Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here again,
Already have 1 interview scheduled, and working on the other for private.
I applied for an internal promotion before the two firms, and it hasn’t even gone to the referral process yet.
Out of curiosity, what kind of companies/positions are you looking at? Very nice getting to the interview stage already at one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Op here again,
Already have 1 interview scheduled, and working on the other for private.
I applied for an internal promotion before the two firms, and it hasn’t even gone to the referral process yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not knowing the specifics of your role your comp is competitive with the private sector for a CPA in a non-management role.
OP here,
Yes, I think it is as well from my research and confirmation with a college classmate who is in management at Big4.
I think the biggest question for you is if you want to be accountant or a people leader. My wife is a CPA and moved fairy quickly up the ladder to director of a Fortune 500 simply because there are huge swaths of accountants that would rather play with numbers than deal with people. If you want to make more money in the private sector your going to have to manage people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not knowing the specifics of your role your comp is competitive with the private sector for a CPA in a non-management role.
OP here,
Yes, I think it is as well from my research and confirmation with a college classmate who is in management at Big4.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I made more than that when I left private sector in 2004. You are severely underpaid unless you are just out of school.
32 in a few months. I had a low paying fed job for 2.5 years while I was finishing school. Was done by 25. I’m not in management, sometimes serve as Team Lead. Like someone mentioned before, my salary is on par with the private sector for similar work.
If you want kids, I would stick with government. Much more family friendly. The additional salary is not worth spending less time with your kids.
This is situational and generally a really bad take. I’m private sector, work from a home office and travel. We have accounting and financing people that 2-3 wfh 2-3 days in office. My wife is fed and has to go into the office into downtown dc everyday - put the door at 7, home around 6:15ish. I spend much more time with the kids, even though I travel.
Op - federal jobs may seem like a rational prudent decision, but as a cpa you can make more money (which impacts retirement savings) and have nore control over your life in the private sector. If you get a job at a cpa firm you could probably double your current salary in 5is years. And your 32 , life is an adventure and too short to slog away in the federal rat race.
The hours are just too long in public accounting and almost everyone burns out of it. Not a long-term employment option for 95%+ of people. Been there done that and frankly it is not worth the stress. Unless you become a partner or senior manager you are not likely to make more than 200k. Apply for new fed jobs at the GS-14 level instead.
I'm in the industry as well. The OP is not really a candidate for Big-4 audit. Those career paths start out of college, then get weeded down from there. However, the OP could be a great candidate as a federal contractor (working for a Big-4 or otherwise), reap the benefits of salary progression, draw upon their career expertise, work traditional hours, and not have to travel. That's what OP should be positioning for.
How much of a pay boost would he see with that kind of transition, and how much risk does he take on of being laid off?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I made more than that when I left private sector in 2004. You are severely underpaid unless you are just out of school.
32 in a few months. I had a low paying fed job for 2.5 years while I was finishing school. Was done by 25. I’m not in management, sometimes serve as Team Lead. Like someone mentioned before, my salary is on par with the private sector for similar work.
If you want kids, I would stick with government. Much more family friendly. The additional salary is not worth spending less time with your kids.
This is situational and generally a really bad take. I’m private sector, work from a home office and travel. We have accounting and financing people that 2-3 wfh 2-3 days in office. My wife is fed and has to go into the office into downtown dc everyday - put the door at 7, home around 6:15ish. I spend much more time with the kids, even though I travel.
Op - federal jobs may seem like a rational prudent decision, but as a cpa you can make more money (which impacts retirement savings) and have nore control over your life in the private sector. If you get a job at a cpa firm you could probably double your current salary in 5is years. And your 32 , life is an adventure and too short to slog away in the federal rat race.
The hours are just too long in public accounting and almost everyone burns out of it. Not a long-term employment option for 95%+ of people. Been there done that and frankly it is not worth the stress. Unless you become a partner or senior manager you are not likely to make more than 200k. Apply for new fed jobs at the GS-14 level instead.
