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More Tech, STEM Workers Voluntarily Quitting Their Jobs (dice.com)

Nerval's Lobster writes: New data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) suggests that more tech professionals are voluntarily quitting their jobs. In August, some 507,000 people in Professional and Business Services (which encompasses tech and STEM positions) quit their positions, up from 493,000 in July. It's also a significant increase over August 2014, when 456,000 professionals quit. Voluntary quits could be taken as a sign of a good economy (Dice link), hinting that people feel confident enough about the market to jump to a new position (likely with better pay and benefits), if not strike out on their own as an independent. For tech pros, things are particularly rosy at the moment; according to the BLS, the national unemployment rate among tech pros has hovered at under 3 percent for the past year, although not all segments have equally benefitted from that trend: Programmers, for example, saw their unemployment rate dip precipitously between the first and second quarters of this year, even as joblessness among Web developers, computer support specialists, and network and systems engineers ticked upwards during the same period. If there's one tech segment that hasn't enjoyed economic buoyancy, it's manufacturing, which has suffered from layoffs and steady declines in open positions over the past several quarters.

167 comments

  1. retirement? by turkeydance · · Score: 3, Interesting

    disability? there's lots from which to choose.

  2. You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Pay us well and treat us well, and we won't keep job-hopping.

    1. Re:You like our work? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pay us well and treat us well, and we won't keep job-hopping.

      People tend to job-hop when pay is rising the fastest. It is during recessions that they hunker down and stay loyal.

    2. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Pretty much this.

      Management and other small-minded folks like to blame employee dissatisfaction on anything but the real causes: mistreatment by management, mandatory unpaid OT, expectation of being on-call 24/7 and very few opportunities for promotion and advancement for tech workers who choose to stay at one company.

    3. Re: You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. You just explained it perfectly.

    4. Re:You like our work? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 3

      I recently ran into a former coworker who is still working the same job and making the same money I did when we worked together ten years ago. I didn't have the heart to tell him that the contract work I did since then paid 80% more money. Those yearly 2% raises don't add up.

    5. Re:You like our work? by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 4, Informative

      Pay us well and treat us well, and we won't keep job-hopping.

      People tend to job-hop when pay is rising the fastest. It is during recessions that they hunker down and stay loyal.

      To be fair, it's when pay is rising fastest *in other companies* that that people tend to job-hop, yes?

    6. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, and it's during the boom times companies whine about "employee loyalty" and all that shit they destroyed. Yet during recessions, they can't do the layoffs fast enough.

      Boo fucking hoo.

    7. Re:You like our work? by plopez · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why not share you numbers? An efficient labor market cant operate without a good flow of information.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    8. Re:You like our work? by Narcocide · · Score: 1

      Seconded.

    9. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Numbers are meaningless without location.

      Junior level candidates in Silicone Valley can start at what senior level candidates make in, say Colorado. But the crazy cost of living offsets that completely.

    10. Re:You like our work? by Narcocide · · Score: 2

      The second part of the statement, I agree with. But in this case numbers aren't worth as much as names. We need to start naming and shaming the companies that are abusing basic labor laws first. We know there are vast discrepancies in salaries already, but salary discrepancies aren't inherently illegal.

      (Don't worry, I know you didn't think it out further than trying to call what you probably erroneously assumed was a bluff, I was just trying to help the discussion as a whole by salvaging the important part of your argument.)

    11. Re:You like our work? by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      Naming and shaming - that is what glassdoor.com is for. Everybody needs to sign up, share their salary info, and comment on the quality of their employers.

    12. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You got it!

      Company offers a 2% raise, competitor offers 30% more pay and better benefits. No contest.

      Actually, I went to my boss and explained that I could get 30% more by getting another job. His response was "I don't believe you, times are tough and you should be thankful you have a job." He was surprised when I turned in my resignation 48 hours later. Seems the listing company jumped when I sent in my resume, interviewed me same day and offered the next morning.

      i've been at the new job a year and love it!

    13. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2% "raise"? Around here, you get 2% just for showing up on time. Inflationary corrections. I've been working at the same company ever since I graduated 7 years ago, and I've gotten over 80% in raises.

    14. Re:You like our work? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 2

      I worked at one company for six years that gave me a 50% raise after my first year, as I was doing all the odd jobs that no one else wanted to do. During my last year there my new supervisor, who started work at the same time I did, made a big deal that he was giving me a 2% raise. I laughed, told him about the 50% raise, and explained to him that I automatically got a 2% raise for being above the salary cap. He got mad because I made more money than him for five years, as he thought he was a better worker than me.

    15. Re:You like our work? by Bengie · · Score: 1

      I wonder why he'd try to make a big deal about 2% when obviously it's not that much. Just enough to about cover inflation. Did it come off as if he was lauding his position to be giving you a raise?

    16. Re:You like our work? by gweihir · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Loyalty is priceless. Unfortunately, the MBA scum that swims to the top these days does not understand that.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    17. Re:You like our work? by gweihir · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Good STEM workers are not primarily interested in money, or they would have chosen a different field. Of course, it has to be still enough to make a decent living, but otherwise other things are more important. Not all people are like the modern "manager" species that does not understand anything except money, and that only with a short-term view.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    18. Re:You like our work? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. One condition of getting me to work for you is that every minute I work is on the clock and gets paid for. Otherwise, overtime (which in a sane environment is reserved for emergencies only) becomes a tool management uses to compensate for their mistakes.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    19. Re:You like our work? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes. Supervisors that think _they_ are doing the important work....

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    20. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that companies will actively manipulate their profiles. Pegasystems is really big on this. Great ratings, but I can tell you morale is shit, and pay is worse.

    21. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely agree. One condition of getting me to work for you is that every minute I work is on the clock and gets paid for. Otherwise, overtime (which in a sane environment is reserved for emergencies only) becomes a tool management uses to compensate for their mistakes.

      Well said.

      Been involved in STEM in one form or another since leaving school.

      My last full time IT job had a clause to the effect 'if it fucks up, you work solid until its fixed..'
      I bailed from IT as It was becoming increasingly 'unenjoyable' and I was getting royally sick of firefighting other peoples fuckups for no extra cash, but lots of grief..

      So I voluntarily jumped from STEM after 20+ years (Good salary, well on my way up the greasy pole, my bosses thought I was crazy for quitting and couldn't believe that I hadn't another job lined up).

      Fast forward to my current employ, not STEM (has elements, but nothing major), and I'm a lot happier (on the whole happier, alas, guess what? still fucking firefighting - did a 38 hours solid stint a couple of months back just to get one order out the door on time..thanks to one of the suits giving the customer a totally unrealistic and unalterable delivery date)

      I wonder how many of the others have done the same, and just gotten the hell out of Dodge to escape from STEM totally..

    22. Re:You like our work? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      You must have picked your secondary education quite a bit after me. When I went into Computer Science, it was being sold as endless fields of opportunity. That everyone would be so crucial to the economy that companies would beg to have you come work for you. It didn't quite pan out that way.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    23. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to call BS on you. Been working at this 27 years (doing STEM considerably longer, though), and the only idiots that have ever say that are management when they are trying to sell us on the 0% raise they are giving us for the year. Sorry, I love engineering and CS, but even a child can ask the question "what's in it for me?", much less make the comparison of N N+30%.

    24. Re:You like our work? by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Many companies fail to understand the cost of turnover. Normally when turnover happens it will cost 150% to replace an employee. Because of the time it will take them to settle in and get use to the process (The informal one, that isn't written down, such as avoid these departments, as their manager is a jerk, work around this director because he is useless). After about a full year of learning then someone usually comes truly productive in the institution. So that is a big cost to the organization to have people leave.

