This is a guest post from FMF at Free Money Finance, a personal finance blog designed to help you grow your net worth. You can subscribe to Free Money Finance here.
Historically, “making six figures” has been to income earners what “becoming a millionaire” has been for those tracking their net worths — a lofty goal achieved by only a select few. And while neither a six-figure earner nor a millionaire can bask in the luxury they could a couple decades ago, there’s no doubt that earning over $100,000 a year still puts you in a select group.
In fact, the U.S. Census Bureau says that only 5.63% of individual income earners and only 17.8% of households had incomes of $100,000 or more in 2006. So despite the drop in purchasing power from the days of old, if you earn $100k or more each year, you’re still in an elite group.
How can you get into the six-figure club? There are many roads to this golden path (lottery, inheritance, take over a family business, etc.), but many, if not all, of these are out of your control. As such, I’m going to focus on what I consider to be the method that will give the most people the greatest chance of earning $100k or more — by developing a career and growing it over time. Specifically, I’m going to tell you how I got to six figures in seven years and how you can use these principles to do the same.
Words of warning
You’re probably skeptical. I’m okay with that at this point. Read on with an open mind and I think you’ll be pleased. And while I can assure you that the tips below are proven and repeatable, I must admit that they’re also challenging. Therefore I’d like to make the following perfectly clear before I get started:
There are exceptions to these principles. Probably many exceptions. Just as with any personal finance advice, people’s situations, skills, opportunities, personalities, likes, dislikes, and so on are different. What works for one person may or may not work for another. (As J.D. often says, “Do what works for you.”)
I’m cheating a bit. Just to be completely honest, the seven years noted in the title are post-college (in my case post grad school.) One could argue that those years of schooling should count towards earning six figures. If you’d like to count them, go ahead. But “Five Steps to Six Figures in Thirteen Years” just doesn’t have the same ring to it as the current title.
These tips will work. They worked for me. This is exactly what I did to earn six figures in seven years. In addition, I’ve had many friends and colleagues do the same, so I know it’s repeatable — if you follow the steps.
I’ll end this preamble by saying I’m not trying to brag (though I realize some of this may sound like it), just offer you a first-hand experience of what worked for me. In fact, if you want to see how much humble pie I’ve had to eat during my career, read my series detailing all the jobs I’ve ever held. In it, you’ll see that my road was not smooth or without its own challenges. But even with those obstacles I’ve been able to live out the principles that follow and lead to a six-figure income. I hope you can do the same.
That said, here are my five steps to six figures in seven years.
Step one: Get a high-earning degree from a good school
It’s a fact of life that certain college degrees result in a higher earning potential. So graduating in one of these fields gives you a built-in jump on the pack as you try to reach six figures quickly.
If you want to be a teacher, that’s fine; it’s a great and noble profession. But it’s likely you won’t be able to make six figures quickly (if ever). If you focus on the top few degrees (and the professions associated with them), you’ll get a big headstart towards reaching your goal.
Note that I suggest you go to a “good” school. In my opinion, you do not need to go to a top-notch college to make this work. I recommend going to the least expensive school that gets you the degree you need and the initial job you want. Once you do this, the school you attended makes very little difference in your career or earning potential.
I went to a top 25 business school (not top 10 or even top 20), but I left with only $5,000 in debt and the job I desired from my targeted employer. Before I decided to go to my school, I knew the employer I wanted to work for recruited there. You should know the same. Just like a résumé’s main purpose is to get you an interview, graduating from college’s primary purpose is to get you that first job and often a “good” school can do the job just as well as a “top” college.
Step two: Work for a name-brand employer at your first job.
No matter the field, there are certain companies that have an aura of respect around them — companies that are known to be good trainers and that are admired by people in your field, around the country, and, if good enough, the world. Some of these include: Google, Apple, Disney, Nike, Procter and Gamble, the Mayo Clinic, Pixar, McKinsey, and so on.
There are two main reasons you want to work for a top-notch company:
- They generally pay well (though maybe not the best), and you certainly want to have as high of a starting salary as possible, and
- Working for these companies gives your résumé an added boost since they are “known” to develop excellent workers. As such, they are companies that other companies recruit from, offering you more (and better) job opportunities in the future. Almost twenty years after I worked at one of these great companies I have colleagues, recruiters, and employers (when I’m interviewing) regularly say something like, “Wow, you worked there” or “You have some great experience” simply because I worked for a name-brand company two decades ago.
How can you get employed by one of these companies? Simple: go to a school where the company recruits (review Step One again). Beyond that, network with alumni, school administrators, and anyone else associated with your target company (or companies) to give yourself the best advantage of getting hired. I happened to know an undergraduate student that went to my target company during my second year of grad school. I kept in touch with him and he was instrumental in getting me hired (and we eventually became roommates).
