We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

Income vs. Career Enjoyment

Would you rather…

be filthy rich and hate your job, or love your job but have to scrape by?

It's not a trick question—and it's a question you will almost certainly have to answer at some point in your life. How do you answer it? By figuring out what's most important to you. And remember: there are no wrong answers.

Except killing orphaned pandas. That can't be most important to you.

So, what's most important to you in a job?

  • A big, juicy paycheck?
  • Stability?
  • A creative outlet?
  • Fame?
  • Lots of praise about how awesome you are?
  • Being the boss?
  • Helping people?
  • Working with children?
  • Working with animals?
  • Cool co-workers?
  • Lots of important projects?
  • Challenges to overcome?
  • A great office?
  • Lots of perks and benefits?
  • Fat cash bonuses?
  • A dog in the office?
  • A clown costume you get to wear every day?
  • A low-stress environment?
  • Lots of responsibility?

Now, which of those things are you willing to sacrifice in order to rake in some extra dough? Would you be okay giving up the in-office dog? What about the ability to help people? And at what cost?

Of course, job enjoyment is different for everyone. For one person, being able to work in a big corner office with no one ever coming by is the dream. For someone else, that may be the worst misery since chem class. A "good income" is also be different for different people. For one person, a good income might be enough to buy a house, raise two kids, and take vacations whenever you want. For someone else, a good income might mean enough to have a private jet. And for others, it might just mean enough to live from paycheck to paycheck without missing a meal.

Whatever sacrifices you decide to make for cash—which, by the way—is not a bad thing—just remember: when you start working full-time, you'll probably be spending 40, 50, or 60 hours a week at your job. Assuming you sleep 8 hours a day (try it—it's good for you), that means you're spending 35-50% of your ENTIRE LIFE at work.

We hope you like it.