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Comment by callalex

3 years ago

If by “prestige” you mean “enough money to work for 4 years and retire anywhere that’s not the Bay Area and never work another day” then yea, it’s prestige.

> enough money to work for 4 years and retire anywhere that’s not the Bay Area

Four years is probably optimistic, unless you got lucky with stock growth.

I searched for "average cost of living map" and found a site[1] that says cost of living at Santa Clara County is $138K. I then did a search for "average salary at Google" and one website[2] says it's $124K, which suggests saving enough money in 4 years on salary alone would be difficult.

You might think that working for Google while living somewhere outside of Bay Area would be a good way to save, but because compensation is dependent on where you live, this doesn't always work out.

[1] https://www.epi.org/resources/budget/budget-map/

[2] https://www.payscale.com/research/US/Employer=Google%2C_Inc....

  • That's cost of living for 4 people, mind you:

    > The cost of living for a two-parent, two-child family

    The typical case is more likely single or DINK.

    Manage the money well, throw in a couple of bonuses and a favorable liquidity event around y4 and it's plausible enough to become a motivator or rationalization, I assume.

  • The people building this ad tech nonsense make well over $124k. I'd wager that number comes from nation/worldwide salaries, and the folks that the original comment described aren't data center janitors or whatever. These folks get paid very well to insure Google dominance – in salary and in stock.

  • Thank you for bringing data to the discussion. I’m not sure that average salary is the right metric, however. The people inventing new adtech projects are being paid 4-5x that number based on my experience. Although anecdotes can only be trusted so far I guess…

  • That average salary must include non-engineers.

    The average salary for a mid-career engineer at google is north of $300k if you assume no stock movement.

    https://levels.fyi

Oh, crap. You put an actual number in your comment, and now there's going to be a whole subthread debating the accuracy of it, completely ignoring the relevant point of the comment.