      While employee salary is the biggest expense for an organization, it is also a vital key to its infrastructure, and it shouldn't be skimmed. Studies show if someone is getting paid more than they feel it is worth, they will work harder, if they feel they are getting paid less than they feel they are worth, they will not work as hard. The calculation for happy employees isn't hard.
      Give them good pay: on par or better than your compensation.
      Give them predictability: They will need to feel that their job is steady, and they can plan a life outside around it.
      Give them opportunities to grow: Make sure they have a path towards promotion, ability to learn other things. A lot of businesses feel tuition reimbursement will just train people to be overqualified for their job. However if you can promote the person once they have the new education, they will stick around, and you will have someone in that higher position who knows the business with the latest skills.

      Avoiding any one of these causes turn over.
      Under par pay: You may get employees when they are desperate, or with a promise of the other two where they think they can work up really fast. But any thing that causes them to lose trust in the organization and they are out, as soon as they can.
      Lack or predictability: This could just come from a volatile attitude, where you may be friendly one day, and yelling and screaming the next. Where your job in under pressure that YOU may be next on the layoff. Down times do happen, but you can make this more predictable letting people know who is getting canned, and why, allowing them time to prepare, and perhaps using your organizations resources to help them find new work. This can also mean unpredictable hours, granted all work isn't 9-5 but, having a good scheduled and shared out of office duties so people can live their life.
      Lack of growth: As they continue on the job, the gain insight on what needs to be done, not allowing people to grow, in terms of rank, or getting choice jobs. Also the organization will have an overly simplify ranking structure.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    25. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My friend suffers from the expectation part. He manages networks for a reasonably middle-sized telecoms company. He does a damn good job at that. In the few years he has been there, he has gotten them a shitload of new work.
      But he is feeling this pressure pushing him away slowly but surely. He even sent a CV out to some companies and is considerably jumping ship, even just for a few extra grand a year on top of his already reasonable pay.

      You know something though? If I was actually paid to be on-call at any point in the day, I'd GLADLY take it.
      Sure, it will dramatically lower my health, and even with my knowledge on efficient sleeping, I'd probably still die by the age of 50, but who cares, the future is very bleak anyway.
      We are probably a couple decades away from full-out war between large nations if shit doesn't get better.
      And if the weather gets worse, like it is expected to be this year, that is only going to exacerbate things considerably more so as energy use sky-rockets.
      Right now is the best you are likely to expect from society. This is our high point.
      Developing nations are slowly but surely gaining momentum, incoming a few extra billion people, weather is getting worse, resources dwindling, more wars are breaking out between nations over resources and land, religious extremism at an all time high, nationalist extremism at an all time high.
      FUTURE.

      Asteroid mining, large-scale aquaponics, advanced solar and wind power, about the only few things that would save us as a species, the things that would give us breathing room, a little time to expand and develop, things that could provably support 10-15 billion humans if done properly. (and that is a rough lower estimate at best)
      All being held back by greed of others.
      Asteroid mining is about the only promising one as private enterprise has taken over the race to space.
      Aquaponics is slowly getting there. There has been a few large implementations built recently that are promising.
      Solar and wind is still awful though. Not to mention batteries. Energy storage is still atrociously bad. It is holding back pretty much any tech industry, from tablets to power generation. There is some promising research as of this year in reversible reactions, which will lengthen battery life considerably.
      Regardless of all of these efforts, however, it still isn't enough. There needs to be a push for this at the global level.
      That, sadly, will never happen. We are doomed to continue repeating the same mistakes. All because of attention-whore politicians and rich-kids who only care about getting more power. Fuck all of them. Ban politics, save the world, etc. (only partially joking with that, most modern politics is a complete lie and literally none of your votes matter since you cannot change middle-government positions, the ones that actually matter!)

      Unpaid on-call work can go to hell.
      Even if the future is going to be horrible, it isn't now, why would I want to suffer now?
      Oh wait, I'm already suffering now. DAMN IT. Why did nobody tell me?

    26. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's pretty much how it is. Graduated in 2009 and within a month, I was getting offers 2,000 miles away. They offered to fly my out to Cali for the interview and pay for my round-trip ticket and hotel stay. I was getting offers from all around the country to start immediately with some pretty decent pay when compared to the economy of where the job way. with so many offers, I had the pick of the litter and chose a local company that paid less, but was near family and had an awesome benefits package that made it competitive.

      That whole "recession" thing around 2009 was so annoying. My phone wouldn't stop ringing with job offers for a few years. I guess programmers were in really high demand. My University did say that for my major, for 30 years strait 100% of students found a job in our field paying an average of $70k/year within 6 months of graduation. We are in high demand.

    27. Re:You like our work? by kbrannen · · Score: 1

      Great post, I'd mod you up if I could.

      One more thing with many jobs is that when a person walks out, they can take irreplaceable information with them. Most of us probably aren't given time to really document what we do, so when we leave, all the "whys" and "designs" go with us. Where I am now, I'd love to know why several things were done like they are because I think they need to be changed but we don't dare for fear of breaking something important; but we'll never know why as the people who coded it are long gone. If I and a few others like me leave the company, they will be in a very difficult spot as it could take our replacement well over a year to come up to speed and as the 3rd generation of coders to work on this product they'll know even less than I do. So yeah, it's far cheaper to keep your current employees happy.

    28. Re: You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may be a case of workers taking off their white hat to don a black one. I mean we keep reading how much money these hackers are making while watching inflation and H1B workers drive our incomes into the poverty line.

    29. Re:You like our work? by hwstar · · Score: 1

      Employer: You signed a blanket non-compete. If you leave we have the arbitration judge on your payroll sue the shirt off your back

    30. Re:You like our work? by hwstar · · Score: 1

      Correction: your->our

    31. Re:You like our work? by rhyous · · Score: 2

      Actually that is exactly how it panned out. If it didn't pan out for you that way, then you must be doing something wrong. I don't even take calls anymore from numbers I don't recognize because I get about 1 to 3 recruiting calls and two to five recruiting emails daily.

    32. Re:You like our work? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      He was under the false impression that being a supervisor meant he was the best tester in the entire department, not realizing that the Dilbert Principle of promoting the least competent person into management was company policy. His promotion started an exodus of a dozen talented testers out the door (I was number three to leave), as he preferred younger testers who would do as he says in fear of being fired rather than challenge him when he was wrong. He kept that job until the company filed for bankruptcy several years later.

    33. Re:You like our work? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      When I went back to community college to learn computer programming after the dot com bust, computers were still the money major of the day. That changed a few years later when everyone abandoned computers for healthcare which became the new money major. I had a friend who switched from computers to healthcare, becoming a male nurse at a major hospital. He liked the money, hated the patients he worked with. Ironically, my current I.T. support contract is for a hospital but I have no interaction with the patients and probably make more money than he does.

    34. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... it panned out exactly like that for me. I really don't say that to gloat but as a data point for you.

      (maybe do more public relations and github, if you don't)

    35. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Good STEM workers are not primarily interested in money, or they would have chosen a different field. Of course, it has to be still enough to make a decent living, but otherwise other things are more important. Not all people are like the modern "manager" species that does not understand anything except money, and that only with a short-term view.