Step three: Perform
There’s no way getting around it — if you want to be on the earnings fast-track, you need to be on the high-end of the performance scale. What does this mean exactly? It means you need to find out what your employer expects of someone in your position and give them much more than that. If your expectation is to save the company $50,000, work to save it $100,000. If you need to grow sales 7%, work to grow them 12%. If your goal is to get five new customers ordering your product, work to get eight. If you over-deliver versus your expectations and so consistently and with a variety of different projects, you will be a high-level performer and receive a commensurate level of financial rewards.
In addition, you can really super-charge your performance (and thus your pay) if you work on any of the following:
- Problem projects (turning them from problems to advantages for the company)
- Important, high-profile assignments that get you noticed by those higher up in the organization, and
- Big businesses that are vital to the company’s success.
Of course, these opportunities are a double-edged sword — they can propel your career if you succeed, but they can also devastate it if you crash-and-burn.
Finally, having a good, pleasant attitude is at least a tie-breaker (some say it’s more) that will help you advance in your career. Everyone likes performers with good attitudes more than performers with poor attitudes, so be positive — it might just pay off for you (literally).
Step four: Manage your career aggressively
Big pay bumps, even for high fliers, don’t usually come with the frequency or size that they should. After all, many employers are quite happy giving you the least they can even if you’re slam-dunking projects left and right. That’s why you need to:
- Regularly ask for raises (FYI, if you’re doing Step Three, asking for and getting a raise becomes a whole lot easier).
- Ask for promotions when available (these usually include a decent salary bump).
- Network regularly with people both inside and outside the company. Some of these interactions will help you discover opportunities for advancement.
- Consider moving companies. This can be a good strategy since many of the biggest increases in both pay and responsibility can be found with a company shift — especially if you’re moving from one of the companies listed in Step Two.
The main point I want to emphasize here is you can’t allow your career to be on auto-pilot. If you do, you’ll get auto-pilot raises and auto-pilot opportunities, and you’ll severely limit your chances for making the big bucks. But if you work at it, you can get regular, meaningful salary increases — something that’s even more important than starting with a high starting salary.
Step five: Have some luck
I hate that this is on the list, but I have to be honest: Luck is a factor in the success of your career. The reason I hate it is that it’s the one tip you can influence the least (if at all). Sure, you can try to make your own luck by putting yourself in the right situations, accepting the right jobs, selecting the best employers and so on, but ultimately, much of life and the results of work are out of your hands.
All I can suggest here is to look at all the pros and cons of a job change, promotion, business situation, etc. and consider them carefully — trying to maximize the number of events where luck is in your favor and minimizing the ones where you get bad luck. Also learn to ride good luck as long as you can and cut your losses as quickly as possible when bad luck shows up.
Conclusion
That’s it. Those are the five steps I used to grow my income to six figures in seven years, and they’re the same tips that have helped me maintain my income growth past that point. I can’t guarantee that they’ll get you to six figures in seven years, but I can say that if you apply them to your career, I’m pretty confident that your income will grow much faster than it would have if you had not applied them.
Some of you may be thinking “That’s great advice — I wish I had it 20 years ago.” In other words, you’re past the point where a few of these steps work, so what can you do now to increase your income? My suggestion is to get into the process above at the earliest possible step.
For example, if you think it’s worth it and you have the time and money, consider going back to school (step one) to get a new/better degree. If this isn’t a possibility or not very practical, start networking your way into a name-brand company (step two). And if this isn’t feasible, everyone can at least start with step three no matter where they are in their career.
The later you jump into the process, the less impact it’s likely to have on the goal of reaching six figures. However, applying even just the latter steps (especially three and four) will allow you to grow your income far more than it would if simply left to drift on its own.
Step photo by Lazurite. Graduation photo by Eralon. Clover photo by Cygnus921.
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That’s an interesting line of thinking — one I hadn’t thought of — but it certainly makes sense.
GE Miller –
I was going to answer your questions, but Dude and Eugenia took all my answers! (Good going, Dude and Eugenia! And thanks.)
Financial Samurai –
Do you have any data that says 6% is low? I’d love to see it. I’ve linked to what I could find on salaries, but would be willing to review anything you might find to the contrary.
Sarah K –
Ha! I’m already at mid-life, don’t want a Porsche, love my work, have a wonderful family, and don’t really need/want anything else in life.
Why assume that six-figures = misery?
David –
Exactly! Thanks for clarifying it for us in one simple thought.
Andy –
I hit $100k when I was 30. I’m much older now and started my blog four years ago and was well into six figures by that time.
Your income guess is close — though a bit low for the past few years.
Mike Hunt –
Thanks! Good to see you over here too!
Interesting net worth question. I have a bit of an unusual situation (or spin on the question if you prefer) regarding it that would probably be a post in and of itself. Maybe I’ll write about it in the future.
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Inspiring post. Crystal-clear guidance to hang over our beds and look at regularly.
Unusually interesting discussion in the comments, too. Some good points from all sides.
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I think the biggest gain with a high-income career is OPTIONS. Take housing, for example. A larger income qualifies you for larger mortgages, which in turn makes a greater percentage of homes in your area available to you. Or you could forgo the mortgage and pay cash for a foreclosure or fixer-upper. Or you could opt out of home ownership altogether and rent a house/apartment/condo/whatever meets your lifestyle needs.
