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bYuPride
08-22-2007, 05:00 PM
what would you say a good salary for a 26 year old graduate from SLCC should be...

MikeWaters
08-22-2007, 05:04 PM
doing what?

bYuPride
08-22-2007, 05:32 PM
doing what?

bank branch manager... i guess my question is more of what most 26 year olds might be making with a 2 year degree (which is worth nothing of course).. I have friends who have completed their 4 year degrees a few years ago and none are making over 40k..

MikeWaters
08-22-2007, 05:33 PM
did you try salary.com ?

I have no info on bank managers.

Clark Addison
08-22-2007, 05:45 PM
Salaries for Bank Branch Managers can vary widely depending on a lot of things, but with that experience and education, I would probably put it somewhere in the 25K to 35K range.

bYuPride
08-22-2007, 08:25 PM
did you try salary.com ?

I have no info on bank managers.

I did salary.com... you have to type in branch manager.. if it's correct, then i'm in a fair deal. nothing amazing, but it's nice knowing i'm not getting low balled.

bYuPride
08-22-2007, 08:37 PM
Salaries for Bank Branch Managers can vary widely depending on a lot of things, but with that experience and education, I would probably put it somewhere in the 25K to 35K range.

3 years experience as a teller, junior banker, personal banker and business specialist at wells fargo can get you a branch manager position at keybank. oh and did i mention an awesome associates degree in general studies from Salt Lake Community College?

a personal banker at wells working your way up from teller makes 29k. coming from the outside a PB makes about 33k. a branch manager one working their way up at wells fargo makes less than 40k... it goes up as you become a branch manager 2 and 3... usually capping out a 50k base and then there are annual increases of about 3 or 4%... you make more money jumping to a different financial institution. i was probably 3 years or so away from branch manager at wells with the way they do things.

NorCal Cat
09-13-2007, 06:22 PM
Salaries for Bank Branch Managers can vary widely depending on a lot of things, but with that experience and education, I would probably put it somewhere in the 25K to 35K range.

What? 25K?! In-n-Out pays about that much for flipping burgers.

Clark Addison
09-13-2007, 06:38 PM
What? 25K?! In-n-Out pays about that much for flipping burgers.

25K is right about $12/hour. That's pretty good for flipping burgers, isn't it? For a bank manager, I think it's on the low end, but for a small branch of a small bank, it is in the ballpark, I believe. I'm not positive, I work for a bank, but not on the retail side. Bank Managers generally get paid less than I thought they did before I came here (of course, if you are experienced, in a large branch, you can do OK).

NorCal Cat
09-13-2007, 06:45 PM
25K is right about $12/hour. That's pretty good for flipping burgers, isn't it?

Yeah, good for flipping burgers, crap for a branch manager. I guess you can live off 25K in some places though....somewhere out there.

NorCal Cat
09-13-2007, 06:47 PM
bank branch manager... i guess my question is more of what most 26 year olds might be making with a 2 year degree (which is worth nothing of course).. I have friends who have completed their 4 year degrees a few years ago and none are making over 40k..

Really? Wow, is the pay level really that low in SLC?

Our starting salary for a new college grad is over 40K.

cougjunkie
09-13-2007, 06:50 PM
Really? Wow, is the pay level really that low in SLC?

Our starting salary for a new college grad is over 40K.

40k goes a lot further in SLC than it does in California.

Surfah
09-13-2007, 09:48 PM
Salaries in Utah do suck. Before moving back to Utah last year I interviewed for several positions with various builders here. I had 3 offers and they were laughable. One was 25K less than my base salary in Virginia. When I asked if there was a bonus program where I could make up some of the cut in pay I would be facing they said their bonus program maxed out at $1500 a quarter. I could reasonably make that type of bonus on each home I closed. I closed 50 homes that year. The other two offers weren't much better and none eclipsed $45K a year.

That's when I decided to go to work for myself if I were going to move back here to Utah.

bYuPride
09-13-2007, 10:28 PM
Salaries in Utah do suck. Before moving back to Utah last year I interviewed for several positions with various builders here. I had 3 offers and they were laughable. One was 25K less than my base salary in Virginia. When I asked if there was a bonus program where I could make up some of the cut in pay I would be facing they said their bonus program maxed out at $1500 a quarter. I could reasonably make that type of bonus on each home I closed. I closed 50 homes that year. The other two offers weren't much better and none eclipsed $45K a year.

That's when I decided to go to work for myself if I were going to move back here to Utah.

what do you do?

YOhio
09-13-2007, 10:42 PM
40k goes a lot further in SLC than it does in California.

40K in Utah still isn't a lot of money. Cost of living in Utah seems to be steadily rising. A starter home in Santaquin is now in the low 200's.

That's one of the main reasons I like Ohio. I have no data to back this up, but it has to be one of the most affordable places to live in America.

Surfah
09-13-2007, 11:30 PM
what do you do?

I was a construction manager/superintendent (each builder has a different title). I was offered by Destination Homes and Fieldstone and one other local/regional builder though I can't remember.

I started my own development company working on the commercial side of things now. It's less volatile and speculative than residential in my opinion. At least right now.

SteelBlue
09-13-2007, 11:42 PM
25K is right about $12/hour. That's pretty good for flipping burgers, isn't it? For a bank manager, I think it's on the low end, but for a small branch of a small bank, it is in the ballpark, I believe. I'm not positive, I work for a bank, but not on the retail side. Bank Managers generally get paid less than I thought they did before I came here (of course, if you are experienced, in a large branch, you can do OK).

In-n-out really does pay about that much.

Surfah
09-13-2007, 11:52 PM
In-n-out really does pay about that much.

True. I have some friends, a married couple actually who both work there full-time and can afford to live in Valencia, CA on their combined salaries.

RockyBalboa
09-28-2007, 11:19 PM
25K is right about $12/hour. That's pretty good for flipping burgers, isn't it? For a bank manager, I think it's on the low end, but for a small branch of a small bank, it is in the ballpark, I believe. I'm not positive, I work for a bank, but not on the retail side. Bank Managers generally get paid less than I thought they did before I came here (of course, if you are experienced, in a large branch, you can do OK).

Managers of In n Out make over 100K.