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Poll: How comfortable would you be taking a major paycut if it meant a better work/life balance?

danielsj2's picture

Hi fellow Step Monsters! An opportunity came across my email today for a different job. Only 40 hour work weeks with ability to work from home sometimes, zero traveling (I am traveling to around 3-4 different states each week now)and way more of a work/life balance.

The only caveat: 15,000 pay cut. Ouch. They did say that obviously as the company revenue increases as they plan in 2018 they can afford to offer me a raise.

I hate my job and I am always sick from the amount I work and travel an i know I would probably never be able to have a baby at this position due to the stress and lack of flexibility of my company towards that kind of thing.. DH says he just wants me to come home happy. But I am worried about not being as financially comfortable. Now, I obviously wont be flat out broke if I take it.. just not tons of money left over after bills.

What are your thoughts? How many of you would take a drastic pay cut for less stress and anxiety?

Comments

ESMOD's picture

I guess the money would be a relative thing. If you made 100K and the new job is 85K.. well, that's still a decent amount of salary. If you make 40K currently then going to 25K would be a bigger hardship since you probably need your salary for your living expense requirements.

In theory, it sounds like a cut in pay would be worth it to have a MUCH better quality of life. I imagine that maybe you could find some savings in your current budget like maybe not having to spend as much on a work wardrobe since working from home some is an option? The new company also is saying there could be some raise coming too.

I would do it in your shoes because TBH.. the after tax value of 15K probably isn't "as worth it" as you think. (also look at other benefits like health care... that could be more valuable at the new job).

mommadukes2015's picture

It's really funny, I'm grappling with this right now because my job is restructuring.

At this point, I'm not willing to take a pay cut in any amount. I work from home and make a decent living so unless something comes up that is easier, has comparable pay with benefits (if there are benefits, then I would let a little $ go) then I'm not interested.

danielsj2's picture

Well I have healthcare though DH so that isn't an issue. I would be going from 65k a year to 50K. But obviously as the revenue increases so would my pay. Its more of a 'out of comfort zone" not seeing a large amount in the checking account after bills are paid. But my boss said to me last week that it wouldn't be wise for me to have a baby with my current job demand and needs. Like who tells an employee they aren't allowed to get pregnant because of what the company expects of me??

ESMOD's picture

Wow.. that is bordering on a violation of your rights as an employee. Would he have ever told a MAN that he shouldn't have a kid?

I think I would definitely explore the new job.

danielsj2's picture

Yes that is what I was thinking. A man wouldn't have to take maternity leave so i feel he said that because I am a woman. DH and I were talking about trying next year.. but that totally left me deflated. Like I would be scared to tell him I was pregnant. But the whole environmnet here is toxic and hostile anyway so I can't say as though I am surprised.

ESMOD's picture

If you can afford to live on a smaller salary and your DH is pushing for this as well, I would absolutely leave a toxic and hostile work environment. Think about it this way, where you are now is going to shorten your life span. The negative fallout on your body to working there is not worth the extra money. Sure, you may need to adjust your spending. Maybe meals out will be more treat than common place. Maybe vacations will be dialed back. But, it's not like you are leaving a great work environment with more money. In your case, it would be worth it.

ksmom14's picture

Just something to keep in mind, some companies have policies about how long you have to have been at the company before you're entitled to the maternity leave benefits.

For my company, you have to have been here a year before you're entitled to any maternity leave benefits.

Just be sure you know the policies before you get pregnant and are SOL!

ksmom14's picture

I think if you can afford it, you should take it.

I don't love my job, honestly don't even like it much, but the benefits FAR outweigh me liking/not liking it.

The pay is decent, the benefits are sub-par/decent, but the flexibility with work/life balance is outstanding.

I work just 15 minutes from home, I can work from home if I need to if a kid is sick or someone is coming to the house to do work. I can take an extra long lunch to go to a dental appointment, or get my drivers license renewed, no problem. I can last minute tell my boss that one of the skids has awards at school at 2pm and I'd like to leave for an hour to be present, and will be back, again no problem. With my DD2 when I was pumping, I pumped FIVE times a day while at work, again no issues from anyone.

The ability to focus on my family and life is the reason I'm still at this job...well that and DH works here too so we get to have lunch together every day Blum 3

BethAnne's picture

If you do decide to go for the lower paying job make sure you get promised pay increases in writing with a time-line and targets in place. Otherwise the promises are not worth anything and they can and will ignore them.

Is there a sideways move at your current company that would allow you similar flexibility for a role without a pay cut? Or if they knew you were thinking of leaving might they offer to ease your travel schedule to retain you?

