things that employers see are gaps in time of employment as well as constant leaving of jobs.
@kamenriderovant96767 ай бұрын
@@CorporalDavisAnd some employers are looking for commitment.
@Tamara-ju3lh6 ай бұрын
I got a 18% raise at my 2 year and a 16% raise at my 3 year. I lucked out. I'll be at my current job for 4 years in June and I love it. I have life/work balance too.
@ideedeevg8 ай бұрын
I have been hearing the “job market is bad” since I was 16 years old that I started working. I have never had an issue finding a job and I work very hard but if I’m not being appreciated and taken care by the company I move on. My last job I worked in a company 7 years because the owner of the company knew how hard I worked and he knew he needed to keep me happy in return because he wouldn’t find another one like me.
@ursula12318 ай бұрын
Totally agree with her and actually practiced this years ago. ❤
@michaeldallas-yf4gj7 ай бұрын
Oh boy. This is eye opener!!!
@8homa8 ай бұрын
it's what happens....we an RN who started out 40$ an hour....2 of the RN'S WHO worked the floor went to HR to see if they could get a raise...was told no...they went back gave their 2 weeks noticed..took a month off & reapplied...so they went from 25$ an hour was rehired at 40$ an hour & also got a 25,000 sign on bonus....
@bloxer95638 ай бұрын
💀
@ConcernedResident_GiantStack8 ай бұрын
Yeah, when you find out how much colleagues make, it makes a difference. I found out that I girl I trained made the same as me. Couldn't believe it. Used it to get me a 40% raise.
@LilacDeiji8 ай бұрын
This might come as a shock, but I’d rather you not go overboard with the ellipses. They make your text illegible.
@CoolGuyDoingCoolShit7 ай бұрын
The $ sign goes in the front
@thailee8768 ай бұрын
True i was stuck at a job with little raise, decieded to take this route and double my income
@brittanyv8 ай бұрын
This only works for people in managerial or corporate position. This does not work for your sales staff, cleaning staff, data clerks, receptionists, logistical team, etc…. Most of those jobs pay low across the market so mobilizing does not always give you an increase.
@IEdjumacate8 ай бұрын
This is good advice if you take it with a grain of salt. Is the company you are jumping to stable? Is the team you are joining established? How to other people in the company view it (Glassdoor reviews, etc)? It is a very real scenario that you switch jobs & get fired within months. It’s happening a lot. Only jump if you feel the opportunity is stable & if it’s too good of an offer to pass up, make sure you have an emergency fund built up just in case.
@savvgorr35787 ай бұрын
That’s so true and it’s an honest advice. 👏🏽 👏🏽
@Gn-dc5lb8 ай бұрын
Her advice has a point. I'm not looking for a career, I'm just tryng to pay bills right now, save a little, and enjoy my time outside of work. No career burn out. No putting up with shitty raises. Companies will lay you off and fire you for no reason. Many people lost their CAREERS during the pandemic with no recourse. I've job hopped for almost 15 years now and I never had a problem finding a job anywhere. Most employers do not check references or backgrounds outside of criminal. I have no record. Lie on your resume if you have to, who gives a damn. Get s burner phone and be your own professional reference. I've done this at least 3 times when a job I knew I could do (simple pencil pushing but paid well) had insane requirements. Get your money and move on.
@sassyone828 ай бұрын
Lie on your resume? Be your own reference via a burner phone? This is undignified advice and karma comes back around to people who do this.
@Bekind948 ай бұрын
I love my job. I work from home. I believe in the agency I work for. They treat me like an adult. No micromanaging. I will stay.
@PapioRed7 ай бұрын
True, been promoted annually at my current company and love it. Stagnation is seen as weakness unfortunately.
@carkarlaw8 ай бұрын
Great idea and only doable for younger age professionals. Once we get older and have family, it will be challenging to jump ship. Think about people at 50s or 60s, their only goal is not to get layoff at work.
@dianne16468 ай бұрын
They clearly needed a bigger sample size for that study.
@miriamhavard76218 ай бұрын
Agree. That study is most questionable.
@earthstar75348 ай бұрын
Obviously didn't realize that in the last 5 years we can now automatically filter out job hoppers and all sorts of other red flags without ever having to see the resumes. I'm a hiring manager and people call to check on their resume all the time, but it was automatically rejected if I can't find it. I say as much "it seems your resume was rejected upon submission. It had red flags on it. I'm sorry, I can't specifically say what it was. I can't know because the filters take them out for me." People get very angry they weren't immediately informed we automatically rejected their resume, but my job is to hire not tell people why we won't hire them.
