It seems that I really should improve my English...
European triplet means (in my speech :) three amounts of salary related to some European location.
The three figures are good, average, minimal salary. | [reply] |
Your english was fine. The problem is that you used a figure of speech (idiom) with which I was not familiar. In the US, we typically quote only one target figure for something, either as a seller or as a buyer. "We'll pay $60K for this job" or "I'm looking for at least $75K if I have to put up with Cleveland" and so on. The idea of "tipping our hand" to reveal our actual private "... but I'll accept $55K" numbers seems very foreign.
Thanks for clarifying.
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Obviously no-one would be silly enough to tell an employer what they'd really accept! He's looking for what people would consider a good salary, what they'd consider an OK salary, and what they'd consider a bad salary.
Pulling some numbers out of my arse, then for someone with the experience he mentions (although clearly the circumstances matter a LOT) I'd consider €4000 to be good, €3500 to be tolerable, and €3000 or less unacceptable. That, however, is London salaries.
update: those figures are *before* taxes etc. Call it €2700/2300/2000-ish cash in hand
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My real idea was to get voluntary _opinion_ of other people only. And, because everybody is different, I'v attempted to be more specific using that triplet.
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My guess is that it's high-average-low net pay per month. Whether high and low are one sigma, etc, the OP would have to answer ...
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