      Most people aren't happy when they find out that they're being shortchanged for their skillset. If another company is willing to pay me 30% more for the same job then the only thing that'll keep me from jumping ship is a) that company has a bad rep for working people to death with excessive overtime and the higher pay is because of weaker benefits or b) my current company needs to have some awesome benefits that others don't offer like flexible work hours or unlimited vacation time, etc.

    36. Re:You like our work? by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      (maybe do more public relations and github, if you don't)

      This. Being able to point to your work in a public repository for a project actually doing something useful speaks volumes and cuts down the effort needed to evaluate you enormously. Establish some open source cred and the world is your oyster.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    37. Re:You like our work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I'm more than happy to earn a small amount less in return for stability and loyalty. Just treat me a decent human being, give me a reasonable living wage, put me on as full time (none of this contract bullshit) and stop with the constant manipulative "productivity" sword of Damocles crap and I'll be the most loyal employee you ever met. I'll stick with you through thick and thin, praise your name and happily pull the occasional bit of overtime for free.

      But until that happens you can go fuck yourself. I will keep looking for a better position every night and will drop you like a hot potato the moment I get a marginally better offer. You don't respect me, I won't respect you.

    38. Re:You like our work? by rocqua · · Score: 1

      Not quite, you generally get much larger salary bumps when job-hopping. This is due to their demand for your skills. Rising wages mean this demand is even higher, giving larger bumps (and better chance of actually finding a new job).

  3. Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are in the middl e of a corporate crisis! Tech CEOs may not get big bonuses this year...please oh please make it legal to hire more indentured labor.

    1. Re:Leave no H1-B behind! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Are you kidding? I got laid off from my tech job just before the government shutdown in October 2013 and I was out of work for eight months. Meanwhile, the CEO gave himself a 60% pay raise and bought a new yacht for having a lousy fiscal year. That didn't stop the company from hiring Indian workers to replace American workers.

    2. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      I sucked so bad that I only had 60+ job interviews during those eight months, had three job offers towards the end, and still working at the job that I accepted 14 months later.

    3. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Sentrion · · Score: 4, Informative

      Get off your high horse. I graduated with a degree in electrical engineering just after the Enron crisis unraveled and the dotcom boom went bust. Even though I spent each day applying for every technical role imaginable, I ended up working at Sears for a few dollars over minimum wage. That lasted almost six months until I took a job several states away from my home in Dallas. Many tech workers who are unexpectedly laid off face a unique challenge of being very good at one particular specialty. Even though they can be just as effective with a very different role, employers often seek out a candidate that exactly meets the job specification. So someone with four years experience designing 10kW power supplies will be deemed under qualified or an unfit match for a job requesting five years experience designing 2kw power supplies. A second candidate with ten years experience designing power supplies ranging from 1kW to 10kW would be deemed over qualified. The company then justifies recruiting a candidate from a third world country that will work for whichever wage keeps him employed and allowed to remain in the country. The fact that no one understands his emails, and he has to repeat what he says two or three times before anyone can make out what he's trying to say doesn't seem to matter.

      We definitely should bring in talent from around the world, but often times in STEM fields the H-1B visa holders have a very narrow skill set and are expected to work extreme hours for low pay. But it gets the message across and keeps the rest of the STEM workers from demanding too much. Of course when today's technology is made obsolete the H-1B workers are sent home rather than retrained. But by then there are millions trained on the latest trend and they import replacements.

    4. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      If you had 60+ interviews and only 3 offers, you are miserable at interviews.

    5. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're supposed to lie some on the resume to fit the job description, provided you believe you can do it. Waiting for a perfect fit will keep you unemployed for months.

    6. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're supposed to lie some on the resume to fit the job description, provided you believe you can do it. Waiting for a perfect fit will keep you unemployed for months.

      Alas, here in the UK a lie on your CV/resume once found out, can result in a criminal conviction for fraud.

    7. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by znrt · · Score: 1

      Alas, here in the UK a lie on your CV/resume once found out, can result in a criminal conviction for fraud.

      a cv is pure marketing, everyone knows that. if company pr isn't held to the same standard then that's nonsense, i wonder if there was a single one you couldn't sue to oblivion after just the first week on the job.

    8. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Oh please. Stop it.

      Maybe you were unscathed, but the economic downturn was real. I had a neighbor in banking, who originated certain kinds of corporate loans. His skills were highly sought after, and he was out of a job for a year and a half. When he was hired, it was back into (nearly) the same department, doing the same kind of job. What happened was the bank just decided to no offer such loans till the economy recovered a bit.

      I have a second neighbor who lost his job, and opted to go back to school. Technically he didn't become "unemployed", but if you asked him why he was in school, the answer was "I don't have a chance to land a job in this market" He just reentered the market two months ago.

      I have a distant relative, with a Master's in Comp Sci. He worked for a small five-man shop. The owner worked so hard during the downturn that my relative attributes the owner's heart attack to the crash. The owner's partner didn't fill the gap as well as could be hoped, and after a year he lost his job (and the company folded). He eventually got a job at 70% pay with the city. It took a year and a half (and leveraged inside connections).

      In a hot market, I'd be inclined to agree with your sentiment, but we don't have one of those. Even when my company laid me off, and I had another large company trying to talk about my working for them for two months prior to the termination date, it still took me four months before I walked on the new job. Many companies just don't hire quickly anymore. And trust me, I believe it, as after I left that one (was poached away) it took four months for a company that wanted to poach me to get me through their "accelerated paperwork" path.

    9. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm modding, so I am posting AC (apologies)

      In the states, your resume or CV is not legally binding, this is why companies will always make you fill out a job application, including re-iterating your job experience/education, then sign and date under the legal terms "...I agree that all information is true and correct..." blah blah

      I learned this in a management training seminar years ago (I had always wondered why companies make you write that out by hand when they could just attach your resume to the job application.)

    10. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even when the company is asking for 10 years experience with a 3 year old technology?

    11. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Many tech workers who are unexpectedly laid off face a unique challenge of being very good at one particular specialty.

      I had the opposite problem of being a jack of all trades and a master of none. As an I.T. support contractor for contracts that lasted one day to one year, I rarely had the luxury of picking and choosing my next contract. I've always took whatever came along next. For recruiters who are looking for someone with a minimum of three years in each of the last three jobs, they declared that I've lacked focus. Never mind they were looking for someone to fill a short-term contract.

    12. Re: Leave no H1-B behind! by hwstar · · Score: 1

      I'm calling B.S. on that. Some people out of work have completely marketable skills but are fed up with employers having too much power, and don't have to work W2 because they can live off passive income and investments. It's these people which start their own businesses, or decide to contribute in other ways such as writing open source software and creating open source hardware.

    13. Re:Leave no H1-B behind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, wrong employer, I jumped ship in September 2013 for about a 30% pay raise.

  4. Hewlett-Packard effect by BenJeremy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    At HP, there are a LOT of people leaving, as morale is at an all-time low. Those with marketable skills would rather leave on their own than get a dreaded "offer" to work at Ciber or Modis at 30% less pay, reduction in benefits, and a loss of seniority - and finding they can make more at a company willing to actually offer reasonable compensation increases on a regular basis.

    There may be other companies, not as high profile as HP, where this is also occurring. Obviously, there are many companies "below average" (Kind of has to be that way), but the disparity is pretty high - when people start shopping around, they quickly realize they are underpaid, and the rest of the pieces start falling into place.

    It can't go on forever... which is all the more reason those people confident in their ability to place at better companies are going now, rather than waiting.