I'm in the industry as well. The OP is not really a candidate for Big-4 audit. Those career paths start out of college, then get weeded down from there. However, the OP could be a great candidate as a federal contractor (working for a Big-4 or otherwise), reap the benefits of salary progression, draw upon their career expertise, work traditional hours, and not have to travel. That's what OP should be positioning for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I made more than that when I left private sector in 2004. You are severely underpaid unless you are just out of school.
32 in a few months. I had a low paying fed job for 2.5 years while I was finishing school. Was done by 25. I’m not in management, sometimes serve as Team Lead. Like someone mentioned before, my salary is on par with the private sector for similar work.
If you want kids, I would stick with government. Much more family friendly. The additional salary is not worth spending less time with your kids.
This is situational and generally a really bad take. I’m private sector, work from a home office and travel. We have accounting and financing people that 2-3 wfh 2-3 days in office. My wife is fed and has to go into the office into downtown dc everyday - put the door at 7, home around 6:15ish. I spend much more time with the kids, even though I travel.
Op - federal jobs may seem like a rational prudent decision, but as a cpa you can make more money (which impacts retirement savings) and have nore control over your life in the private sector. If you get a job at a cpa firm you could probably double your current salary in 5is years. And your 32 , life is an adventure and too short to slog away in the federal rat race.
The hours are just too long in public accounting and almost everyone burns out of it. Not a long-term employment option for 95%+ of people. Been there done that and frankly it is not worth the stress. Unless you become a partner or senior manager you are not likely to make more than 200k. Apply for new fed jobs at the GS-14 level instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I made more than that when I left private sector in 2004. You are severely underpaid unless you are just out of school.
32 in a few months. I had a low paying fed job for 2.5 years while I was finishing school. Was done by 25. I’m not in management, sometimes serve as Team Lead. Like someone mentioned before, my salary is on par with the private sector for similar work.
If you want kids, I would stick with government. Much more family friendly. The additional salary is not worth spending less time with your kids.
This is situational and generally a really bad take. I’m private sector, work from a home office and travel. We have accounting and financing people that 2-3 wfh 2-3 days in office. My wife is fed and has to go into the office into downtown dc everyday - put the door at 7, home around 6:15ish. I spend much more time with the kids, even though I travel.
Op - federal jobs may seem like a rational prudent decision, but as a cpa you can make more money (which impacts retirement savings) and have nore control over your life in the private sector. If you get a job at a cpa firm you could probably double your current salary in 5is years. And your 32 , life is an adventure and too short to slog away in the federal rat race.
The hours are just too long in public accounting and almost everyone burns out of it. Not a long-term employment option for 95%+ of people. Been there done that and frankly it is not worth the stress. Unless you become a partner or senior manager you are not likely to make more than 200k. Apply for new fed jobs at the GS-14 level instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I made more than that when I left private sector in 2004. You are severely underpaid unless you are just out of school.
32 in a few months. I had a low paying fed job for 2.5 years while I was finishing school. Was done by 25. I’m not in management, sometimes serve as Team Lead. Like someone mentioned before, my salary is on par with the private sector for similar work.
If you want kids, I would stick with government. Much more family friendly. The additional salary is not worth spending less time with your kids.
This is situational and generally a really bad take. I’m private sector, work from a home office and travel. We have accounting and financing people that 2-3 wfh 2-3 days in office. My wife is fed and has to go into the office into downtown dc everyday - put the door at 7, home around 6:15ish. I spend much more time with the kids, even though I travel.
Op - federal jobs may seem like a rational prudent decision, but as a cpa you can make more money (which impacts retirement savings) and have nore control over your life in the private sector. If you get a job at a cpa firm you could probably double your current salary in 5is years. And your 32 , life is an adventure and too short to slog away in the federal rat race.
Anonymous wrote:how challenging would it be to potentially rejoin your current gov agency in the future? in my experience, big-4 jobs (and especially mid-tier firm jobs) for qualified candidates are a dime a dozen due due to turnover. so be careful leaving a gov job if it’s difficult to obtain, but it sounds like you have the itch to go private (and nothing wrong with that)!