You could buy prepared meals at Whole Foods to your heart’s content, or you could clip coupons and buy nothing but staple groceries as Super Wal-Mart.
You could take a sabbatical or two from work, as Eugenia is planning to do … or you could just keep on truckin’ in to work every day, if your job energizes and refreshes you.
Someone with a lower income might not have as many choices about where to live, where to shop, and how much wage-earning work to do in order to keep themselves afloat.
Financial security is also an option with a high income — it’s not a given. It’s certainly possible to have six-figure earnings with seven-figure spending habits.
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@bon, love the comments!
@FMF, I totally agree with you. I tell people to get a good degree in a specialty that pays well, sciences, engineering, or last resort business. If you aren’t sure, do a double major or a minor in another area you love, but make sure you haven’t spent 4 years in college without having a degree with significant earnings potential. Many people start the family the love and realize they need to make a decent salary to take care of that family. Having a good income can really help you help your family. I’m also pretty sure that you can use these skills to be successful in all different types of industries, doing something you really enjoy.
One of the big take aways from this was constantly be looking for the next job, it can help you get raises. If someone is going to offer you a job, they have to pay you more than your current job. And once you have a job offer, you can ask your current boss to match it. Its alot easier to ask for a raise when you have a confirmed job offer for $10K more, and your company will have to decide how valuable you are. I love this idea!
For those that are negative, be careful about how you address things in life. Negativity breeds negativity. You can march to a different drum and still be positive in your thoughts about others (many posters did exactly that here). The author didn’t mention being dishonest or doing other immoral activities to get ahead, basically he said work hard and plan your career.
There are lots of ways to make $100K, I make 100k as a military officer. Its hard work, but rewarding and exciting. And having a great retirement will allow me to try a second career that I love!
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Jeff –
Just wanted to say thank you for your service to our country. To do something as noble as that while also making six figures must really be a blessing.
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@ Mike Hunt
nope, that’s not me.
What’s Allied Signal?
I haven’t gotten to my 1st 100k yet, due to a combination of the nosedive the economy took, and a few tough life situations (messy break-up, serious illness). I’m finally back on track. Unless the economy tanks again, I’m on track to make 100k before I hit 32.
I agree w/bon about how specializing can be really helpful. I think it pays to either become very specialized, or because a very evenly-talented generalizer, someone who can pull together a lot of specializers & know how to best have them work well together.
I ended up being a specializer & got into some extra-specialized work, sweaters, underwear & swim. Both take a lot of specialized skills to be good at. If I look into freelancing, I’ll be able to make a higher wage, because I know how to deal with those more difficult categories.
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I’ve read through these comments, mostly negative, some positive. I believe I’m more in line with Tyler in my beliefs.
One career path to 100K I have not seen discussed is working for the federal government. It is well known that the federal government bureaucrats are old and gray. Some 60% of the federal government will be eligible to retire within a few short years. This opens up advancement opportunities quickly.
In 2003 I graduated college with a Bachelor’s in Economics. I came to DC and began with the Department of Justice making about 33,000. Because a government job has a mandated ceiling of 40 hours worked per week, and the job tends to not be very stressful, you have a good bit of free time. I was able to go get my Master’s in Economics from a local university (DC has many good ones) while working (I often studied in my office). With good performance you are moved up pay grades, and as a junior statistician I went from 33K to 45K in 2.5 years. After I got my Master’s, I applied for several economist jobs in the government. One I got, moving my salary to about 75K. I’ve been in that job for three years, been promoted twice, and now make over 100K. I work 40 hours a week, I have little trouble commuting, actually enjoy my job, and I’m able to go to school at night and am into my 3rd year of my PhD in Economics, which the government is helping to pay for.
I write specifically about my example because many commentators appear to think that the road to 100K is stressful, in a bad job, or in a rat race, or something. My path was relatively easy, quick, and enjoyable. I like what I do. I’m pretty autonomous at my job (I really don’t have a boss).
It might seem counter-intuitive, but moving into the government, who pays for education and training more frequently than private employers, may be a faster path to getting rich.
Maybe it is lucky that I enjoy math and statistics and economics. But I figured out what I liked to do, designed a work path around it, and then took off. One big thing that helped me was that I was ALWAYS OPEN TO OPPORTUNITIES. Indeed, it was a random opportunity (meeting) that provided me the big jump after my Master’s.
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You gave the best advice for students, to get a high earning degree–not some degree that has very limited value as an entryway to business!
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The key point is to choose a marketable degree in college. Study math and science. People who do well in math are not broke. Stop whining that math is hard, overcome this challenge and be better than everyone else at it.
The naysayers in the above posts will unlikely ever make it to 6 figures because of ATTITUDE. You do not have to be a white male to succeed. Change the attitude. Expect to rule the world when you begin your career.
Work had before you have a family and then scale back and enjoy them. I am well into 6 figures with my part time work, and I am not a white male. I work around my family time. Going to t-ball games, x-mas plays, and weekend getaways are more important than work.