    1. Re:Hewlett-Packard effect by Shados · · Score: 1

      in the SF and Valley areas, as well as on the east coast (Boston, NYC, etc), the average "half life" of a software engineer before they quit to go elsewhere is ridiculously low. Between 1 and 2 years depending on the city.

      There's a lot of reasons and theories for it... "just because they can", "its easier to jump ship than wait for a promotion", "you get bigger raises that way", "seeing more companies make you a better engineer", etc etc etc.

      Its almost an habit at this point. Not sure its great for the industry, but for the employees, its an environment thats hard to beat.

    2. Re:Hewlett-Packard effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Wait, did they secretly rehire Fiorina?

    3. Re:Hewlett-Packard effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They hired a clueless, cross-dressing Ben Franklin to run the company. I hear they saved enough money with their crappy policies to party for the rest of the year in London. If its anything like last year, they'll be rubbing it in employees' faces with daily e-mails about how much fun they are having on the company dime.

    4. Re:Hewlett-Packard effect by plopez · · Score: 1

      Services is dying. IBM, MS, Dell, etc. just about every big services company is cutting back. Anyway, a friend who works at HP said they are starting to lift the hire freeze for developers and his project has hired one and looking for another. So check their postings. Of course that is just a datum, so do some research if you are looking.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    5. Re: Hewlett-Packard effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citation please. All those companies are doing freaking great. Dell and MS have $100+ billion in USD.

    6. Re:Hewlett-Packard effect by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      At HP....morale is at an all-time low.

      That is really saying something!

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    7. Re:Hewlett-Packard effect by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 2

      I dunno about "all time low", this isn't a new situation for us. SABRE to EDS, EDS to HP, HP to whomever will take the various subcontracts. All our site support is converted to contractors, at about a $7-$10 per hour pay reduction. Oh, and NO real benefits since the ACA "employer mandate" somehow doesn't cover the contracting companies like Insight Global, Mindlance, etc. Not sure how they got to opt out when the employees didn't...

    8. Re: Hewlett-Packard effect by gweihir · · Score: 1

      They are selling the silverware, i.e. are burning substance. You can do a nice straw-fire for a few years that way, lasting just enough for the predatory C-levels to cash in their stock options, and then it leaves a burned-out husk that will linger a few years and then die quietly. That is what is currently happening at most of these companies.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    9. Re: Hewlett-Packard effect by plopez · · Score: 1

      Just not their services divisions. I understand Oracle business services are also having problems.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  5. maximum suckage by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More people are clueing into the fact that working conditions suck, that sh*t always rolls downhill when it comes to missed deadlines or ever changing specs, and that it's not worth it. Ageism and the up or out mentality, where there are too few jobs to move up to, doesn't help.

    --
    "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    1. Re:maximum suckage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The up or out thing is what gets me. This requirement to move up constantly. No regard for if you've found a position you're happy with, nor how well you may do your job. If you're not moving up, obviously you must want to be fired.

      Just does not make sense to me.

    2. Re:maximum suckage by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      It's a great way for management types not to be confronted with old hands who know way too much more than they do and can call them out on their BS.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  6. Fed up by paugq · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I see more and more people in IT leaving their jobs to work on something else.

    People are fed up with low pay, crazy schedules, lots of pressure -often times for no reason!- and technology changing at Formula 1 speed (just take a look at the web: what was good and trendy 2 years ago is proscribed today).

    To top that up, add off-shoring: today you are key, tomorrow your job is in India, Vietnam or who knows where. People do not like job insecurity.

    What are they moving to? Everything else: law, gardening, plumbing, cake shops, teaching, whatever with a more relaxed schedule, people not discussing about hourly cost and difficult or impossible to offshore. Really.

    1. Re:Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what my cousin did. He saw the writing on the wall and decided to go get his law degree instead of sticking around in IT.

    2. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work in manufacturing, I implement and support a quality system.

      I will quit and leave manufacturing all together for the following reasons:

      1.) the environment is toxic. Corporations are a breeding ground for incompetence and mediocrity. Management continues to plan poorly and make the same mistakes.

      Right now in the middle of a crisis, the company is paying to contract my services, which is equivalent to the cost of four full time employees.

      They don't have money to hire employees, but they have money to pay contractors - the system is fucked.

      Anyway it's a toxic corporate environment where everyone games the metrics and is only performing as much as they can CYA.

      2.) the travel and hours suck. Pay is great but I'm sacrificing too much.

      After I've reached my savings goal, I'm getting the fuck out for good, and I will do work that pays 30k a year and is less stressful and 9-5.

    3. Re:Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And lack of vacation. I've only quit three jobs in my life, and all three were to get time off. I worked from college until I was 35 without a single week off, and it sucked. I quit that job so I could go on a cruise. Now, my current employer has a no vacation rule until we release, and we're three years past that original release date now. Yes, there's a massive developer shortage so there's more work to do than can possibly be done, but too many companies just don't get that it costs less to let someone take a week off than it does to hire someone.

    4. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what about your Indian coworkwer? I bet they get two contiguous weeks off per year. At the startup where I've worked for six years, not a single American has been allowed to take more than a long weekend, but all of the Indians get two to three weeks off *every* year.

    5. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never had a vacation in my adult life. There's just no way for companies these days to hire backups.

    6. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unimportant people can always take time off. It sucks that the best employees are always punished for being the best.

    7. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even here at Microsoft the Indian guys get weeks off at a time while the rest of us get crap for wanting to take a weekend.

    8. Re:Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here in Canada, the TPP agreement we're about to sign - and I'm going to take a chance and guess that the country you live in is about to sign - makes it much easier for foreign workers to work on Canadian soil without screening. I hate to be the paranoid nut but it's getting pretty close to effectively putting corporations in charge of immigration.

      As bad as it is now, soon they will just be able to import Vietnamese people (yes, Vietnam is part of the TPP) to work for much cheaper in places where it's impractical to offshore. I expect to see even less jobs in the future for citizens.

    9. Re: Fed up by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      It's probably written in their contract so they can return to India to visit family. My contract says I can only work 40 hours per week, Monday through Friday, during regular business hours. I haven't worked overtime in ten years.

    10. Re:Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > no vacation rule until we release, and we're three years past that original release date

      I too have been on a three year death march. It sucked working for nearly 42 months without a single day off and most weekends. Of course, the Indian employees still got two weeks off to go home to India. Yes, I understand the airplane tickets are expensive and the travel takes a long time so you need to go for as long as you can, but the unfairness of it sucks.

    11. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And my contract says I get five weeks of vacation per year, but that doesn't mean I can take any time off. The doublestandard in tech companies is ridiculous.

    12. Re:Fed up by somenickname · · Score: 1

      This is definitely the case. 20 years ago you would occasionally see people leave the industry to try to turn a hobby/passion into a business (starting a restaurant, etc.). Now you see people leaving the industry out of pure frustration. I don't blame them either. I've been writing software since I was a child and I imagine I'll be writing software for the rest of my life. I love writing software but loathe the modern software industry.

      On the bright side, the toxicity of the modern software industry is probably a huge boon for the open source community. Contributing to open source projects while making an honest living outside the software industry is a very enjoyable lifestyle.

    13. Re:Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I worked from college until I was 35 without a single week off

      The first day I took off of work was for my fortieth birthday. I've also never taken a sick day off in my life. Heck, I even had perfect attendance in school. It isn't right that this industry allows people from Asia to take weeks off every single year, but people from here are required to work every single day.

    14. Re: Fed up by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 1

      Aren't H1B visa holders required to leave the country for a couple of weeks every year? That was my understanding when I worked at a company, years ago, that had a few.

