Hey my father worked in an Indian public sector organisation (IOCL) . And retired happily and enjoying his retirement days 💙 with us . And I know it's advantages personally.
Yes! There are DEFINITELY advantages for working with the public sector - I'm a little biased myself since it's practically all I've done. Thanks for sharing, and I wish you the best :)
I’m currently employed by private sector job. I love my job and what I do. Except I need more money or at at least job security such a pension. I applied for a city job and was offered a position for $1,980 less a year. Which may be about $38 less a week. However with all benefits perks such as pensions. Union, annuity, 401k more vacation time, use of company vehicle. How ever I was hire at top salary for that particular position they told I can take a civil exam at any point for a pay increase. My current position only offers 401K n I can’t recall what they add but it’s not much. No company vehicle use I have to use my own vehicle but I get gas. In your opinion do you think it’s worth taking? I’m 42 I’m not looking to be hopping around from to job. I’ve been in this field for 7 years now. I just want decent pay or potential for more money while having job security and Retirement security. Love this video great info 👍
Thank you for watching and I know it's been a few months since you left this comment so I hope this is still helpful! An important thing to consider when taking a position is *TOTAL* compensation. Not just salary. The things you listed for the city job are all a part of the total compensation package. If you were to put a monetary value on all of those things, I bet the total compensation of the city job would blow the other position's total compensation out of the water. So, with that being said, while the salary of the city position may be less, the overall comp would be likely make the change worth it.
Just moved from private tech to a huge international organization (public). I was hoping that it will be more stable. I might have been wrong! It seems like everyone here is fighting for funds!
Looking into getting a government job, currently work in sales and I’m burned out, I only have an associates degree in business administration would not having a bachelors affect me?
Talking to friends, co-workers and researching it for myself seems like straight pay not including the added benefit of a "guaranteed pension", time off, and super low lay off probability Federal jobs pay about the same in IT.
@@Jake-fe4uf Absolutely - there are certain jobs that can pay equal (if not more) in straight pay when comparing public vs private sector jobs, and then if you consider the other "total compensation" benefits, public sector jobs can be much more appealing than private!
OMG as many times as you say both names, you say them so so much it is hard keeping track which you are talking about, i'll find another channel you repeat way tooooooooo much
Are interview questions similar in the Public vs Private Sector? If they are different, what are some of the questions they may ask in Public Sector interviews?
I would say the questions are VERY similar. The topics might vary slightly. For example, public sector might focus questions more on being service oriented since that is literally their primary job (serving the public in various ways). But I would say that in general, all of the interview questions will be similar.
All I know is that the government is the one who runs the country wherever you go! I’ve never heard any private companies that rule the country!!! 😂😂😂 That’s why the government should be the role model of its countrymen and the image of the country!!! 😂😂😂 If the government is doing polygamy then the countrymen will follow because the government are leaders in the country right? If the government is cheating then so as the countrymen right? 😂😂😂