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I like the overall theme of this article. I’ve recently crested six figures in base salary (although with bonuses I got there sooner) and I really have to agree with many of the points mentioned especially the “work hard” one. You will need to over deliver on goals and projects to get recognized.
Overall, though, probably the most important thing is having a “git er done” attitude. Everyone likely works with someone who is absolutely satisfied with the status quo — and for whom change is HARD. Anything new is IMPOSSIBLE and everything needs to be FULLY DOCUMENTED with WRITTEN PROCEDURES. They will invariably bitch and moan about THAT PERSON WHO BREAKS THE RULES and DOESN’T DO THINGS THE RIGHT WAY. It’s highly likely you want to emulate the person the status quo people bitch and moan about — because they are likely the ones who take calculated risks and are willing to actually do something about out-of-date procedures, business practices and so on. Businesses that fail to adapt to change are not in business for long — so being the person that shows up looking for a better way to do things (and actually does them) is a GREAT way to get ahead. And hey, if you get fired, then go to work for the competitor
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Also, there is definitely something to be said for getting that industry internship going early on in the college years. If you wheedle your way into an internship in the freshman year timeframe you can emerge from college with 3-4 years of expereince, and that looks GREAT on a resume. Barring the ability to get an intership, volunteering to work on something related can get the networking going early. For programmers, many, many Open Source projects need testers, doc writers, coders, etc. For engineering, volunteer for science fairs, youth activities, etc. For business, look up Junior Achievement and other civic organizations. I’m sure there are analogues for other organizations, as well.
Also, I’ll add in a note about “leadership”. Leadership skills are absolutely critical to success in an organization. So is credibility. Read up on some leadership books (I really like the excellent “The Leadership Challenge”) and start practicing good leadership TODAY. I doin’t care if you are the geekiest shut-in engineer in the world who still lives in your mother’s basement — at some point, people are going to see you as “the person who knows this best” — which makes you a LEADER. You need to know how to handle it if you want to succeed.
I’ll also echo that math, science and engineering are careers that do lend themselves to high earner status. Also law and medicine. Of course, high earner does not equate to “wealthy”, so I would encourage anyone who wants to earn a six figure income to take a quick read of “The Millionaire Next Door” for a great look at how to manage that income.
I also work a “regular” 40-50 hour workweek. I rarely travel (one week a year at most) and I do see my family at night and on the weekends. I don’t carry a blackberry or feel “on call” for work 24/7. Very occasionally I need to work late or on a weekend (I’m in IT and shutdowns happen off business hours — we typically do 1-2 a year) So six figure income most definitely does not imply being a slave to the workplace. But it does mean that you perform services someone is willing to pay for.
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Has anybody had the rude awakening that $100K does not go as far in real life as it seemed in university? When I was was 22, I set the goal to make six figures by the time I was 30. I became obsessed about it, had definite setbacks, but reached the goal when I was 29. I imagined nice suits, a nice house, and a BMW in the driveway.
The reality is that the house is very modest, needs work, and even on $100K will take a decade to pay off. A car, any car, is not even in the equation, the suits are cheap and three years old, and dinner out is a monthly occurrence at best. Between $30K going to taxes, trying to pay off the house in ten years, maxing out retirement funds, an education savings plan for my newborn, and putting $500 in savings with every biweekly paycheck, there really is is very little disposable income left at the end of the day.
Anyways, I suppose this is how one gets rich slowly…
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@The Beagle — welcome to the world of wealth-building and being responsible (to some extent). However, YOU set the goal to pay off the house, YOU set the goal to save $1000/month, YOU chose to max out the retirement funds and YOU chose to fund education savings for your child.
Most people don’t do that. Quite honestly it sounds like you set financial goals that no longer align with your life, which has changed. Perhaps it’s time to re-evaluate where you are going and what you are doing and see is those choices still make sense.
Understand this isn’t an attack — it’s coming from another goal-setter who will set a goal or plan in motion and then do everything possible to achieve that goal with single-minded determination and who needs a kick in the rear every so often to get the “big picture” — and that usually comes from my wife
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Thanks Jason @110. You eloquently summarized all the worst memories of my brief experience in the corporate world. Aaagh. WRITTEN PROCEDURES. Your advice would have been really welcome to me at the time. I’ll look up that book about leadership.
To gotitall @109. I think maybe a little bit of math can be most useful to people who aren’t interested in it or will even have trouble with it. Do you think that’s possible?
I did my PhD in math and it doesn’t feel like it’s made me any more useful, but maybe I lack the talents and confidence that other people developed when they weren’t studying mathematics.
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I enjoyed your take on getting to “six-figures” and applaud anyone who gets there. But I have to say that college and career building have always been, to me, sort of a backwards approach to making money. Career is important. Making good money is important too. But if you make a lot of money but lack the knowledge of how to spend it efficiently, and invest it wisely, you really don’t accomplish anything beyond a vicious cycle. If you think that making money only comes from a job, you’re missing the hidden value of every dollar that ever comes into your hands.