      Maybe it was all BS, but the company I worked for was based in the EU. So they wanted the H1B folks to come work out of the EU offices during that time rather than go home for a few weeks.

    15. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vacation inequality is my biggest complaint about this industry. In the 32 years I've worked as a programmer here in Seattle, I've only worked one place where there was vacation equality.

    16. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what about your Indian coworkwer? I bet they get two contiguous weeks off per year. At the startup where I've worked for six years, not a single American has been allowed to take more than a long weekend, but all of the Indians get two to three weeks off *every* year.

      Back when I used to be in IT we had an Indian who seemed to be on vacation every few months. Not only wondered how he afforded it but how he got so much damn time off to begin with. I think the problem was back then that I made myself too indispensable, hence why a disaster seemed to break out every time I so much as took a 3-day weekend.

    17. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile I cannot save vacation days and my company is required by law to provide at least 3 weeks contiguous vacation of my 5 1/2 weeks per year.

      It is much easier to get these clauses in via a union or in your employment contract than it is to actually make your company let you take vacation days. Because the manager signing your contact knows it is a small cost to pay if your skills are needed.

    18. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aren't H1B visa holders required to leave the country for a couple of weeks every year?

      No. I was a H1B and stayed in country for 3 years without leaving.

    19. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work in the public sector (in IT) making 1/3 the national average. I get vacation time but my contract states that I cannot seek secondary employment. Every 4 years raises are up for negotiation and every time we are told 0% is all we can expect. Private sector still looks better. though I cannot currently be replaced with a visa worker, I'm sure there is legislation pending that will change that.

    20. Re:Fed up by Paul+Carver · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry to hear that. Obviously you picked the wrong employer (s). I've worked for the same company for almost twenty years in a variety of IT related departments and I think there was only one year (2008 maybe?) when I didn't get a raise (although it's not necessarily a large raise every year) and I am pretty much required to take my full three weeks of vacation every single year plus all personal days and official company holidays. They start nagging people if you don't schedule all your vacation time.

    21. Re: Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no idea how much our feckless leaders have jacked up the prices of employees. It used to be that employees cost double their salary, but now you also have to figure in another 50% for the insurance companies who bought Obama, and taxes have gone up significantly.

    22. Re:Fed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some sort of social hub needs to start up for unemployed tech people. This way they can get together and start their own business. Bonus points for competing against your previous employers.

  7. Dice link... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ergo, not reading it.

    Indeed and Monster both kick Dice's ass.

  8. "Tech, STEM" a redundancy ? by walterbyrd · · Score: 2

    STEM: Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics

    1. Re:"Tech, STEM" a redundancy ? by JoeMerchant · · Score: 2

      Science Engineering Mathematics Environment and Nature would be seen as sexist.

    2. Re:"Tech, STEM" a redundancy ? by Nethead · · Score: 2

      But S.E.M.E.N. is useless without females.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
  9. Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Funny

    They've finished training their H1-B replacements, after all.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
    1. Re:Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Nothing says success like one upping an H1B visa holder about the best tasting slime molds; they just don't get it, and it never gets old.

    2. Re:Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I did a PC refresh job where an Indian engineer had 40+ half-empty coffee cups with slime mold on the surface of each one inside his cube. My boss told me not to replace that PC. The engineer got fired and a hazmat team went over that portion of the building.

    3. Re:Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by dbIII · · Score: 2

      Fair enough, but the Indian would have not only had a shower that week but on that very day!
      It must be the influence of a cold climate or something but the habit of some Americans of bathing infrequently gets very disgusting once they visit a place where snow never falls.

    4. Re:Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      was it a Designated Shitting Cubicle?

    5. Re:Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      It never gets old.

    6. Re:Well, of COURSE they're quitting their jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was my same experience working at HSBC, Indians shipped over 100+ at a time, they would leave cups piled up as they were unwilling to carry them 20-30' to a trash can. The offices were infested with tiny flies and smelled foul from rotten tea left about. Most of the American workers would go to the basement or executive floor just to use the bathrooms away from the floors the Indians were on due to the odor and fly infestations. Then there's the whole matter of them failing to have any respect for personal space and constantly blocking hallways and aisles. I mostly blame HSBC though for failing to provide them with cultural training.

  10. I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting worse by walterbyrd · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have seen ads for jobs as desktop techs, asking for a masters degree in engineering.

    Costco starts out at $20.00 an hour. Walmart truck drivers make $82K a year. I see ads for developers, asking for a degree, and five years experience, for $14 an hour. I see ads for interns that require five years experience.

  11. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Honestly, if I thought I could get scheduled 40 hours/wk at Costco I'd turn in a resume. That's probably about my current salary if you divided it by my overtime.

    If I could get a consistent schedule, I'd pick up a second part-time job to make up the difference. Probably do a bit of open-source dabbling on the weekends once programming stopped being work and started being something where I can solve problems and have fun.

    Reality is, though, employers these days shit on all their workers by scheduling them part time, then changing the schedules every few days. Oh, you've got another part time job? Well, now we want you to come in every other hour for the next two weeks. Good luck keeping both your jobs, wouldn't want you to earn enough to get out of poverty, now would we!

  12. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My brother drives a truck (not walmart, but still). He's up at 3am to drive and hour and a half to his delivery zone. Gets home at 6pm. You want $82k a year for that?

  13. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have seen ads for jobs as desktop techs, asking for a masters degree in engineering.

    That should clue you in that the company doesn't want to hire American workers.

  14. I have two reasons for quitting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) The pay sucks. Too many so called programmers so companies are hiring the cheapest. 2) You are treated like garbage since management figure they can replace you for half the price.

  15. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by ooshna · · Score: 2

    I just got into an argument with someone over this being the reason we have to keep minimum wage. You give companies the ability to use peoples desperation for work as an incentive to for less and we will quickly see wages drop to sweat job levels in just a few years.

  16. Fuck off Nerval's Lobster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every single story you post here is clickbait shit. How far is your head up Dice's ass? You're worse than Bennett Haselton.

    1. Re:Fuck off Nerval's Lobster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Nerval's Lobster" is the Dice marketing department account.

  17. Another sensational headline about nothing by PCM2 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Are we really extrapolating a trend from a single month-to-month increase? Sure, 493,000 professionals quit in July and 507,000 quit in August. That's actually a pretty negligible change. All the more so when you consider that 510,000 quit in June and 516,000 quit in May.

    Indeed, from the report itself:

    The number of quits has held between 2.7 million and 2.8 million for the past 12 months after increasing steadily since the end of the recession. The quits rate was unchanged in August, measuring 1.9 percent for the fifth month in a row. The number of quits was little changed for total private and government over the month.

    So once again -- lies, damn lies, etc.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:Another sensational headline about nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect Dice makes more money when more people job hop.

  18. They see the writing on the walls by Grand+Facade · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When all of their cow-orkers speak Hindi..

    What is big business going to do when the short term payoff HB-1 workers go home and take their new found knowledge with them?

    They will cry crocodile tears about how the offshore engineers are beating them at their own game.

    They will need more government subsidies and tax breaks to survive!

    --
    Rick B.
    1. Re:They see the writing on the walls by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Even our people in India are worried because they're seeing the company outsourcing to another company that's also in India...

    2. Re:They see the writing on the walls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      When all of their cow-orkers speak Hindi..

      What is big business going to do when the short term payoff HB-1 workers go home and take their new found knowledge with them?

      They will cry crocodile tears about how the offshore engineers are beating them at their own game.

