:-). That formula should keep the bosses guessing
for a while...
Tom, what kind of financial services is it? Manhattan is a
high-dollar locale, so that should command a better than average wage. Financial
services, esp. I-banking, has way too much money--so if they are in that
business, charge a premium :-). But seriously, if the company is a typical
finserv company, and you are critical to their keeping their systems up and
running, which means critical to their making a ton of money, then your salary
should be commensurate with that, which means probably 10-20% above "the
average" for that skill set. Its hard to give an absolute number but depending
upon your experience and skill set and given the location, a low 6 figure salary
would not be out of line.
Darren
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Molkentin, Steve
Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2005 7:54 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] salary(OT)
Gee Tom - I am not sure you can add enough zero's to the
end of the number you create...
Try thinking of a number, halve it (opportunity), multiply
it by 3.2 (business), subtract the number you fist thought of (size) and then
add 20% (location).
Any help?
themolk. ;)
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tom Kern
Sent: Thursday, 13 October 2005 11:37 AM
To: activedirectory
Subject: [ActiveDir] salary(OT)well, i've been consulting for 2 months full time for a company and now they want to make me an offer to work for them(yeah,i'm amazed too..)At first it was a head/senior AD position but now they want to throw in Exchange in the mix.they used to outsource all their windows infrastructure and during my tenure there, they took it back so they have no AD/Exchange people.This is a 3000 user finanical corp in Manhattan.my question is, what kind of salary would one expect for a such a position, taking into account the bussiness and location and size.thanks