I’ve known people who make six-figures who couldn’t afford to retire, and I’ve met one person who made $30,000 a year who retired early and actually was a millionaire at retirement. No college. No inheritance. No lottery win. Just smart spending and wise investing.
We focus far too much on how much we make and not near enough on what we do with what we make, and so we keep falling into this notion that you have to make a lot of money to have a lot of money. It’s simply not true at all.
Look at, for example, all the athletes who have ever died broke, even making multi-million dollar salaries over the course of their careers.
Ergo the old adage; it’s not what you make, it’s what you do with what you make.
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@Jane — thanks. Don’t get me wrong, there is a proper place for procedures and documentation in an organization. The problems come when the procedures, policies and documentation take on a life of their own and become obstacles in the path of innovation and change.
Incidentally, I work for a company that would not exist without mathematics, so the way I feed my family comes right from the efforts of a lot of bright people who know a lot about math, science and engineering!
“Mathematics is the queen of the sciences” – Gauss
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@Jason, Yes – my problem with procedures was that they were the only training I received – step-by-step instructions – and I wasn’t allowed to change the steps.
If I asked my boss why we did something a particular way, because sometimes it didn’t make sense to me, he’d say that was how the procedure was written when he started and he thought it best not to change it. So it was just like you said, I think.
(No-one even seemed to know what they were doing!)
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@ LittleHouse (#84):
My brother and many of my family’s friends are teachers, and love their work. I (and they) do wish their financial compensation were better.
I do hope, though (if you are in fact a teacher yourself), that that was a typo in your post, and that you know the difference between the plural form of “teacher” and the possessive. If it was not a typo — yikes. One more nail in the coffin for bare-minimum grammar standards in the United States.
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One thing I’ve found curious is how many people knock working in Corporate America, & turn around & exault working for yourself as the answer.
Not to knock those that have done so (because I agree with, and hope to get back into, entrepreneurship), but because Hard Work is HARD WORK whether you’re doing it for The Man or yourself.
Working for Corp America, I don’t have to wear as many hats as I would, if I worked for myself. I have a steady income stream. I don’t have to pay ALL of my social security. My health insurance is MUCH cheaper.
If you made 100k gross for yourself vs for Corp America, you’d have a lot less money left over, using the DIY option.
I don’t say any of this to dissuade anyone from working for themselves. I think a lot of people go into entrepreneurship with their eyes half-closed to the difficulties.
And I should know – I originally had a small business for myself, that failed utterly, before I got into what I do now. The 1st time around, I was too young, and it was a “you don’t know what you don’t know, because you don’t know it” sort of situation.
Spending a few years, even ONE year in any kind of management position…if you try to squeeze every bit of learning out of that, it can apply to so many other types of businesses, in realizing what you need to do, to make a business successful.
Back on the topic of making 100k though – even if you’re doing it in Corp America, paying attention to what other departments do can reap huge rewards. It makes you look like a much more forward thinker, which is good for moving up in the ranks. Also, if you spend time on voluntary committees to improve how the company works, that can be a huge bonus in the eyes of the higher-ups, and give you oppurtunities that you wouldn’t otherwise get.
When one of the VPs of my last company left for greener pasteurs, he was impressed enough with my cross-functional work to court me at his next place of employment, which is how I got to the job I’m at today. We both benefitted – he gave me a great deal, because he *knew* he was getting a great person, and wanted to me to happy & stay there. I got a 5k signing bonus & ended up in a better working environment, because I knew that this guy was somebody who was good to work for.
And it doesn’t take brown-nosing to get there. As I’ve moved up, that’s another thing I’ve realized. A lot of high-level (not all, but a lot) do see through the brown-nosing. They might not point it out publicly (which is embarassing for all involved), but they know about it, & it doesn’t do the brown-noser any favors in the long-term.
That’s not everybody, mind you. Just in my experience, most brown-nosers *might* get a little ahead in the short-term, but long-term, they stall themselves out because of it.
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This lost me on step one, because it doesn’t address how, say, a 30-something with two kids is supposed to go about obtaining a degree from a good school. You can’t do it over the net. You can’t do it with just night classes. You can’t quit your job and feed your kids on student loans.
This is an article for kids, not everyone. For kids, it’s got some good common sense advice.
As for those who don’t want to believe luck has anything to do with it, I don’t think anyone was arguing that without ginormous lottery-winning sized good fortune, you won’t make it. They’re just acknowledging the fact that sometimes the field you’re getting a degree in dries up and blows away suddenly during your last semester of college. Sometimes you get hit by a bus and make a painful three year recovery where you can’t work at all and fall behind your colleagues. Where you make your own luck is in determining that you’re going to find an opportunity within whatever happens to you, disaster or blessing, because then you usually do figure something out eventually, and you put off a positive attitude that makes people more likely to want to help you.
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On first read I missed the bit saying “the seven years noted in the title are post-college”
That makes the $100k goal a lot more attainable in 7 years. I first thought the 7 years included college.