      They will need more government subsidies and tax breaks to survive!

      What they do is buy up land in India and set up a shop there where they hire the same people from a contracting company and operate the revolving door to keep costs down. It gets sold as "follow the sun" but really it's a way to need less expensive US based resources. Never mind that shit is always broken, always behind schedule and these people are not innovative, we have a small US team to be innovative and come up with the ideas to have the crap offshore sweatshop implement it. In the US we have typically 10-25 employees per manager, in India the reporting structure is close to 50-150 under one manager, as if that person can actually track that many employees.

      This is exactly how my employer (one of the 3 biggest US banks) operates. They tried to sell it like this was to augment us and decrease our workload, as it stands now we basically coordinate the offshore teams. The US employees are here to train then guide/manage the contractors.

    3. Re:They see the writing on the walls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Same coward here, I forgot to mention that those contractors get to flaunt lifestyle in our face as well.

      Here in the US, we're tracked on EVERY SINGLE THING to justify our employment. Break times and lunch duration are all at manager discretion, if you have a good manager they don't care so long as you get crap done, if you have a bad manager don't even think about a break or taking an extended lunch.

      Whereas our global contemporaries get to show up to the office(typically a half hour late, but we can't complain because it's a cultural thing), then go to "breakfast break" of up to an hour as soon as they arrive. They also get to leave promptly on time because if they miss their ride home they're stuck in a "bad neighborhood".

    4. Re:They see the writing on the walls by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      The business will outsource all their engineering work to a firm in Elbonia who, due to the low cost of living there compared to the US, can hire those former workers for even less pay.

    5. Re:They see the writing on the walls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When all of their cow-orkers speak Hindi..

      What is big business going to do when the short term payoff HB-1 workers go home and take their new found knowledge with them?

      They will cry crocodile tears about how the offshore engineers are beating them at their own game.

      They will need more government subsidies and tax breaks to survive!

      What they do is buy up land in India and set up a shop there where they hire the same people from a contracting company and operate the revolving door to keep costs down. It gets sold as "follow the sun" but really it's a way to need less expensive US based resources. Never mind that shit is always broken, always behind schedule and these people are not innovative, we have a small US team to be innovative and come up with the ideas to have the crap offshore sweatshop implement it. In the US we have typically 10-25 employees per manager, in India the reporting structure is close to 50-150 under one manager, as if that person can actually track that many employees.

      This is exactly how my employer (one of the 3 biggest US banks) operates. They tried to sell it like this was to augment us and decrease our workload, as it stands now we basically coordinate the offshore teams. The US employees are here to train then guide/manage the contractors.

      Same here, everyone hates using those branches for anything as the work that comes back is always half-assed and full of errors, the time to fix it all up is often nearly as much had we done it from scratch ourselves.

  19. And doing what? by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I sorta get your sentiment, but you didn't finish it. What exactly are they doing about it? Are they joining communes? Committing Sepuku? Otherwise there's 3 possibilities: a) they're starting their own businesses, unlikely in this economy. b) They're job hopping because that's the only way to move up in the world or c) they're having nervous breakdowns and/or being forced to quit/retire.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re: And doing what? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1
      I quit the field entirely. Health reasons, which is the inevitable outcome for many of us. Sucks, but it has its benefits. Less stress, no crazy bosses with crazy ideas who want it yesterday, more time with family, friends, the dogs... I miss it, but I would never go back. Enough is enough, already!

      It's a different life when you're no longer on Internet time. A normal life.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    2. Re: And doing what? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Ironically I avoided the stress by going to work for a resources exploration company where everything has to just work no matter what. Having two of everything and fallbacks to older solutions reduced those weekend and late night calls to zero.

    3. Re: And doing what? by gweihir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That is just called solid engineering. Most companies would benefit a lot from it, but it is a long-term effect that the current crop of MBA idiots-savant "managers" do not understand.

      Incidentally, I know one bank large enough that you would have recognized the name that recently nearly died because they did away with that redundancy to reduce cost. They were very lucky the incident happened on a Friday or they would be gone by now. A large competitor had the same problem a few days later(same network services supplier) and they only had a 30 minutes outage because they have a fully redundant infrastructure.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    4. Re:And doing what? by hwstar · · Score: 1

      d) Smart enough to play the game to win. Saved till there was enough F.U. money for me to not worry about having steady employment ever again.

    5. Re:And doing what? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      e) Get into another field entirely where businesses have been around long enough to have grown out of the childish ways of management so prevalent in the IT field.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  20. Those re H1-B bait by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    they're legally required to offer the job to an American. Then when no one 'qualified' applies they get to bring in an H1-B. Vote Bernie, he's the only one against it all.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Those re H1-B bait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're talking about green card PERM applications, where they write these sorts of things. For the millionth time on this forum, to hire an H-1B you DO NOT need to prove that no American can do the job. It's the green card that requires this.

    2. Re:Those re H1-B bait by 7-Vodka · · Score: 1

      Actually, I've handled the green card process for one of my employees.

      Yes, it's the green card applicant that requires the advertisement process to show that no citizen has applied for the job, however who do you think all the green card applicants are? They are the H1-Bs and the other foreigners, one and the same.

      You think people come over here on a student visa or an H1-B, work for several years and then don't apply for citizenship, and just go back home?

      Then after the advertisement process, there's another 10+ years where that person can continue to work and move from company to company while their process goes through.

      --

      Liberty.

  21. Well my quits have been due to career success. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lotsa bitter folks in here complaining about H1Bs taking their jobs and shitty working conditions. That has not been my experience at all. I've changed jobs 3 times in the past 5 years, each for a minimum 20% raise. I see no reason for that to discontinue. Sure I've worked with plenty of H1Bs, but they either get the work done, or they're fired right quick. I've never lived on a coast either.

  22. An interesting question to ask would be... by zkiwi34 · · Score: 3, Funny

    What are the reasons for the quit? Are they going politely because:

    a) A stash of cash as gratuity is being offered
    b) There's no point fighting, and they think going politely increases their chances for a new position
    c) They are actually going to new/better/better paid jobs
    d) Giving up on that type of career

  23. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    depends on how many days a week

  24. Probably michigan by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Right now in michigan the wages are unreasonably low so there is a massive brain drain as most skilled tech people are leaving the state in droves. Why work here for $45K-$65K when the EXACT SAME JOB in Colorado or elsewhere is paying $ $79K-$102K

    Plus you can be way away from the cesspool that is known as Detroit.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Probably michigan by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Yes, this is true. Also makes it hard to hire because #1 nobody wants to move to Michigan and #2 HR won't let you pay more than these meager wages because "cost of labor is low."

    2. Re:Probably michigan by dbIII · · Score: 2

      Plus you can be way away from the cesspool that is known as Detroit.

      From afar that place and New Orleans after Katrina both look like good examples of the the "every city for itself" mentality of running a country is utterly fucked in the head. Detroit was a powerhouse of the economy in the 1950s when it was helping prop up other places and now it's been left to swing in the breeze.

    3. Re: Probably michigan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Posting Anon for reasons that will become apparent within my post below.

      I own a development firm of a few skilled developers in the Canadian Prairies. We purchased the clients/accounts of a failing web development/hosting business based out of Indiana a couple of years ago.

      Many of the accounts are companies based in Michigan, hosting very dated (12+ years old), custom web based applications written in Perl.

      We've made a fair amount of money developing replacement software (also web based) for these clients. With the current disparity in currencies it makes my life even better ($10,000 USD = ~$12,900 CAD right now).

