Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes! (I'm a second career RN and I love it).
What was your first career? Did you go into floor nursing immediately?
Anonymous wrote:Encourage her to become a NP. Pay and hours are better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nursing has been very good to me. After about 7-8 years at the bedside I moved into a leadership track. I’ve been in leadership for 15 years. I’ve had to relocate a few times but I’m the chief nurse executive for a large health system. I have huge responsibilities but still good work/life balance. A shortage of PhD prepared nurses with strong operational experience in hospitals mean we command a decent wage. I make over 600K. Im negotiating my next move to a huge system where my comp will total about 850k and all in may be close to 1M. I work hard, know my stuff and demand pay parity with the other. C-suite execs.
Tell your DC there’s a shortage of nurses who want leadership roles. Get experience, go for a MSN and beyond, climb the ladder, work hard, create good outcomes, be a leader, and show that you’re just as valuable as the CFO - then demand to be paid your worth. Being a nurse manager is a hard and thankless job but if you can do it for 3 years you can move up and it gets a lot better.
Thanks PP - this is a really interesting perspective and great advice. So to be clear, you have a BSN as well as a phD?
Anonymous wrote:Yes! (I'm a second career RN and I love it).
Anonymous wrote:Nursing has been very good to me. After about 7-8 years at the bedside I moved into a leadership track. I’ve been in leadership for 15 years. I’ve had to relocate a few times but I’m the chief nurse executive for a large health system. I have huge responsibilities but still good work/life balance. A shortage of PhD prepared nurses with strong operational experience in hospitals mean we command a decent wage. I make over 600K. Im negotiating my next move to a huge system where my comp will total about 850k and all in may be close to 1M. I work hard, know my stuff and demand pay parity with the other. C-suite execs.
Tell your DC there’s a shortage of nurses who want leadership roles. Get experience, go for a MSN and beyond, climb the ladder, work hard, create good outcomes, be a leader, and show that you’re just as valuable as the CFO - then demand to be paid your worth. Being a nurse manager is a hard and thankless job but if you can do it for 3 years you can move up and it gets a lot better.
Anonymous wrote:Abosolute!
Nurses are smart, intuitive, kind, compassionate, cheerful, self-sacrificing, engaged, hard working and horny as hell. Okay ... TMI - but thats my personal experience with a nurse
Anonymous wrote:What is wrong with you people?
Anonymous wrote:Encourage her to become a NP. Pay and hours are better.
Anonymous wrote:Nursing has been very good to me. After about 7-8 years at the bedside I moved into a leadership track. I’ve been in leadership for 15 years. I’ve had to relocate a few times but I’m the chief nurse executive for a large health system. I have huge responsibilities but still good work/life balance. A shortage of PhD prepared nurses with strong operational experience in hospitals mean we command a decent wage. I make over 600K. Im negotiating my next move to a huge system where my comp will total about 850k and all in may be close to 1M. I work hard, know my stuff and demand pay parity with the other. C-suite execs.
Tell your DC there’s a shortage of nurses who want leadership roles. Get experience, go for a MSN and beyond, climb the ladder, work hard, create good outcomes, be a leader, and show that you’re just as valuable as the CFO - then demand to be paid your worth. Being a nurse manager is a hard and thankless job but if you can do it for 3 years you can move up and it gets a lot better.