Anonymous wrote:I’m always curious. When I meet someone professionally or personally, one of the first things I do is check online to see how much their house is worth. (Also looking to see what neighborhood, whether it’s cute, but mainly price.)
For people in my professional space, I’m curious about salary as a means of benchmarking.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in HR for public traded multinational company. I know how much everyone makes, their salary their stock, their sign on bonus. and I know the market data for jobs for all other companies in our vertical as well as companies our size. So no I’m not curious. If you tell me your job title in my dice I know your total comp within a range of 10-15%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious about how everyone I know makes. My neighbors, friends, acquaintances, colleagues, bosses, family.
My husband thinks I’m super crass and nosy.
Stop embarrassing your husband with your sick curiosity. Shame on you.
Anonymous wrote:I am not curious because other people's income is none of my business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. For context, a friend just bought in a 1.5 mil house in a desirable zip code, got engaged with what looked like an expensive ring, got married earlier this year in a 70k-80k ceremony and is planning an international honeymoon all the while furnishing the house with expensive furniture. I’m just curious what 30 year old can afford back to back expenses like that. The spouse is not a high earner. And there doesn’t appear to be family money on either side. So I obviously wonder what income bracket he must be in to be living like that at only 30.
Well, what's his job? I was once in a friend group in my late 20s/early 30s that most of us had pretty good DC jobs, were living in apartments, some of us owned very stupid houses, etc. But one guy owned a 4-bedroom house in the better part of the city, drove a Land Rover, and had a wine cellar! And actually that was modest compared to what he could afford, as it turned out. That's when I realized that DC corporate lawyers can make $500K+ per year. I had no idea, not having had anyone like that in my family or circle before.
It's totally OK to be curious. But never pry. The guy I described above was very cool, the money disparity among friends was likely very uncomfortable for him, but he'd come from a very modest background which is why I think he was in our group. If the rich friend grew up rich, I think it's much less likely he ever meets the poors.
Op here. He’s in PE. His spouse is in a normal field and her parents are solidly MC. His parents are MC as well.
He probably makes millions.
Anonymous wrote:I am not curious because other people's income is none of my business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. For context, a friend just bought in a 1.5 mil house in a desirable zip code, got engaged with what looked like an expensive ring, got married earlier this year in a 70k-80k ceremony and is planning an international honeymoon all the while furnishing the house with expensive furniture. I’m just curious what 30 year old can afford back to back expenses like that. The spouse is not a high earner. And there doesn’t appear to be family money on either side. So I obviously wonder what income bracket he must be in to be living like that at only 30.
Well, what's his job? I was once in a friend group in my late 20s/early 30s that most of us had pretty good DC jobs, were living in apartments, some of us owned very stupid houses, etc. But one guy owned a 4-bedroom house in the better part of the city, drove a Land Rover, and had a wine cellar! And actually that was modest compared to what he could afford, as it turned out. That's when I realized that DC corporate lawyers can make $500K+ per year. I had no idea, not having had anyone like that in my family or circle before.
It's totally OK to be curious. But never pry. The guy I described above was very cool, the money disparity among friends was likely very uncomfortable for him, but he'd come from a very modest background which is why I think he was in our group. If the rich friend grew up rich, I think it's much less likely he ever meets the poors.
Op here. He’s in PE. His spouse is in a normal field and her parents are solidly MC. His parents are MC as well.
Anonymous wrote:I’m always curious. When I meet someone professionally or personally, one of the first things I do is check online to see how much their house is worth. (Also looking to see what neighborhood, whether it’s cute, but mainly price.)
For people in my professional space, I’m curious about salary as a means of benchmarking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. For context, a friend just bought in a 1.5 mil house in a desirable zip code, got engaged with what looked like an expensive ring, got married earlier this year in a 70k-80k ceremony and is planning an international honeymoon all the while furnishing the house with expensive furniture. I’m just curious what 30 year old can afford back to back expenses like that. The spouse is not a high earner. And there doesn’t appear to be family money on either side. So I obviously wonder what income bracket he must be in to be living like that at only 30.
Well, what's his job? I was once in a friend group in my late 20s/early 30s that most of us had pretty good DC jobs, were living in apartments, some of us owned very stupid houses, etc. But one guy owned a 4-bedroom house in the better part of the city, drove a Land Rover, and had a wine cellar! And actually that was modest compared to what he could afford, as it turned out. That's when I realized that DC corporate lawyers can make $500K+ per year. I had no idea, not having had anyone like that in my family or circle before.
It's totally OK to be curious. But never pry. The guy I described above was very cool, the money disparity among friends was likely very uncomfortable for him, but he'd come from a very modest background which is why I think he was in our group. If the rich friend grew up rich, I think it's much less likely he ever meets the poors.
Op here. He’s in PE. His spouse is in a normal field and her parents are solidly MC. His parents are MC as well.
DP. The spouse is not a high earner but is in PE? That’s a very, very well paid job.
How much do they make?
My sister is in PE. A couple of years ago she told me that entry for an analyst in DC (not NYC) was $300,000. It goes up from there.