I’m kinda surprised at the negative reaction in many of the comments. These are proven steps that work. That doesn’t mean that it is what everyone should do or that everyone would enjoy it.
I make 100k and I work 40 hours a week. High salary doesn’t require working yourself to death. There are certainly high paid people who do work long hours but its not mandatory for every job.
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@Jen — You start off with your problem and finish with your solution. Many, many people get degrees who have kids. They do night, weekend and online courses. Both my wife and I have received advanced degrees at night or on weekends. Their spouse watches the kids while they are in class. If they don’t have a spouse, their parents or siblings pitch in. If they don’t have parents or a spouse, their friends pitch in. Or they get a sitter.
If you really want that degree, you can make it happen. Just like you make the other things happen in your life that you want to happen.
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Jason, please re-read my comment and note that I said “good school”, which is what the author said. A “good school”, according to employers who care where you got your degree, is a standard 4 year school designed for people who have nothing to be doing but going to school. Sure, you can get “a” degree at any point in life, but what the author is suggesting is not University of Phoenix, and therefore it’s not going to be in everyone’s reach.
Also please remember that not everyone lives near a college that would be considered a “good school” and may not have any way of making ends meet if they suddenly relocate their family closer to a college town to accommodate their plans.
Note too that I am not saying there is NO way for a 30-something with two kids to achieve six figures. I just dispute the author’s claim that THIS method will work for anyone. It will work for some people, and that’s great. But no one method works for everybody. Life would be so incredibly boring if it were that simple.
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There are many 4 year universities that offer traditional degrees through online/distance learning. Some of them are actually “good”, too. In-State pubic universities with this option are pretty much free. This is the 21st Century. Maybe you need to do some research rather than defeating yourself from the outset.
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Hi FMF – All I’m saying is that 6% seems low for the number of working Americans making over 100k.
There are over 100 posts here, and it looks like 20-25 people claim they make over 100k. Just saying, I think there’s much more wealth out there than we think.
I wrote about it on FS where policemen, firemen, longshoremen make over 100K, and that’s not even from work. It’s from their pensions! The article is entitled “Fortunes, Fortunes, Everywhere.” Maybe I’ll just repost it, b/c this topic of how much people make seems like it’s quite debatable.
I have a feeling it’s b/c the economy has returned and a lot more people are making more money. The people who are making over 100K downplay the amount of people who make over 100k, b/c that dilutes their stature. Just my theory.
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It’s good if you know exactly what you want to do before college however most people do not. In saying this there are a few good points to take in. Basically you just need to be a good performer with a good attitude and your on your way which most people I think know about.
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Maybe you need to do some research rather than defeating yourself from the outset.
This coming from someone who immediately assumed I was describing my own situation rather than a hypothetical?
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I was pretty excited when I read the title of the article only to find out that the article only refers to making 6 figures through a J-O-B…
Which as you all know is probably the highest taxed way of making 6 figures therefore probably not making it 6 figures.
Plus, contrary to making 6 figures through your own business, can be taken away from you in a snap!
More surprising is that it is hosted on a blog where the owner probably started making 6 figures after leaving his J-O-B…go figure.
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LM, good point. Who are you exactly referring to in the end, FMF leaving his 6 figure job or JD? FMF right?
I think FMF rocks, especially since he donates all his blog rev to charity!
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Good points. Although, through a series of chain of events I was able to hit the six figure mark. Hard work and longevity with a company do go along way.
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Great article! I just would like to add one point. While planning your carrier it is necessary to understand economic conditions. Personally, I’ve lost my chance while markets booming all around and stay with previous company without receiving significant bonuses (like for many other firms). Today, situation significantly changed and now the questions is – to survive rather than increase you wealth. But market will back and some companies will grow faster than other – do not lose your chance to be with that employees!
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@Financial Samurai –
The approx 6% who make 100,000 is referring to AGI, I believe. So there are probably some more people who make more but then get knocked into a lower bracket from write offs.
But I don’t think the % is as high as you are expecting. $100,000+ individual AGI is a lot of money. People who say otherwise need a reality check.
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Just as a data point, I’ve loosely followed these steps, and have done reasonably well with them.
1) Get a high-earning degree from a good school: I got a Computer Science degree from an above-average state college (though not top tier, and certainly not ivy league), in 2002. Thanks to always working part-time while in school and living off-campus, I graduated with no debt.
Comp. Sci., while not as hard as something like chemical engineering, was a much tougher degree than business, education, or communications, and the jobs paid accordingly. It may not be what I love, but I don’t mind it, I’m pretty good at it, and it pays the bills better than teaching (which might be my “ideal job if money didn’t matter”, but I guess we’ll never know).
2) Work for a name-brand employer at your first job: My first job after graduation was with the largest company in my industry, which has a great reputation, both now and back then. They recruited at my college, which is how I got the job. I started at $53,000 in 2002, slightly above average for my degree at the time.
3) Perform: I worked my butt off — sometimes in quantity, always in quality — and in a year was being assigned the same level work as engineers 5-10 years senior to me.
