New Job Offer....PTO?
jstallard
5 Posts
Hello all...I'm excited because I have been extended an offer within $1500 of what I was asking. I was told I would also receive 21 PTO days. My current job does not have PTO and I receive 4 weeks of vacation plus 9 Holidays.
I was referred to the new job's Benefits Manager for questions but she is in a meeting. When under PTO for 21 days does that normally include holidays?
If not, the way I'm lookin at it is I'm giving up 9 holidays, 1 week of vacation and 10 days' sick time.
How should I counter this offer? I want to accept but as a "seasoned" person accepting the HR Manager position in an 1100 ee HealthCare facility I want to get what I can going in, within reason. Additionally I'm leaving $16500 on the table here due to not being vested for another one and a half years even though I have been employed here over 5 years.
My sincerest appreciation for any guidance!
Jane in Lex
I was referred to the new job's Benefits Manager for questions but she is in a meeting. When under PTO for 21 days does that normally include holidays?
If not, the way I'm lookin at it is I'm giving up 9 holidays, 1 week of vacation and 10 days' sick time.
How should I counter this offer? I want to accept but as a "seasoned" person accepting the HR Manager position in an 1100 ee HealthCare facility I want to get what I can going in, within reason. Additionally I'm leaving $16500 on the table here due to not being vested for another one and a half years even though I have been employed here over 5 years.
My sincerest appreciation for any guidance!
Jane in Lex
Comments
Good luck!
>normally includes vacation and sick time
>(incidental). Meaning, if your sick, child is
>sick or you need the day off, use PTO. I would
>ask about STD benefits and how PTO coordinates
>with that. We offer 50% salary during STD but
>employees are required to supplement the other
>50% with PTO.
>Good luck!
What is STD?
Thanks,
Jane
Bottom line: If you don't ask, you don't get.
In our plants we have different vacation benefits for exempt and nonexempt employees. But within those two divisions, we give all employees the same vacation benefits based on a standard time of service. I get the impression from this thread that when negotiating for a new position, the company can offer different vacation benefits based on different criteria to employees within the same general job catagory, i.e., exempt vs nonexempt.
Can I offer a new comptroller 4 weeks of vacation after 2 years while the company HR Director or Sales Manager has to wait 5 years before getting 4 weeks of vacation?
For the sake of this discussion let's not include senior executives, which have a different set of perks.
Work/life balance seems to be the #1 discussion nowadays. The job market is so bad in our area. Good candidates are few and far between. I'll gladly make this happen if needed.
Many employers do have set paid time off packages and may not be able to negotiate with you, however, if you don't ask, you'll kick yourself later if you don't try!
Good luck and happy TGIF! :DD
I think I just wanted you all to give me the courage to do it!
Again, many thanks!
Jane in Lex