@ronaldtipton60358 ай бұрын
This is great advice, for increasing your income, but not necessarily your happiness. With promotions comes added responsibility and stress. Often times added pressure and longer or more demanding work hours. Changing jobs that often can lead to a bigger circle of acquaintances, but fewer true workplace friends. There is nothing wrong with settling into a role for longer than a couple years. You should be analyzing your whole situation - income, work/life balance, personal goals and happiness, family demands and happiness, etc. Finding a new job (and possibly having to move you family) ever 2 years is costly and disruptive. It may conflict with your spouse's career. It may cause issues with your children due to changing schools. There are a TON of variables to consider, not just your salary increases. This video is short-sighted in that aspect.
@faithbasedliving93918 ай бұрын
I remember being ridiculed for doing this. I would be told why is it so hard for you to stay at one job? I started at $26 in 2020. I now make $40 an hour now but switched to part time for personal reasons. I’m a licensed vocational nurse.
@Miksit18188 ай бұрын
Awesome! Since 2020 I went from $15 to 42/ hour. But I now am staying at my job for a bit. Great company and bonuses will provide the 15-20% 🙏 raises.
@CookieCurls8 ай бұрын
Depends on your level. You can’t get to higher senior level roles without getting promoted first. No one will hire a director who hasn’t been a director before, you need to stay somewhere long enough to be promoted into that role first. This only really works early on in your career.
@kittymogulco8 ай бұрын
Love this! I'm obsessed with watching inspiring women who are completely unapologetic about being ambitious. Can anyone share her name please? ❤
@sue1capri6168 ай бұрын
As a recruiter, hiring managers don’t like to see this!
@earthstar75348 ай бұрын
No we don't. I work with 3 different recruiters for our high paid positions and they know not to even bother me if the candidate has less than 5 years per position. It costs a fortune to hire and train. Part of my pay is also based on retention. If there's no chance I can retain you I don't want to bother. Our online postings completely filter out those kinds of resumes I never even see them.
@annayang6928 ай бұрын
She's absolutely right!! I had my yearly evaluation at my previous job and got a 2.75 raise, which did not make sense to me because I was above "meets expectations" in all aspects of my role. I applied to a new role somewhere else and made 32% more at my new job. My old job wanted to keep me and talked to HR about a bonus retention, but even with that it was not up to par with my new job. The process of finding a new job is not easy, but staying at a job that is not paying you what you're worth is not easy too. At the end of the day, it's just business.
@osielramirez72748 ай бұрын
Yepp. I seen people get laid off this past year and it just reminds me to not stay comfy, keep improving my skills, connect with people, and keep my resume up to date.
@cajbaf6 ай бұрын
I stayed at my last job for 17 years. They could never understand why I didn't want to move up. I liked what I did and was living comfortably with what I had. Greed is mot a good virtue.
@puffy92578 ай бұрын
It’s not just about money. Some people value Happiness too.
@ntrg32487 ай бұрын
Why not both?
@TheIllustriouBlueJay7 ай бұрын
@@ntrg3248happiness often requires stability.
@vicfontaine51307 ай бұрын
@@ntrg3248If you work in a place with good people jumping ship might not always be ideal
@shayemoore7 ай бұрын
Exactly 💯
@KVG8228 ай бұрын
My work gives a raise to everyone every year.
@JB-pe2yn8 ай бұрын
Enjoy that 2-3% raise 😂
@tinaelert28656 ай бұрын
I quit a job in 2022, got a job for 2 dollars an hour more in 2023, quit that job after 5 months and made another 2 dollars an hour at the next job. Every time an employer was mean, standing up for myself and leaving got me more money. If they would have been nice i would have just stayed forever, so im glad they were mean. :) be brave!!
@anandabliss99978 ай бұрын
As a recruiter I tend to shy away from people who have worked 2 years or less at a job.
@James-xd1rf8 ай бұрын
I have trouble lasting just a year at most jobs 😢
@twinningtwins47218 ай бұрын
Thankfully, the business-smart recruiters don't 😊😊.
@TheSweetestCocoa8 ай бұрын
I think the point she's making is to not settle just because you're in a comfortable job. For me I always keep your resume up to date and always keep my eyes open for new opportunities. I am now 29 and on average stay at a job 1.5 years. I am currently a supervisor at my current company, hold 2 board seats on foundations and own my own company. Put yourself first, she's absolutely right !