One thing I learned is that performance is just as subject to perception and context as anything else: I had to work harder when next to the young go-getters (of which I was one), but not quite so hard when next to the middle-aged slackers — but still, always do at least a “good” job, if not a great job.
4) Manage career aggressively: OK, so I wasn’t so good about this one at first. Big companies make this difficult, as they have fairly ironclad policies regarding raises and promotions, and people who argue are labeled as troublemakers.
I did, however, change jobs in early 2006 (for a nice pay bump, and freedom bump) to a smaller, though still large and reputable company, where I’ve since been able to earn an excellent reputation with management and customers, to get 4-figure bonuses every year, and to achieve multiple promotions.
5) Have some luck: Luck always plays a role, like it or not.
Good Luck: My resume was light on relevant work experience, so I was actually wait-listed for that first job at the big company — they literally called me the day before the interview because someone else had canceled. (Note to college students: get jobs or internships /in your field/ whenever possible, it’s never too early.)
Back Luck: I was passed over for promotion there because my boss’ /other/ project failed and my team was caught in the crossfire. This, and because I was really bored, is why I left. (One regret about leaving: the big company had a solid pension, which I was not vested in and lost. I probably should have tried transferring to other departments before leaving the company entirely, or at least stuck it out until the 5-year vesting point.)
Good Luck: One of my two recent promotions at my current job was basically due to someone else leaving.
Good or bad, luck plays a role — which is not to say that you shouldn’t be proactive, because you should. But also realize that some events are beyond your control.
Today I make /just/ under $100,000 in base salary. But I do make the cut if you count bonuses, plus I have pretty good benefits (4 weeks/year vacation, flex time, good medical, etc).
It can work.
My only real regret is that I focused a lot on my “job” rather than my “career”, and I’m currently lagging behind in things like getting my master’s degree, a few professional certifications, etc, which will all help me significantly in the long run.
But hopefully I’ll get my PMP this Spring and enroll in a master’s program next Fall, and begin to reverse that trend.
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It seems that 5% is very low – check out the states from 2007:
http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/index.html
Granted, they are 2007 but I be it won’t be that far off
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Just for the record, I am a 27 year old minority female who makes 90K a year (plus a 5% 401K matching bonus and a performance bonus every year).
I would be making 100K a year base but I took longer than 3 months off for my maternity leave after I had a baby AND I had several complications with my pregnancy which precluded me from working (both of which knocked me out of competition for a promotion).
I work 40 hours a week. Period. I do not do OT and my employer has never asked me to.
I have great benefits. I get 4 weeks vacation and 2 weeks sick time off a year.
I hardly ever travel for work.
I love my job. I have a degree in computer science, and I work as a development team lead.
My husband, a white male, makes 125K a year. He is 29 years old. He rarely has to travel. He picks up our daughter from daycare every day at 4pm and brings her home to play with her. Recently, my daughter was ill so he called his boss and told him the situation. He was supposed to be flying out the next day with his boss. His boss told him to stay home with the baby and not to worry about it.
There is a work life balance that needs to be maintained in every job, but it is possible to do this with jobs making over 100K. (In my case, close to 100K). My husband and I are proof of this.
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Job hopping is how I’ve managed to get close to 100K. I started in my field in 2004 making 45K, in 2009 I’m making 80K doing the same work because I changed companies and got big pay bumps each time. In one case, I was with a company for only 6 months before moving on to get a 25% increase in pay. I’ve only been given 2 raises in this time (both at my first job) and 0 promotions during this time.
45K -> 60K ( 33% pay increase)
60K – > 75K ( 25% pay incrase)
75K -> 80K ( 6.67% pay increase)
Total pay increase from 2004 -> 2009: 77.78%
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Look at the name/point of this website…it makes sense that there would a higher proportion of 100k+ people here. People that make that much money generally do so deliberately, I think. They actively look for ways to increase their income, which is what would bring them to a site like this in the first place.
Another thing, and this something I think I’ve noticed to be true, but it could just depend on the people that I know…it seems like the lower-earning people I know spend far less time online than the high-earning people. I think some of that has to do with the fact that many of the high-earners I know have desk jobs that give them more time to surf, but it also seems to me that a lot of the low-earners don’t have the interest, or curiosity, or time to be online & utilize the internet the same way higher-earners do.
This is just an observation, and could be inaccurate. But it has seemed to be true from what I’ve observed of friends at different income brackets.
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Looks like 6% is about right:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_income_in_the_United_States
And the part about being white certainly seems to have statistical validity, but obviously there are many exceptions.
I majored in History and worked as a freelancer in a creative field for many years, maxing out at $55K a year (which felt like a fortune!). I actually made a goal to make over $100K and have a better lifestyle by getting a top 5 MBA. It paid off ridiculously well – three years later and I’m at over $200K.
Of course you have to enjoy what you’re doing, but I discovered that most people who get MBAs are actually very, very happy about 10 years + out. It’s a flexible degree, and as another poster said, knowing a little bit of math is priceless. I’m a verbal/creative person at heart, which is also priceless in corp america where seeing the big picture is in short supply. Writing lucid emails is also a very important skill.
