Submitted by spongerd82 t3_zzcet2 in personalfinance
meathole t1_j2atgvd wrote
Tripling your salary is insane, well done! Max out your retirement accounts and don’t really change your spending habits. How did you manage to triple your salary?
spongerd82 OP t1_j2atv6x wrote
I've been a college educator for almost 13 years. Never did it for the money. Now that I have a baby, I actually responded to all the head hunting for cybersecurity experts.
Thanks for the input!
meathole t1_j2av52i wrote
Thank you for contributing to education! You chose a great time to break into cybersecurity.
Ryzzthebizz t1_j2ayovg wrote
Funnily enough I’ve been looking into learning Cyber Security for a while here in the UK and really did wonder, if there’s so many high paying Cyber jobs why are there loads of Tutors/courses here when they could be in those jobs.. what’s your thought on going into Cyber Security? Apologies that this is off topic.
spongerd82 OP t1_j2az8qb wrote
I don't mind at all. I actually taught cybersecurity and networking for those 13 years. It's a very lucrative job. It can be stressful because attacks are only getting worse. The learning curve is quite substantial. Even with computer skills, it does take some time to learn the security side well enough to pass the relative certs. Feel free to let me know if I can answer any other questions.
relefos t1_j2b4lh5 wrote
This is a problem with the software field as a whole. You hear a lot about salaries like this, so you start to assume that’s what everyone makes. In reality, the average salary might very well be $200k, but I’d guess that the median is more or less around $75k. Basically, while there are jobs that pay an insane amount, the vast majority of people aren’t getting them. In fact, I assume the average person with a CS degree or a bootcamp certificate is working an IT style job making $75k give or take
The second problem is that things like Glassdoor seem to struggle with differentiating titles. So many people who graduate with a CS degree or get a certificate end up as “Information Technology Analysts” or some title other than “Software Engineer”, so when Glassdoor says Software Engineers make $XYZ, keep in mind that there’s a very good chance you get some other title that’s paid less
Add to this that it’s actually hard and some people just aren’t good at it, combined with people pursuing it blindly bc money AND with the fact that technical interviews are a thing (ie your interviews aren’t behavioral alone, they test your programming / security skills extensively) ~ we end up with a relatively low median salary & a giant misconception that all “qualified” people have $200k tech jobs
The point is that while you can get a job like OP’s, unless you’re truly good at it and work very hard, you likely won’t get that. Your salary may still be super good compared to other fields ($75k isn’t bad), but you may be sad to find that you left something you loved just to plateau out and never break into that super-mega-high-paying sector
THAT BEING SAID, if you do have the mind for it & you don’t mind working hard ~ you can get a job like OP’s! Because if you work very hard, you’ll show your worth in technical interviews
This is all coming from me, a CS grad with a good software engineering job. I would say that of the ~200-300 people I knew (to varying extents) from my major, maybe like 50 of us have those good jobs and the rest are all working IT stuff or even something totally different. And 50/200 or 300 may seem like a ton but I went to a pretty good university, so the percentage will be higher than bootcamp programs
Just to stress one more time ~ if you have the brain for it and you work hard, you can get the nicer jobs. Tech interviews majorly benefit people who know their stuff. So if you become super skilled, you won’t struggle to find a great job (like OP)
soundwave75 t1_j2b6e2e wrote
I thought 18 paragraphs usually came with the customary TLDR...
Edu_cats t1_j2aw8ko wrote
Wow, congratulations!
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