I love numbers so if i were you I would be running through the potential new budget and seeing precisely where I would be having to cut back and then decide on the basis of that if it is worth it to me.

Personally I think that sanity is preferable to more money, but that doesn't mean that it will be affordable in your situation or that this job will be the only opportunity you get to ease your workload. Perhaps there will be something else similar for a better salary.

danielsj2's picture

unfortunately no. I am a one woman dept here and have been denied the help I have asked for 4 times. I am getting sick constantly trying to keep up with 70 hour work weeks and constant traveling.

secondplace's picture

Sounds like you're actually making less per hour at the current job than you would at the new job.

moving_on_again's picture

SO has changed positions/jobs twice with pay cuts to have more time for family. Weirdly, it feels like we have more money than we used to. Maybe because we actually have time to make home cooked meals more often? Not sure why.

I personally would do it.

queensway's picture

If you truly hate your job you should move on to a new one. You can't put a price on happiness. From reading what you wrote you sound like moving on to less stressful job is really what you want. Good luck.

justkeepstepping's picture

I would do it in a heartbeat as long as we could still survive off of the amount I was being paid.

Just J's picture

Nine years ago I got laid off from the mortgage industry while pregnant with my son. I probably could have gotten hired somewhere else right away, but it was so stressful and I was looking for a way to get out of it even though the money was great. I was working 11-12 hour days and my daughter was in daycare, and with a baby on the way it just wasn't going to work out. I wanted to be home with my kids so I got into the restaurant industry and started working opposite shifts as DH so one of us was always home with the kids, and took a massive pay cut. Luckily my DH's business started to grow and we cut a lot of costs. We moved to a town where the rents were lower, I bought an older model car for cash so we only had one car payment, we traded in DH's truck for a smaller one to save on gas, we downgraded phones to basic texting phones, stopped eating out as much. There are lots of ways we all spend money we don't need to without realizing it, I'm sure there are lots of ways you can cut spending and not really notice.

The bottom line is that life is too short to have a job you hate. You can't dread going somewhere that you spend most of your time. And no job is worth a 70 hour work week unless it pays millions. My family comes first, and I work to live, not live to work.

strugglingSM's picture

15000 may seem like a big cut, but in return for the extra time that will not be eaten up by traveling may be worth it. I used to work at a job with weekly travel and it was exhausting. I may have had extra money, but I could barely get anything done because I wasn't around during the week. I had to send my mom off to get me a parking pass, because the office was only open during the week and even things like seeing a doctor were next to impossible because I was rarely around to go to any appointments.

danielsj2's picture

This is true. I didn't think to look at i that way. I have to pay all my onsite travel expenses upfront and wait to get reimbursed. Sometimes I am broke because the hotels and car rentals ate up my paycheck and I don't get reimbursed for a month.

DaizyDuke's picture

I would do it. I would much rather make less and be happy than make more and be miserable. When my Supervisor retired a few years ago, DH was like why don't you apply for her job? I said HELL NO! Sure she made about $20,000 more than I do, but she also worked until 11 pm some nights, came in on weekends, had to deal with nasty people pretty much 24/7 and because of all this she was a miserable beeotch. Nope, I'm good with working 35 hours a week, passing off crazies and nasties to my supervisor and never working a weekend, holiday, snow day, etc.

Hell, if you find it a struggle you could even just pick up a part time job doing something fun? That's what I do, I judge horse shows for side money. It pays really well, and it's not even really "work" they are just paying me for my opinion and knowledge of the rule book basically Wink

danielsj2's picture

This is true! I have accomplished a lot by age 31 so it's not like I have regrets in stepping down in role responsibility. My doctor said just last month that i am constantly having to come in because I am sick and my body is trying to tell me to slow down but I am not listening. He said 'I have seen more of you in one year than when I started seeing you when you were 17.. think about that"

Well I visit this new job to check out the office and see how I vibe with the others so it it's a good place and they answer my questions like I hope then I will most likely be making the change. Thanks everyone for your advice--you guys are the best!

Aniki-Moderator's picture

Your health is everything and stress does HORRIBLE things to your body.

A former coworker's hair was falling out while she went through a nasty divorce.
A friend had debilitating migraines. She found a new job and they went away.
I had "emotional diarrhea" for 6+ months after my pyscho exH beat the stuffing out of me.
I had out of control blood pressure so bad that my doctor was about to hospitalize me. And then I found a new job.

There is no price you can put on your health. I hope everything works out for you.

Acratopotes's picture

Money can't buy you happiness or good health....

Do what you think is right for you - no one else,