Anonymous wrote:I have a $500K+ total comp attorney job in big pharma and it is a walk in the park… I am not in management and there are many other roles like me in the org, most with great work life balance and wonderful colleagues.
We did all put in our big law years but now it seems almost too easy. I guess if we stayed in big law we could be making multiples of $500K but I’d rather have my current situation any day.
Anonymous wrote:I have a $500K+ total comp attorney job in big pharma and it is a walk in the park… I am not in management and there are many other roles like me in the org, most with great work life balance and wonderful colleagues.
We did all put in our big law years but now it seems almost too easy. I guess if we stayed in big law we could be making multiples of $500K but I’d rather have my current situation any day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:sure, if you look at a $500k income nationwide, it is impressive and rare. In DC/NY/SF it's not terrible uncommon in certain zip codes.
Here are some avg incomes for zip codes in Bethesda/CC:
"The average household income ($321,268) for 20816 is less than the average household income for 20817 ($325,502), 22101 ($360,494), Brookmont CDP ($434,332), and Somerset town ($419,599)"
In Somerset or Brookmont, you are just above avg at 500k.
The fact that rich people all live in close proximity doesn’t make being rich any more common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have also become aware that there are lots of jobs that sound really impressive but actually don’t pay that well at all. Directors of museums, historic homes, university librarians, heads of art galleries, curators, head of fundraising for a symphony. Director of a prestigious private school, head of a think tank, or a prestigious center at a university.
I remember initially meeting a lot of people in DC who had what I considered high powered jobs and in some cases looking them up to find that they pay peanuts.
Because they have very different values than you.
Not everyone is primarily motivated by money (and many of us have minimal respect for those who are…)
Many of us have minimal respect for people who don’t realize that most people need their salaries to pay their bills.
Anonymous wrote:sure, if you look at a $500k income nationwide, it is impressive and rare. In DC/NY/SF it's not terrible uncommon in certain zip codes.
Here are some avg incomes for zip codes in Bethesda/CC:
"The average household income ($321,268) for 20816 is less than the average household income for 20817 ($325,502), 22101 ($360,494), Brookmont CDP ($434,332), and Somerset town ($419,599)"
In Somerset or Brookmont, you are just above avg at 500k.
Anonymous wrote:sure, if you look at a $500k income nationwide, it is impressive and rare. In DC/NY/SF it's not terrible uncommon in certain zip codes.
Here are some avg incomes for zip codes in Bethesda/CC:
"The average household income ($321,268) for 20816 is less than the average household income for 20817 ($325,502), 22101 ($360,494), Brookmont CDP ($434,332), and Somerset town ($419,599)"
In Somerset or Brookmont, you are just above avg at 500k.
Anonymous wrote:500k base is very rare, even in DC. This would be big law attorneys at the higher levels (like 8th-year associate, partners etc), doctors in higher-paying specialties (basically surgeons, or surgeon adjacent like derms who do lots of Mohs), and the VPs at the big companies like Capital One, the pharma companies, etc. Even people who are senior directors at these places aren't getting a 500k base but probably get over that amount with their bonus and stock. My husband is a function leader assistant GC at a big pharma company and his base is low 300s, but gets like 150k in restricted stock that vests after xx years and we cannot really touch. The DMV has lots of families making 300k each for the base, which is a high HHI obviously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have also become aware that there are lots of jobs that sound really impressive but actually don’t pay that well at all. Directors of museums, historic homes, university librarians, heads of art galleries, curators, head of fundraising for a symphony. Director of a prestigious private school, head of a think tank, or a prestigious center at a university.
I remember initially meeting a lot of people in DC who had what I considered high powered jobs and in some cases looking them up to find that they pay peanuts.
Because they have very different values than you.
Not everyone is primarily motivated by money (and many of us have minimal respect for those who are…)
Many of us have minimal respect for people who don’t realize that most people need their salaries to pay their bills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have also become aware that there are lots of jobs that sound really impressive but actually don’t pay that well at all. Directors of museums, historic homes, university librarians, heads of art galleries, curators, head of fundraising for a symphony. Director of a prestigious private school, head of a think tank, or a prestigious center at a university.
I remember initially meeting a lot of people in DC who had what I considered high powered jobs and in some cases looking them up to find that they pay peanuts.
Because they have very different values than you.
Not everyone is primarily motivated by money (and many of us have minimal respect for those who are…)