clovis_noobson
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 9, 2023
- 5
I am at a cross road where I received two offers, one from a mining company (owner of the mine) and one from a tier 1 design and consulting company. The mine is in Western Australia, roster being 5-2 & 4-3 at 56 hours pw, as a rail engineer. The design & consult job is in South Australia (I live here currently), standard 40 hours pw, and the job is in geotechnical engineering field. The FIFO job pays twice as much as the office job. Despite that, I am having trouble seeing the obvious 2x pay as worth it or not when considering work-"hustle" balance, career development, and social life.
[ul]
[li]Work & hustle because I plan to grind for the next 5 years of my life to get a lot of money and prepare for a business or to obtain a live-able passive income through investments. I am thinking with the FIFO job, there will be more money for saving and to invest, but hardly anytime to learn or try side-hustles that could provide business acumens which I am lacking. During university and even now, I still imagine that I will do day job as an office-based engineer, and do business/finance as a second income or long-term knowledge investment. Would the certainty of the FIFO's salary package be more efficient in achieving my financial goals than striking out at night after office hours?[/li]
[li]Career development wise, I am more familiar with the career progression in the geotechnical job of being a grad, then slowly going to more senior engineering roles until principal or moving into director/C suite positions (very hard). For the FIFO job, I heard a friend said consulting company appreciate an engineer who worked on the client's side of the business and that after 2-4 years at the mine, I may transfer to an office consulting job for one of the mining client's consultants. If the second path is possible/ has happened before, does it seems like the more profitable and rewarding career development when comparing to the traditional seniority pathway in design/consult? [/li]
[li]Social life wise, A simple question. Will I ever have time for love or a committed relationship working FIFO in the mine? [/li]
[/ul]
Any thoughts are well-appreciated.
By the way, could someone with more experience details me what I would do as a rail engineer in a mine site? Does the work involve design or mostly operational and maintenance work for railways?
Thank you.
FYI, Australian international student, freshly graduated with an aim to work in Australia until at least I obtained my Permanent residency.
[ul]
[li]Work & hustle because I plan to grind for the next 5 years of my life to get a lot of money and prepare for a business or to obtain a live-able passive income through investments. I am thinking with the FIFO job, there will be more money for saving and to invest, but hardly anytime to learn or try side-hustles that could provide business acumens which I am lacking. During university and even now, I still imagine that I will do day job as an office-based engineer, and do business/finance as a second income or long-term knowledge investment. Would the certainty of the FIFO's salary package be more efficient in achieving my financial goals than striking out at night after office hours?[/li]
[li]Career development wise, I am more familiar with the career progression in the geotechnical job of being a grad, then slowly going to more senior engineering roles until principal or moving into director/C suite positions (very hard). For the FIFO job, I heard a friend said consulting company appreciate an engineer who worked on the client's side of the business and that after 2-4 years at the mine, I may transfer to an office consulting job for one of the mining client's consultants. If the second path is possible/ has happened before, does it seems like the more profitable and rewarding career development when comparing to the traditional seniority pathway in design/consult? [/li]
[li]Social life wise, A simple question. Will I ever have time for love or a committed relationship working FIFO in the mine? [/li]
[/ul]
Any thoughts are well-appreciated.
By the way, could someone with more experience details me what I would do as a rail engineer in a mine site? Does the work involve design or mostly operational and maintenance work for railways?
Thank you.
FYI, Australian international student, freshly graduated with an aim to work in Australia until at least I obtained my Permanent residency.