Ok, let's say you were making the standard amazon 160k salary and you got another 100k a year in stock or something.
If by year two, you saw that for the next three years you were getting 75k in stock, you could have (in theory) gone to GCP and snagged an offer for ~160k+100k (your original 'market value').
I mean, obviously it's not quite that simple and we've both been through FAANG interviews and they move slow and all that, but I'm just saying, in theory if your stock value had dropped low enough, you could have started interviewing elsewhere, and if the reverse happens, it's all upside.
Just for context for those who don’t know. Amazon has a back heavy RSU vesting schedule 5/15/40/40 over 4 years did their initial offer with the last two years 20% every 6 months. The first two years are a pro rated signing bonus to make up for the lack of RSUs. Meaning your compensation will equal $250k if the stock stays flat.
But still - I much rather have the same amount guaranteed in cash especially since I think the outsized stock gain days for FAANG are over.
But you’re right, it’s a lot harder to go from one BigTech company than the other for most software developers (I think???).
Now to be completely transparent with a fact that wasn’t relevant at first but it is with that last statement I made, I have no idea how hard it is to get a software engineering position at Google after coming from Amazon. I do know it’s fairly strait forward to go from AWS ProServe to GCP’s equivalent from what I’ve seen. It’s almost an open door if you’re any good. I just don’t do BigTech or any in office job any more.
If by year two, you saw that for the next three years you were getting 75k in stock, you could have (in theory) gone to GCP and snagged an offer for ~160k+100k (your original 'market value').
I mean, obviously it's not quite that simple and we've both been through FAANG interviews and they move slow and all that, but I'm just saying, in theory if your stock value had dropped low enough, you could have started interviewing elsewhere, and if the reverse happens, it's all upside.