I’ve been in my current job for going on 9 years. For most of that time, I’ve loved the job and the company. I’ve been promoted once and feel like I’m compensated fairly. I’d like to advance and take on some new challenges, but I’m also not incredibly ambitious in that way or driven by title or the number of people that report to me, which is good, because there is a log jam at the top and very little room for advancement in my org. While I’d love to take over my boss’s role and believe I could kill that job, that’s not happening unless he moves up or on, and there’s no clear path forward for that to happen. All that aside, for most of my time here, I could never imagine working anywhere else, and I felt this would be a place I’d eventually retire from.
But things started to change over the past few years. We got a new CEO just before the pandemic, a hire that was external to the company. He never seemed like a natural fit, but because of the timing and all the issues with the pandemic, I think most were willing to give him a pass and a pretty long leash. But, now, 3 years or so into his tenure, things are not looking good. Our stock price has dropped 45% from its most recent peak, and the morale in the company is abysmal. All vestiges of the former leadership team are pretty much gone, and there is little to no confidence in the senior leaders that are currently in place. To many both inside and outside the company, it feels like the company has lost its way.
We’ve also been hit with very significant layoffs recently. My job and team are safe, but we’ve seen many colleagues and friends depart, and the new structure that has been put in place doesn’t make a ton of sense given the company’s professed strategic priorities.
With all that as background, a couple weeks back, I got a LinkedIn request for a meeting from a talent acquisition person at a company I’ve always been incredibly interested in. I wouldn’t usually respond, but given the company doing the asking and the fact that they were recruiting for a position that sounded like the next step up for me, I connected with them, and we had a call. That first call went great, and I had a second call with someone else there in HR/recruiting on Friday. That meeting went even better, and I learned more about the position, which confirmed that they are essentially hiring for my boss’s job at this other company in an org that they are in the process of building out. The job sounds amazing and would give me increased responsibility and new challenges. The bummer is, while they’re hiring for my boss’s job, they’re not paying my boss’s compensation (or what I assume is my boss’s compensation). While this would be a significant advancement for me in terms of role, the compensation is almost exactly what I’m making right now in my current role; it’s a little more, but no more than an annual expected raise and not commensurate with an actual promotion.
I don’t want to put the cart before the horse, as I’ve only met with HR/recruiters so far, but I’m supposed to meet with the hiring manager (potential new boss) in the next week or so. I feel like this is something I have to explore, and I’m admittedly excited at the potential opportunity of working at this new company, both because of the role and the company. But I am concerned about the comp situation.
Would you consider a move to a new company you’ve always been a fan of when that move would be a promotion in role but a lateral move in terms of compensation? Does that make sense?