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Top paying UK jobs 2022
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Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom0 -
sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom0 -
sultan123 said:sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom
HTH,
Mands0 -
Wait, Groundhog Day was 2 February...0
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Mands said:sultan123 said:sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom
HTH,
Mands0 -
sultan123 said:Mands said:sultan123 said:sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom
HTH,
Mands
They are likely to all be "accurate" based on their data and their methodology. You can question who has the widest dataset but their methodology will always be obtuse.
The reality is that job titles can have exceptionally wide spreads in salaries. A quick search on Monster shows the lowest full time job for a Project Manager right now being advertised is £25,000 whereas I've known some on £175,000 on a salaried basis and £1,200 per day on a contract basis (so circa £290,000).
As others have said CEO has a lower salary than some of their direct reports because any one man band company can say they are the CEO even if they earn below NMW. The same would be true for the COO etc but it's not such an aspirational title and so the title is more common in larger companies and therefore the salaries on average are higher.
As a statistician you could attempt to "correct" for these things but then you add ever more subjectivity to it. You could divide CEO between company sizes but its arbitrary where you decide to apply the boundaries.
It would naturally help if you say why you are wanting to know0 -
DullGreyGuy said:sultan123 said:Mands said:sultan123 said:sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom
HTH,
Mands
They are likely to all be "accurate" based on their data and their methodology. You can question who has the widest dataset but their methodology will always be obtuse.
The reality is that job titles can have exceptionally wide spreads in salaries. A quick search on Monster shows the lowest full time job for a Project Manager right now being advertised is £25,000 whereas I've known some on £175,000 on a salaried basis and £1,200 per day on a contract basis (so circa £290,000).
As others have said CEO has a lower salary than some of their direct reports because any one man band company can say they are the CEO even if they earn below NMW. The same would be true for the COO etc but it's not such an aspirational title and so the title is more common in larger companies and therefore the salaries on average are higher.
As a statistician you could attempt to "correct" for these things but then you add ever more subjectivity to it. You could divide CEO between company sizes but its arbitrary where you decide to apply the boundaries.
It would naturally help if you say why you are wanting to know0 -
sultan123 said:DullGreyGuy said:sultan123 said:Mands said:sultan123 said:sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom
HTH,
Mands
They are likely to all be "accurate" based on their data and their methodology. You can question who has the widest dataset but their methodology will always be obtuse.
The reality is that job titles can have exceptionally wide spreads in salaries. A quick search on Monster shows the lowest full time job for a Project Manager right now being advertised is £25,000 whereas I've known some on £175,000 on a salaried basis and £1,200 per day on a contract basis (so circa £290,000).
As others have said CEO has a lower salary than some of their direct reports because any one man band company can say they are the CEO even if they earn below NMW. The same would be true for the COO etc but it's not such an aspirational title and so the title is more common in larger companies and therefore the salaries on average are higher.
As a statistician you could attempt to "correct" for these things but then you add ever more subjectivity to it. You could divide CEO between company sizes but its arbitrary where you decide to apply the boundaries.
It would naturally help if you say why you are wanting to know
I work in the public sector, I am a LM for two people of the same grade, 1 civil servant the other external agency yet there is a £12k delta between the their salaries for doing the exact same job.Make £2023 in 2023 (#36) £3479.30/£2023
Make £2024 in 2024...0 -
annabanana82 said:sultan123 said:DullGreyGuy said:sultan123 said:Mands said:sultan123 said:sultan123 said:Exodi said:Grumpy_chap said:Ditzy_Mitzy said:there are no entries for king, professional footballer or has-been senior minister turned after dinner speaker.
A similar thing would apply to after dinner speakers. What category would they even appear under? "Entertainer?" Mixed in with all the jobbing musicians playing the Dog&Duck for the price of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps.
"King" is really most likely something the OP won't be able to aspire to. Also, as a job, isn't "King" a voluntary role?
This looks more accurate, lists jobs and averages at bottom
HTH,
Mands
They are likely to all be "accurate" based on their data and their methodology. You can question who has the widest dataset but their methodology will always be obtuse.
The reality is that job titles can have exceptionally wide spreads in salaries. A quick search on Monster shows the lowest full time job for a Project Manager right now being advertised is £25,000 whereas I've known some on £175,000 on a salaried basis and £1,200 per day on a contract basis (so circa £290,000).
As others have said CEO has a lower salary than some of their direct reports because any one man band company can say they are the CEO even if they earn below NMW. The same would be true for the COO etc but it's not such an aspirational title and so the title is more common in larger companies and therefore the salaries on average are higher.
As a statistician you could attempt to "correct" for these things but then you add ever more subjectivity to it. You could divide CEO between company sizes but its arbitrary where you decide to apply the boundaries.
It would naturally help if you say why you are wanting to know
I work in the public sector, I am a LM for two people of the same grade, 1 civil servant the other external agency yet there is a £12k delta between the their salaries for doing the exact same job.
I guess there is not even a list which has decent estimates. As you correctly point out, too many variables.0
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