I'm looking for advice on calculating my market value.
I live in central Europe and work as a Cloud Architect, that also does DevOps and pretty much everything required project-wise.
I make 32k per year and it seems hard getting an average market pay. I have no university degree, but 6 years experience in IT, 3 years experience in CI/CD and 2 years experience with AWS and IaC.
How can I figure out my market worth?
Edit: I have little experience with negotiations and the job market, that's why I ask.
You need to find the pockets in the market which do compete for talent on an international (at least EU-wide) level. That may be foreign tech companies, remote jobs, maybe the very hottest of startups in your country (with stock grants). I like this article (https://blog.pragmaticengineer.com/software-engineering-sala...) which goes deeper into this.
A "trick" which works in my market (in France) is to work as a contractor instead of a full-time employee. When I did this move I basically doubled my income overnight while keeping the same job title. A lot of companies will balk at an engineer asking for 70k€ as an FTE, yet have no qualms paying the same person 7-800€/day for 2 years as a contractor.
32k seems a bit low for central Europe but it's difficult to say without a more precise location.
There are easier (and less accurate) ways to assess your value.
1: Next time you hear from a recruiter, ask them what a rough range is for the role. If they won't tell you, try to gauge their reaction to your salary expectations. Say, when they ask, if you tell them you expect 50k and they are still willing to proceed then you can be sure that you can get a lot more than 32k.
2: Look out for salary surveys from your country (here's one from Ireland that's pretty good: https://www.morganmckinley.com/ie/ireland-salary-guide-calcu...).
3: This is probably the least accurate; look at salaries at companies that are transparent about compensation, like Buffer: https://buffer.com/salaries.
But while the average may say you are worth say 65k per year, the upper end is more like a million per year, and the lower end near zero.It depends on multiple factors, what industry, what location, what company and how you present during interviews.
At present it is fair to say what you are getting is below average. Doubling your salary shouldn't be difficult if you look around, especially outside Central Europe. It can be difficult since many companies only offer a contract within certain juridictions, but some companies out there are flexible since they want to select from the worldwide pool rather than a fraction of it.
To find your true value. Apply to about 50 jobs you feel you qualify for. A third of it will give you a screening call to show your worth, 5 of them will get you through the final round and probably make you an offer. Make the average of the offers you get, that's your true value now.
Of course along the way you may hit a great 2nd offer which double your income, you would be tempted to just take it and end the experiment. And you may be right to do so. You can run the experiment again after you switched jobs.
I will throw out there that the best way to get compensated for your true value is to repeat this at least once a year, because too many employers squeeze current employees compensations by not offering the increase they deserve.If you continuously look for jobs you always ensure to have the current information about your current value hence leave no chance to be stuck at some undervalued job. Of course it's draining to often be on the look out and attend interviews. But it depends how important it is to you.
2. Interview and get offers. Your market rate is what the highest bidder is willing to pay.
3. Someone on HN shared this years ago and it helped me tremendously, it's better than any other blog post or book I've ever read about negotiating a job offer. Highly suggest reading it:
Market worth is largely theoretical. Go and get some offers, then you have some choices about what to do.
Right now the market is very hot for HN-person skills. So go make some calls and see what comes.
your worth is how much they are willing to pay you to stay, which is directly correlated with how much cheaper they can get someone that does the same from the market + onboarding costs. For architects this plays a bigger role, since you need way more context to operate than someone just managing infra, so the onboarding costs are way higher.
Even if you are living in Italy, which has a very crappy salary, you should be earning more for this position. But what would raise as a red flag for you in a hiring process would be the experience VS position.
Easily you can get more salary if you step down to a Cloud Engineer/Systems Engineer/DevOps (I know, is a culture, but positions are labeled like this) or something similar.
Also try to work for banks, the fact that they trust you is a +50% that you can ask above the market average, handling systems that control few billions requires people that you trust, and at this scale 10k, 100k, or 250k, doens't make that much difference, but a small fckup may cost 100mi to the company. Closer to the money you are, more you get from it.
German market pays best in Europe but you need to speak the language. The culture is also very specific.
If you don't have family and don't mind working in other timezones, then US will have the best offer for you.
My algorithm: do many applications. Aim high, low and in between. Ask for a high salary and lower little by little.
I'd wager you could maybe do a GBP->EUR conversion for a _rough_ idea, but then again, local markets and education requirements may dictate your salary. My impression of the French market is that education is still incredibly important, where as in the UK it is not so important for these roles.
A loose north star, if you will.
[1] https://hired.com/salaries
[2] https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2021#salary-comp-t...
1. Apply/Interview and get a formal job offer on paper. If you cant get a job, your market value is a lot lower than you think.
A. Apply only to jobs where you would work, not some wretched job you wouldn't take, that isn't a real market rate FOR YOU.
B. Apply only to cities where you would live, not some theoretical "SF/SV" salary if you aren't willing to move/live there.
Ideally get three offers and average them. Your market rate baseline is that. Negotiation will get more.
2. Hopefully the above exercise finds you a job you WANT, not just a "Mark-to-Market" exercise. Take the job, be happy and go somewhere where you are paid well for good work.
You say you want "average market pay." What do you think "average market pay" is for a DevOps engineer with your experience and educational level? Why do you think that? Where are the employers hiring folks at those wages? I'm focusing on more thought-based questions since you asked about calculating your value as it is today, not necessarily just "how do I make more money" which has different answers.
if 32k is normal for your country look elsewhere maybe
32k can be competitive with the average local company?
But if you compare with top of the range salaries at the biggest tech centers in Europe is quite low
or with remote jobs which could pay top of the range as long as you're situated in Europe
Please see https://techpays.eu/ if you're specifically looking for the companies paying the most
If you want to get competitive salary you need to move, biggest cities/tech centers in Europe.
Ireland, UK (still?), Germany, Netherlands all have big markets with top of the range salaries
Consider going remote for foreign companies, you can easily double that rate.
By interviewing and getting offers.
You might get useful data from HN too, but not without saying what country you're in - central Europe is too vague. Not to pick on you too much, but why on earth would you exclude that from the original post?
What is your working hours? How long do you work in a week? What is the unit of your salary? EUR/GBP/USD? Also is that a net value per year? Are there any tax reductions?
Just this month I learned that some offhand advice I gave to a small business owner last year increased their sales by six figures. It helped me better understand why consultants can be so valuable :)
btw. if you are actively looking for something new, consider contacting me. We are looking for a lot of cloud engineers/architects/etc. -> smart.year8135@fastmail.com
So try to talk to others around you, if above websites don't cover your country. Or try to move.