Q: I like my job. The pay is good. The benefits are good. The problem is that I don't feel that my contributions or efforts to improve my skills are valued. I receive many positive comments from the customers I support but none from my supervisors.
I was recently passed over for a promotion for the second time. I was told each time that there was a better candidate.
I am trying to evaluate the importance of feeling valued as I decide whether to accept another job offer that would be less money and fewer benefits. I'm thinking that feeling valued is priceless. What do you think?
A: I think you can't pay rent with feelings. So if accepting lower pay and benefits means cutting into your must-haves - shelter, food, health care - then I strongly recommend you stay put for now and keep looking for a better offer.
Even if the other job would pay enough to allow the luxury of weighing more abstract needs, you should ask tough, skeptical questions about how you expect a job with lower compensation to make you feel more valued. Maybe it offers more promotion opportunities or more meaningful work - but you need to confirm those maybes before you leap into a situation based on a vague hope of better days.