      One client recently expressed interest in flying me out to consult in the planning of a new project. They are a fairly large international organization.

      I live in a town of ~36,000 people, my monthly expenses are around $2,000/mo for a family of 4.

      Please do leave Michigan to fulfil your personal monetary dreams while myself and my developers pick up the peices of tastey meat you leave behind. One mans trash is another mans mortgage payment.

    4. Re:Probably michigan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Detroit was a "modern" city, designed by corporations. When things slowed down, there were no infrastructure or proper city designs preventing the inevitable slide. This is how life under corporate rule end up. Just ask your natives.

    5. Re:Probably michigan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't compare like that. Cost of living is a huge factor.

      For example, I see many job listings in the Bay area for 80,000-120,000. If I were making 70k in the Detroit market, that sounds great until I look up cost of living and see I'd have to make 130K in San Francisco. That's just to break even. If I were after a raise, I'd have to make more than that.

      I'm guessing you only have a few years experience if you're talking 45k.

      My wife and I are both programmers in the detroit market with senior / team lead level jobs and we're getting your colorado pay range. I even work at a university! We've both gotten 10k+ raises this year because of the demand here for qualified developers to STAY where we are.

  25. Don't forget by Runaway1956 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sometechcompany has contintuity and visibility. The Company writes policy, press releases, public relations statements, etc. So, year after year after year, The Company keeps reiterating how great they are, and how unappreciated they are.

    The techs who have worked for The Company in the past and the present have no such outlet. Their reasons for leaving aren't publicized. Two, or six, or twenty people might know your real reasons for leaving, but none of it is publicized. Outside of your immediate freinds and associates, no one knows how shitty The Company has been treating you.

    And, it is the job of HR to ensure that your reasons are twisted, perverted, and/or hidden from public view. Often enough, it would cost your freinds and associates their jobs to make any attempt to set the record straight.

    So, when all is said and done, The Company just gets away with whatever the hell they please, and you have no recourse other than leaving.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    1. Re:Don't forget by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 4, Funny

      "The Company keeps reiterating how great they are"

      you have no idea. The year my company was named to 100 best to work for...they reprinted every god damned piece of letterhead, envelope, notepad...anything with our logo on it now had the 100 best to work for logo.

      the funny thing was apparently that was illegal and within a month we got cease and desist from whoever grants 100 best to work for. Now we had zero paper for anything we could use and corporate wasn't buying yet another company wide paper buy...yeah they do anything to claim how great they are

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    2. Re:Don't forget by gweihir · · Score: 1

      This is a slow road to irrelevancy though: Because all the good STEM workers will leave, and only those that have no other prospects will stay. IBM is in that fix at the moment for example, they do not have many good engineers left. Same with HP or Yeahoo. Sure, giants die slowly, but once they are moribund, nothing can safe them.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  26. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My brother drives a truck (not walmart, but still). He's up at 3am to drive and hour and a half to his delivery zone. Gets home at 6pm. You want $82k a year for that?

    Which is why they pay so much, few people would want to do that job. I have cousins who make more than I do as tradesmen but many of them drive over 100 miles a day while spend only half an hour commuting and don't have much risk of an workplace injury while inside my office. It's all relative.

  27. Retired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I quit my job at 35 to retire. Working for 13 years out of uni, living as a frugal single person saving and investing £20k a year has given me the freedom to do whatever I like with the rest of my life. That's a nice feeling.

    Will I get back into technology? Possibly. Or perhaps I'll go back to uni, study philosophy, or anthropology, or music, or one of a hundred other things that interest me. Or perhaps I'll become a monk for a while, see where meditation leads me. Or get good at an instrument. Or find travelling the world appeals, and do that until it no longer does. Or make some kind of breakthrough in artificial consciousness messing with RNN's after a psychedelic-fuelled insight.

    I find it odd so few fellow humans, who could have done what I've done, haven't.

    1. Re: Retired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They met women, and women are fucking expensive.

    2. Re: Retired by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      My first wife earned far more than I did for many years and the tables only turned recently (and not by much).

      We parted amicably, our only common financial interests were the house (we split evenly because while she earned more, I was more frugal and paid substantial chunks of the mortgage off), and our daughter.

      My current GF earns about a quarter what I do but still insists on paying her way equally, which works fine because we both have pretty modest lifestyle demands.

      The only kinds of women who are expensive are the ones who are into you for the money.

    3. Re:Retired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have done almost exactly the same as you, with maybe three more years to go before I reach my goal. I earn average income, nothing special. I just I don't own a car, I cook my own restaurant quality meals, I buy second hand clothes, grow my own food, and generally live a simple life so I can save and invest as much as possible. My manager doesn't understand why I don't put up with their crap any more the same way my colleagues do.

    4. Re: Retired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      our only common financial interests were the house

      Yeah but would you even bother having a house in the first place if it was up to you? Most of us are at the mercy of our partner's nesting instincts.

  28. Re: I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wo by GoodNewsJimDotCom · · Score: 1

    Wasn't there a Mitch Hedberg on this? "I'll pay you minimum wage, but if I could pay you less, I would"

  29. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Sentrion · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Problem is that the minimum wage can actually work against all of us if the wage isn't properly adjusted for inflation. Otherwise a minimum wage eventually leaves a full time worker living in poverty and requiring medicaid, food stamps, and housing assistance just to get by. It sets an artificial baseline that employers will try to aim for. So if semi-skilled workers get minimum wage, skilled workers get minimum wage plus a bag of peanuts. An artificially low minimum wage drags down wages for all workers except those that assign their own compensation - those executives that sit on each other's boards of directors and, like monkeys grooming each other, mutually decide to keep increasing each others pay regardless of whether the company is profitable or failing. Meanwhile shareholders have been conditioned to expect returns that fall below inflation (when they aren't negative), and workers have grown accustomed to just trying to keep whatever job they have rather than believing they deserve a reasonable share of the profits they produce. The collective fear of the workers makes sure that those few who may have the audacity to make demands can easily be replaced by a more agreeable and subservient employee.

    When the minimum wage is a living wage, every worker can have confidence confronting employers about working hours, working conditions, or even ask for more pay, knowing that a worst case scenario is they have to get a job elsewhere that pays a wage that they can manage to live with. Workers higher up on the pay scale can afford to take chances with their careers knowing that in the short term they can always fall back to a lower paying job if their plans don't work out. It's ultimately better for the economy as a whole. Satisfied workers are more productive and less likely to leave, even if the short term cost to employers is to pay more. But as all employers would be paying the same they wouldn't be going out of business from paying better wages.

  30. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

    Take it up a notch. Pay everyone a Basic Income, sufficient for a basic but not awful existence. That way no employer can use the collective desperation of the masses to pay them shitty wages - they have to offer something that's better than nothing, instead.

    They say "a rising tide lifts all boats", but most of us don't have a boat. If you give everyone at least a life-raft, then offering someone a life-raft as an alternative to drowning stops being a thing. You have to offer someone a boat.

  31. "Big business" doesn't give a fuck. by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    CxO's who run "big business" have only one allegiance, and that's their own profit, nothing else. They don't give a shit about firing thousands, tens of thousands of engineers (Carly Fiorina), the state of the US tech industry, the US as a country or its people... they only care about their own bonuses and then fuck the hell off once the company is screwed. Or the country is screwed.

    Please read up about corporate psychopaths. "Snakes in suits" is a good book.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    1. Re:"Big business" doesn't give a fuck. by Grand+Facade · · Score: 1

      Don't need to read the book, I've seen it. MANY TIMES!

