Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$65k, 36, “successful” and award-winning journalist.
former journalist - and yep. luckily it's a very stable field with super normal working hours.
(thanks for sticking with it.)
Ha yes exactly — bad pay, bad hours, constant cuts/layoffs. I’m definitely leaving for a well-paying corporate job by 40. I want to afford dumb middle class things like braces for my kids. It’s no surprise that people who stay in journalism longterm are either from money or married into money. An extra $30-40k in salary is nothing to them, but it will be a lifestyle change for us.
come to the dark side. i switched to pr after a year of being a journalist. don't regret it at all. and lots of folks like me prefer to hire from the journalism world.
Anonymous wrote:Op I’m a project manager with a PMP in a non technical role and make $90k. You should get certified if you have the experience required. I’m currently interviewing for a new job and asking $110k, no one has said that’s unrealistic. I’m 33
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$65k, 36, “successful” and award-winning journalist.
former journalist - and yep. luckily it's a very stable field with super normal working hours.
(thanks for sticking with it.)
Ha yes exactly — bad pay, bad hours, constant cuts/layoffs. I’m definitely leaving for a well-paying corporate job by 40. I want to afford dumb middle class things like braces for my kids. It’s no surprise that people who stay in journalism longterm are either from money or married into money. An extra $30-40k in salary is nothing to them, but it will be a lifestyle change for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$65k, 36, “successful” and award-winning journalist.
former journalist - and yep. luckily it's a very stable field with super normal working hours.
(thanks for sticking with it.)
Anonymous wrote:$65k, 36, “successful” and award-winning journalist.