• @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    Your current shitty job could do the same thing.

    You should always be casually interviewing. Your current employer should be passively fighting to keep you (with the conditions and comp and growth your are experiencing there). If another job offers more, off you should go.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      True, it could also happen to my current job. But then I haven’t actively done anything to cause it. I haven’t gone out of my way to change the situation and thus made it worse. That’s a big factor in why people are afraid of change, the risk of actively and inadvertently making it worse, instead of passively enduring.

      (Disclaimer: I’m on disability so I don’t have a “current job” and I also live in a place with decently sane labour laws)

      • @SCB
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        1 year ago

        This is just accepting the same amount of risk but denying yourself agency in improving your life.

        Ask yourself if you would accept that in any other situation - same risk, but no agency. I’d hope the answer is no.

      • @AshLassay
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        1 year ago

        But just enduring the current job also comes with a risk even in a country with strong labor laws. Not changing jobs comes with stagnation of skills and wages. I’ve heard plenty of stories of loyal employees who worked the same job for decades but who now earn less than the new hires and they are now at a point where switching jobs is hard since their skill set hasn’t improved for years. Risk averse people are also often too afraid to even renegotiate their wages. And bosses know that and exploit that.