      Company is doing fine printing money.
      CEO is squeezed out.
      New CEO brings in all his buddies.
      Company is stripped of its assets.
      Company's brain trust flees.
      Production is outsourced.
      CEO is lauded as a visionary.
      The remnants of the company are wrapped up in a bow and sold to competitor.
      CEO cashes in a ridiculous bonus on his way out.

      --
      Rick B.
  32. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    My brother-in-law quit IT to drive a truck.

    Truck drivers can do very well.

  33. F-U Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    F-U Money.

    Got mine in 2007. Walked away. Started traveling the world at age 42.

    F U corporate overlords.

  34. Are there jobs available? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    There seems to be a polarization in these threads. Some people seem to think there are no jobs available and some people seem to think there are positions that can't be filled. This makes me if there are distinct hot spots for jobs and you simply have to be there in that area to get that job. This would affect job switchers as well, since it would take a radical amount of money to get people to move for a job and I don't see that kind of money being offered.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    1. Re:Are there jobs available? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      Some people seem to think there are no jobs available

      Those people are called applicants. They think there are no jobs available because they get rejected for not having 5 years' of experience in something that's only existed for 3 weeks, and out of embedded C, playing the ukulele and commanding a submarine they've only done two of them.

      and some people seem to think there are positions that can't be filled.

      Those people are called fucking retarded HR twats. They think there are no suitable candidates available because nobody has 5 years' experience in something that's only existed for 3 weeks, nobody has experience in all of embedded C, playing the ukulele and commanding a submarine, and if anyone did there's 92% chance they'd be the wrong star sign.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:Are there jobs available? by MoarSauce123 · · Score: 1

      Both might be true. Where I work we have very hard times to fill positions, but we do specialized software that requires expert knowledge of GIS systems and decent .NET development or sys admin skills. The majority of universities in the region teaches Java and GIS experts are quite rare. Then again, for positions like mine in QA I used to get cold calls from companies and offers during good times. Now I might get an offer for 3 month contract work at the other end of the country, no benefits, no expenses paid, and of course it is not allowed to be done remotely. Permanent employment options are non-existent, but that is also due to a shift in the software industry in the past 5 to 10 years: the focus is more about cranking out releases and new features than making sure there is quality and security. Look at all the rankings and surveys of high demand IT jobs, QA is never listed nor is technical writing. I worked as a tech writer for a while and permanent employment is rare, that is typically a field where a lot is done as contract work and results show. There are definitely hot spots for jobs and those are the same places where companies complain they cannot find talent. Why the heck they keep insisting on having their offices all in the same place drawing from a finite pool of talent available is unclear to me. The US is huge, there are so many great places to open companies.

    3. Re:Are there jobs available? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      I worked contract once, it was a pain in the ass. I only take regular jobs.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  35. raises in stem only first 10 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, the ignorance of youth.

    As is well documented, in technical fields (engineering, software development, etc.), your salary tends to rise quite quickly for 7-15 years after graduation: "work experience" is valuable. But for most people, after that, it flattens out to a 3%/year kind of rate.

    The ways to change this are
    1) get a completely different job in a different field - you start at the beginning of the rapid rise curve again, and you'll probably start at a lower pay than you have now, but still higher than you made getting out of school, so the "flat top" will be higher.
    2) Job hop in a hot market - there is a limit to this: hot markets only last a few years, and eventually economic forces take over and you'll be at the last hop. By now, you've probably done the 7-15, so you're going to be in the 3%/year regime again.
    3) have some particular skill that is particularly valuable for now. OTOH, when they retire that last mainframe running RPG, you'll be first on the RIF-list.
    4) Start your own business - but now, you're not really salaried, you're making money off the investment. And if you objectively analyze your "salary" (as differentiated from "return on investment") you'll find it flattops just like your old one did OR you've done #1: you've got a new job (e.g. manager,CEO, etc.)

    1. Re:raises in stem only first 10 years by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      OTOH, when they retire that last mainframe running RPG, you'll be first on the RIF-list.

      IBM introduced a new mainframe this year that can "process 2.5 billion transactions a day (or the equivalent of 100 Cyber Mondays every day, according to the company)."

      http://www.wired.com/2015/01/z13-mainframe/

  36. Refuse to play the employer's game by hwstar · · Score: 1

    Tech W2 employment in America is an awful game:

    1. Employment-at-will is cruel. Most of the world does not have employment-at-will, it uses the "just-cause" model.
    2. Exempt employees put in long hours because of #1. There are no laws limiting working time in the US.
    3. Employers are almost impossible to take to court due to binding arbitration.
    4. Employees in most states can be forced to sign non-compete agreements or be fired.
    5. American employers offer some of the most paltry fringe benefits when compared to other industrialized nations.
    6. Once you get into your 50's, you'll have a hard time getting hired regardless of how good you are

    1. Re:Refuse to play the employer's game by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      As an I.T. support contractor in Silicon Valley for the last ten years, I never worked more than 40 hours per week. My contract prohibits me from working overtime because no one wants to pay overtime. I also get paid federal holidays, paid time off and a full benefit package. Being in my mid-40's, I'm actually one of the younger guys in my current contract job as many of my workers are in their upper 50's.

  37. Re:You like our workLocation? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    How many of those recruiters are willing to hire someone from anywhere? I dont lot happening from my meditate location. Sure its easy if you live in New York LA or silicon valley. Also how are recruiters finding out about you?

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  38. I can see why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been doing this for 24 years. I like writing code, I like building stuff, and I've spent considerable time getting to be decent at it. I'm finding it nearly impossible to find a place to work that isn't run by total fucking idiots. I'm sure I'm not alone.

  39. Excessive stress by MoarSauce123 · · Score: 1

    The software industry is booming and growth is not reflected in staffing level increases. That means it is more likely that tech professionals quit and move to other positions because they had enough of working 14 hour days, nights and weekends.

  40. Nerval's Shill for the win ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So can we just get it out in the open that Nerval's Lobster has never submitted a story without a Dice.com link?

    Sorry, but Nerval's Lobster is a fucking shill. If you're going to do shit like this, put a giant disclaimer which says "this user is on the dice.com payroll and their job is to drive traffic to our shitty site".

    Pathetic guys. Then again, expecting integrity and "journalism" from you clowns is probably too much.

  41. Stuck in limbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sadly, I'm working in tech at a manufacturing company. Not sure if I will have a job beyond this month as the company is shutting down for several weeks in November due to "lighter business than usual". Our main customer is Caterpillar, and the recently announced layoffs after lower than expected sales. I wish I could get a government job.

  42. Re:I started in 1979 - I think tech is getting wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Assuming basic income was $20k, 250 million adults would be $5 trillion dollars. The entire US budget is $3.5 trillion, with about $3 trillion in revenue. You'd need to raise taxes by about 70% to cover that. And stop spending money on anything else. Or obviously, don't give anyone money that makes more than $20k, which would be 50m so a cost of only $1T, which would be more affordable. If people making $20k-$30k quit working to just collect basic income, you'd be talking another 25m people, so $1.5T.

    Admittedly, social security and medicare are $2.xT, so it'd actually be half a trillion cheaper assuming you axed both programs in favor of basic income. Though I'd expect the government to run at a huge overhead, so figure only a couple hundred billion in savings that'd be wiped out for a decade or so in implementation costs. However, I suspect cracks would show in basic income very quickly, and we'd just have it on top of the other social spending.