8

2 job offers on table.

One, where I'd to work on multiple technologies, comfortable timing i.e 6 - 7 hours a day. Enough time to do personal projects.

Other, I'd to work on single technology stack, but more complex and large projects. Good for architectural and design pattern knowledge. Better pay, but stressing work hours like 8-10 hours daily. Might be on weekends as well.

Help me out!

Comments
  • 0
    what is currently important to you?
  • 0
    Give us more details. What are the respective tech stacks and differences in pay?
  • 0
    Search for another job.
  • 0
    Comfort is nice, but not what you're looking for if you want to learn.
  • 1
    Just so you know, average working hours in my company are 10-12 hours -- and so is the same in oh-so-many startups/companies around here. Consider yourself lucky!
  • 1
    comfort will kill you.
  • 0
    How interesting are the multiple technologies from option A? Compare how interesting the single stack from option B is.
  • 0
    @jhole89 @Fiftyseven option B is entirely on Web APIs, ASP.NET, Entity Framework and Angular.

    Option A has all of these with Xamarin, React and on some project I can choose whatsoever technology stack
  • 0
    @crearo i had a bad experience of working in Corporation with 14 hours daily even on weekends.
  • 0
    @plusgut I wish I know this.
  • 1
    @khateeb321 personally I'd go Option A. More diverse stack that will help your CV in the future, chance to chose some of your own tech, and better hours. I've done 12-16 hr days and it doesn't matter how good the money is when you hit that point.
  • 0
    @khateeb321 if you work in many small/medium projects you will learn lots of different technologies and learn how to write code fast. But with code which is most likely not that stable/maintanable.

    if you work in one project longterm you'll learn how to write stable and maintanable code. And will get deep knowledge in the used technologies. But you won't get to know the whole spectrum of the technologies in the market. And you probably won't get fast.

    Of course these are only the experiences I made. These are not true for every company.

    Now the question is, yet again, what do you want.
  • 0
    @plusgut @jhole89 I want that too, but salary difference is like 35%
  • 0
  • 0
    @khateeb321 maybe tell them that you got another offer and ask if there is room for improvement.
  • 0
    @plusgut tell which ones? šŸ˜
  • 0
    @khateeb321 :D of course you can tell both of them, that you want to earn more.
    But what I initially meant was, the company which pays you 34% less, that you exactly tell them that.
  • 0
    Just to let you guys know, I've taken the first job and I'm really happy. I've enough time to work on side projects as well :)
Add Comment