Of course, it depends on my skill and value but there seem to be a huge gap between my actual skill and what my company thinks of my skill level. I have to sign the papers today and frankly need your help.
Spent most of my career in big crufty non-tech companies where the majority of SWEs probably work. Mainly in the finance sector - investment banks, insurance companies, and non-elite hedge funds. The raises were trivial that I didn't even look forward to them or account for them in any major personal finance planning.
Recently switched to a FAANGMULA type company. Haven't even been there a full year yet, but my year end raise was astronomical. In fact, the raise I got for this year from this company is probably bigger than all of the raises I've gotten in 10+ years working for non-tech companies combined.
My friend who also jumped ship from an investment bank to a similar top tech company reported the same.
Is this normal?
I've had only a few pay raises within 10 years, most of which were offered only when I quit. Usually you don't even need a competing offer, it's fine if you're quitting to freelance.
https://www.levels.fyi/ is useful for big tech, https://topstartups.io/startup-salary-equity-database/ is useful for startups
Also helps to give examples of how your work grew the business (specific #s ideal) - sometimes the PM will remember the numbers that you can borrow :)