@shavezequeenbellamy77088 ай бұрын
It sounds greedy. If you have all those things you named, why keep your eyes open for new opportunities? Are you unhappy with the 15 things you’re already apart of? If you OWN your own company, why are you working at someone else’s? Like this sounds like a competition of who can run themselves into the ground the fastest, chasing money.
@TheSweetestCocoa8 ай бұрын
@@shavezequeenbellamy7708 I'm ambitious that's why. I have big goals 😁 ps. My board seats are unpaid and for non profits that help underprivileged students in my country so it's definitely not about the money for me. It's about making a difference in my community and my country.
@superbob248 ай бұрын
@@shavezequeenbellamy7708 because 100k doesn't make it in this economy anymore. I make 110k and don't feel confident in my ability to support a family with the quality of life I want for my family.
@twinningtwins47218 ай бұрын
Well done 👏. Completely agree.
@TheSweetestCocoa8 ай бұрын
@@shavezequeenbellamy7708 I think it's quite strange you look at an ambitious black women and instead of feeling inspired to push yourself you call me greedy. There's nothing greedy about wanting better for yourself and your community. The board seats I hold are unpaid and are for non profits in my country, one supports underprivileged students, the other supports youth farmers that are trying to transition from farming as a hobby to investing in agriculture as a career. Uplifting myself and bringing my community with me is my main goal. (Dunno what happened to my first response.)
@Cogbyrn7 ай бұрын
I prefer loyalty, consistency, and mental health. My job affords me so much flexibility with helping take care of my family that it would be so stressful and awful to keep trying to find new jobs that give me the same treatment.
@jeanetteguerrero96538 ай бұрын
Lucky to those who made it, but it may not apply to all. I’ve been working in 1 company for 13 years. When tried looking for jobs, it does not pay well enough or worst, it pays low; plus, i am considering driving conditions, location, gas, toll, parking fees and food cost, so this adds up. Its not feasible to me at that time and until now. Don’t get me wrong, my job/work is fine, collegues and bosses are ok…i am satisfied.
@akassault75159 ай бұрын
This is the most i've heard someone talk without actually saying anything
@miriamhavard76218 ай бұрын
Have to agree.
@shawng48867 ай бұрын
I’ve never understood how anyone can stay somewhere they hate. Employment is voluntary. I’ve had numerous jobs over the years. It’s about finding the right fit and making a decent living. My hourly rate has quadrupled since 2010 because of opportunistic moves. Most employers don’t give a shit about you and will replace you in a minute. You need that same energy and mindset when it comes your livelihood. ALWAYS do what’s best for YOU!!
@aim-for-greatn3z9477 ай бұрын
Yup but it's impossible to find a job that pays. I'm lucky to be scrapping by but one thing isncertain all jobs I've had has been because I knew someone. I've never been hired traditionally as I believe it's impossible to find a living paying job. I'm trying to do everything to leave America for good and live overseas where it's ACTUALLY livable
@shawng48867 ай бұрын
@@aim-for-greatn3z947 depends on your skills. I started out in telecommunications and moved around in the sales industry for 8 years before I had enough and moved into transportation and I’ve been in transportation since. Got my CDL over a year ago and I very much enjoy what I do and I make a very decent living doing it. But it’s because I acquired skills and experience over the years…
@Greg-oi6vh7 ай бұрын
@@aim-for-greatn3z947Good luck but the whole world is going to shit, honestly. Sure there are other countries that have better quality of life than the US, USA can't even crack the top ten on that. To be fair though, the US is weighed down by some extreme, wretched poverty in a lot of the shittier states, though, and would look a lot better in metrics overall if we fixed up some of those places.
@vicfontaine51307 ай бұрын
@@Greg-oi6vhThe world is going to be fine, I don't know about the situation living in the U.S but I will definitely be dumping more money into their economy
@DSNCB9197 ай бұрын
Golden handcuffs sometimes they get a salary nobody will match
@megan8938 ай бұрын
I've changed employers every 2-3 years for the past 10 years and have been able to work at increasingly better companies, with more pay, and better benefits, every time. I definitely suggest this to people
@CV-nn7jj7 ай бұрын
Depends on the industry. Likely a Tech thing
@megan8937 ай бұрын
@@CV-nn7jj no, in my case, I've worked in accounting, mostly for retail companies