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ThomasCrown
Sun Nov 07, 2010 12:10 am

Co-Op Program/First Year Salaries
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I'm considering going back to school to get my CS degree (software engineering) after working in sales in enterprise software for 5 years or so. This is kind of crazy move in that I'm doing well financially and working for one of the majors but I really want to get into the development side of the business and maybe start my own thing down the road. With that in mind, I'm looking to get a sense of how crazy a move it is financially aside from losing 4 years of employment income! What would be a realistic expectation for co-op and first year earnings coming out of U of T or U of W? I'm expecting a fairly significant drop in earnings but is 50-70K realistic coming out of university?

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knowthyself
Sun Nov 07, 2010 1:18 pm

Re: Co-Op Program/First Year Salaries
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Here's my opinion, but first my background:  I went to college previously in a slightly unrelated field (Electrical Engineering), then I worked for several years in software implementation and development (self-taught on the development side mostly).  I wanted to go back to school too so that I could focus on the technical side like design, development, etc, rather than being pushed too soon into a PM or Sales role as would have happened (though it might eventually happen anyway).  So now after a lot of effort and planning, I'm in my first year of CS (at Ryerson).  I put a lot of thought into that same question, and other similar ones.  Salary-wise, I think that many companies will recognize the experience that you have as an industry professional when you apply for jobs after University.  Even though you may not have X many years of such-and-such programming languages, you bring maturity and experience to the table, which is without a doubt worth money.  That being said, I think that co-op will be trickier.  I suspect that most companies that plan to take on co-op students will have a set budget for how much they want to spend.  You might be able to negotiate in some cases (maybe at smaller companies), I don't know really, but I would guess that if their budget is set then you might not get anywhere.  From what I hear, most co-op jobs start a little under $20/hr, but I'm sure there is a wide range.  Personally, I'm going to focus on finding work on my own so that I might find a company willing to pay based on my experience, not just what they 'usually' pay co-op students.

Right after graduation I think that 50k+ is doable for you.  Since you are already an experienced professional, I think that even if you start out at a lower salary than you want, you will likely climb faster than usual due to more experience/maturity/etc.

Personally, I'm quite happy with my move.  Going from a decent salary to having no income during school makes me appreciate careful budgeting much more, and I think now I'll be better with money in the future than I ever was before (which itself is obviously worth money).


I'm considering going back to school to get my CS degree (software engineering) after working in sales in enterprise software for 5 years or so. This is kind of crazy move in that I'm doing well financially and working for one of the majors but I really want to get into the development side of the business and maybe start my own thing down the road. With that in mind, I'm looking to get a sense of how crazy a move it is financially aside from losing 4 years of employment income! What would be a realistic expectation for co-op and first year earnings coming out of U of T or U of W? I'm expecting a fairly significant drop in earnings but is 50-70K realistic coming out of university?


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ThomasCrown
Tue Nov 23, 2010 12:15 am

Re: Co-Op Program/First Year Salaries
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Thanks for the reply. Good to hear that 50K isn't outlandish!
