2012年5月23日 星期三

Looking For A High Paying Telecommuting Job? Lowering Your Standards Might Be Wise


One of the most important factors in searching for a good job is most definitely finding one where your paid what you're worth. It gives you a good feeling that someone appreciates the work you can do for them when you are rightfully compensated for your job. I've been at both extremes...underpaid and overpaid. Believe me when I say that the latter is much better! I'm sure most of you reading this will agree.

But should you let this one criteria be the governing factor over whether or not you accept a telecommuting job that is available to you?

At first you may think, well higher pay is better. And indeed you are right. But in telecommuting, your wage criteria can take a step back and allow other important job factors to reign in your decision. Like, say doing something you love, rather than something you have to do in order to make a certain amount of money.

Let's say you make $14 per hour at your regular job. Do you think I could convince you to leave the commuting work force and take that $7 an hour job offer so you could work from home?

Say what? Keith, your crazy. Well, maybe so. But always remember this: You do not have to get paid the same amount you make at your "regular" job when you telecommute. Let's see if I can convince you.

So you have a good paying job at $14 per hour and you just don't have the stomach to call it quits and work from home because you can't find a telecommuting job anywhere that pays that much. (They are out there by the way, keep searching.)

At $14 per hour, you are bringing home a total of $2240 per month. Well, let's get real and start subtracting.

Four hundred and fifty dollars for taxes, $200 for gas, car maintenance, parking fees, tolls, etc. I pay forty bucks alone in tolls where I live. Seventy bucks for new clothes, dry cleaning, and such if you're conservative. Two hundred dollars for lunch, snacks, the meat wagon, all those fundraisers your hit up for by co-workers, etc. And the big one for some of you: $600 or more for childcare (depending on where you're from, of course), and $200 for fast food or supper on the go because you know you're too tired to cook for the family when you get home. Add these up and subtract them out for a grand total of $520 take home pay.

Now let's suppose you step out on a limb and take that $7 per hour telecommuting job you were offered. You'll only make $1120 per month.

But taxes are only $224, your transportation cost just went to $0, no expense for special clothing, no expense for extra food beyond what you already buy from the grocery unless you order some pizza every once in a while so we'll tack on $40 for that. Now you don't need child care, but your energy bills probably will increase a little so let's tack on another $100 to play it safe.

After subtracting out all of these expenses from your new telecommuting job paycheck at only $7 per hour, your actual take home pay would be $756 per month.

Congratulations, you just got a raise! And your only getting paid half of what you used to. Not to mention the couple of hours or more per day it takes to get ready and drive to your job. Put a monetary figure on that number and you're making even more.

Now granted everybody's situation will be different. But I wanted to open your eyes to the possibilities of what telecommuting has to offer and why it's so popular today.

My point is don't instantly dismiss a job you come across just because it doesn't pay what you are used to being paid. Do the math. You might be pleasantly surprised with the results.




Find out the Five Top Places to find free telecommute work opportunities, just visit Telecommute Now and download your free Telecommuting Job Search Strategy Guide. Get It Now.





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