Great post, though of course there are many roads.
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Wow did you study my career and write a blog post about it? Spot on!
1. Degree in Aerospace Engineering from a very good college. #1 in this degree area. No rich parents paying the way. I was private student loans in my name only all the way.
2. Got a job with Lockheed Martin (ever heard of them?) straight out of school making around $50k base. Got my job by submitting my resume at a job fair on campus where they were recruiting heavily.
3. Yearly performance review ratings of 5 my first two years (out of 5, 5 being the highest). Got a 16% raise my first year (unheard of), 4% the next year (highest of my peers… yes we tell each other our raises).
4. After being promised a promotion (that would also bring a big pay bump) for more than a year. I switched companies. Switching companies was all it took to go from making $60k to $120k. (Yes, double). I got the job at the second company from someone who had worked with me at my first job and saw how high my performance level was. It also didn’t hurt that we had shared several beers after work together with other high performers (aka networking). My first 100k+ year of earnings was my third year out of college at the age of 24. I have gotten TWO $5/hour raises since I’ve been here (in 2 years) and that’s because I’ve asked for them. Both times they were telling me yes before I managed to even get the question out of my mouth. Makes me think I should ask for another one right now…
5. The “lucky” part that was out of my hands was the timing of my graduation which happened to coincide with a serious lack in availability of aerospace engineers in the career path I chose. Although I did do a fair amount of research into the future demand estimates in my field before I went into it so take that as lucky if you want to.
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I seem to have followed steps One and Two (I have a BS in Physics from Tulane and an MSCE specialized in Coastal Engineering from Louisiana State University), by chance (not accident in that they are good decisions by any book). I am working hard on step 3, which is the hardest step of the three, and I’ve been remaining 100% billable at a time when the engineering industry has no work. Nevertheless, it can be quite difficult to excel in a sluggish economy when one isn’t allowed to pursue more than is expected (the extra work should go to the other good workers who happen to be slow). This begs the question, how do I know when it is time to engage step four and look for a new job?
P.S. Step five of having luck, can be helped a little by networking alot. I don’t just network with individuals in my career field though. I make sure that the movers and shakers, the big earners, the power players in my city know who I am even though I’m not in the same profession as 99% of them.
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I like the overall theme of this article. I’ve recently crested six figures in base salary (although with bonuses I got there sooner) and I really have to agree with many of the points mentioned especially the “work hard” one. You will need to over deliver on goals and projects to get recognized.
Overall, though, probably the most important thing is having a “git er done” attitude. Everyone likely works with someone who is absolutely satisfied with the status quo — and for whom change is HARD. Anything new is IMPOSSIBLE and everything needs to be FULLY DOCUMENTED with WRITTEN PROCEDURES. They will invariably bitch and moan about THAT PERSON WHO BREAKS THE RULES and DOESN’T DO THINGS THE RIGHT WAY. It’s highly likely you want to emulate the person the status quo people bitch and moan about — because they are likely the ones who take calculated risks and are willing to actually do something about out-of-date procedures, business practices and so on. Businesses that fail to adapt to change are not in business for long — so being the person that shows up looking for a better way to do things (and actually does them) is a GREAT way to get ahead. And hey, if you get fired, then go to work for the competitor
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Also, there is definitely something to be said for getting that industry internship going early on in the college years. If you wheedle your way into an internship in the freshman year timeframe you can emerge from college with 3-4 years of expereince, and that looks GREAT on a resume. Barring the ability to get an intership, volunteering to work on something related can get the networking going early. For programmers, many, many Open Source projects need testers, doc writers, coders, etc. For engineering, volunteer for science fairs, youth activities, etc. For business, look up Junior Achievement and other civic organizations. I’m sure there are analogues for other organizations, as well.
Also, I’ll add in a note about “leadership”. Leadership skills are absolutely critical to success in an organization. So is credibility. Read up on some leadership books (I really like the excellent “The Leadership Challenge”) and start practicing good leadership TODAY. I doin’t care if you are the geekiest shut-in engineer in the world who still lives in your mother’s basement — at some point, people are going to see you as “the person who knows this best” — which makes you a LEADER. You need to know how to handle it if you want to succeed.
I’ll also echo that math, science and engineering are careers that do lend themselves to high earner status. Also law and medicine. Of course, high earner does not equate to “wealthy”, so I would encourage anyone who wants to earn a six figure income to take a quick read of “The Millionaire Next Door” for a great look at how to manage that income.
I also work a “regular” 40-50 hour workweek. I rarely travel (one week a year at most) and I do see my family at night and on the weekends. I don’t carry a blackberry or feel “on call” for work 24/7. Very occasionally I need to work late or on a weekend (I’m in IT and shutdowns happen off business hours — we typically do 1-2 a year) So six figure income most definitely does not imply being a slave to the workplace. But it does mean that you perform services someone is willing to pay for.
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