OP. I appreciate the genuine responses. I’ll take a look at higher ed as well. I think the question of why Big Job to something slower pace is easily explained with having a young family. Kids are ES. IME no one thinks it’s strange for working moms to say “I need better work life balance in a stable field”.
Professional skill sets are concentrated in economic development. Think project design, implementation, evaluation and management of $500M+ portfolio. I genuinely like completing complex analysis and research, it sounds like an analyst or IC role could be a fit.
I was really good at what I was doing, so I kept getting promoted, kept getting new projects, and ended up C-Suite accidentally. i had a reputation for being able to mentor and develop staff, people who worked for me ended up leapfrogging into leadership roles and performing exceptionally well. I’m not some magical manager, I just hired well and invested a lot into staff PD.
Knowing what I know now, there are ways to work well without ending up in charge of everything. That doesn’t mean being lazy.
What employers provide "retirement healthcare" except federal government? Do state and local governments and universities provde that?
Can you get federal insurance if you retire at 55?
Also, OP is 43 and would need to work for 12 years to get to 55.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 45 and largely have this kind of job…I make twice that. If you have a college degree you can too.
Perfect. I have a BA & BS and a grad degree.
The big thing for me not being in charge of anything. I need to move a piece of paper across a desk twice a week? 10 pieces of paper? I can listen to a podcast while I do it? Great.
I was pretty sympathetic to your post— we have IC jobs and hire 40 yos for them but what kind of job do you think you can do while listening to a podcast? You think we’re all a bunch of idiots processing TPS reports? Gfy
There are absolutely GS-7 jobs that are not intellectually taxing. And that's almost 60k.
You are not getting those if you are not a veteran.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the fed but also higher ed. Some universities after a # of years will cover a % of tuition for undergrad for your kids. Some will cover the entire cost if you child attends their institution. Doesn’t pay same as Big Job but might be a good idea if your kids have a minimum 4-5 years until college.
or even city/state/county government too.
OPs goal here is to phone in a job for 7 years, then quit and benefit from Federal health insurance at 55. She has plenty of money from BigJobs, she wants subsidized insurance for minimal effort.
Anonymous wrote:Until recently a dual income household, both with Big Jobs. It was terrible for whole family, gave me significant- hopefully temporary- health issues. DH now has the Big Job and I am figuring out what’s next. I’m considering federal jobs. I’d want something where I could be a worker bee and not be responsible for leading a team or supervising anyone. Work life balance, pension, and retirement healthcare. I’d be plenty happy with a job that I never though about outside of the office getting paid $60k with regular increases, all of my salary would go to retirement and 529 anyway. Does this seem reasonable for a fed role?
Anonymous wrote:OP. I appreciate the genuine responses. I’ll take a look at higher ed as well. I think the question of why Big Job to something slower pace is easily explained with having a young family. Kids are ES. IME no one thinks it’s strange for working moms to say “I need better work life balance in a stable field”.
Professional skill sets are concentrated in economic development. Think project design, implementation, evaluation and management of $500M+ portfolio. I genuinely like completing complex analysis and research, it sounds like an analyst or IC role could be a fit.
I was really good at what I was doing, so I kept getting promoted, kept getting new projects, and ended up C-Suite accidentally. i had a reputation for being able to mentor and develop staff, people who worked for me ended up leapfrogging into leadership roles and performing exceptionally well. I’m not some magical manager, I just hired well and invested a lot into staff PD.
Knowing what I know now, there are ways to work well without ending up in charge of everything. That doesn’t mean being lazy.
Trader Joe’s wouldn’t work because working with the public directly is one of the most stressful things you can do. Consultant is a similar no, I’m not interested in client management, it’s one of the big things I’m trying to get away from.
To the poster who said I’m at least 45 which means 50….my age is literally in the title of the post. Bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the fed but also higher ed. Some universities after a # of years will cover a % of tuition for undergrad for your kids. Some will cover the entire cost if you child attends their institution. Doesn’t pay same as Big Job but might be a good idea if your kids have a minimum 4-5 years until college.
or even city/state/county government too.
Anonymous wrote:In my agency the sweet spot for this is a GS-9 to 12 individual contributor role (so you'd make in the 65-85k range). It's not mindless and you'd need domain expertise and still have meetings and deadlines. But you would be done at 40 hours, do a lot of admin stuff (because we don't have admission anymore), and only be responsible for yourself.
If you want to make 120k or more you'd be supervising a team, managing a budget, and have higher stress. I hear other agencies handout GS 13-15 nonsupervisory roles like candy, though.
Anonymous wrote:Look at the fed but also higher ed. Some universities after a # of years will cover a % of tuition for undergrad for your kids. Some will cover the entire cost if you child attends their institution. Doesn’t pay same as Big Job but might be a good idea if your kids have a minimum 4-5 years until college.