i see my local depot is looking for couriers, i want to apply. its the kind of thing i'd love to do. out and about, not stuck in an office all
day, but not outside all day
i'm a bit confused by some of the questions, but never mind. the question is, what sort of salary would i expect? it asks what my expected salary
is, i obviously don't want to put too much, or too little. anyone know? want definites, not what people thing they should get
highest paid job i've done so far was about 14k i think... i'd probably like at least 18k, but think thats maybe a bit high?
don't want them to think i'm expecting too much, or sell myself short lol
quote:
Originally posted by blakep82
i see my local depot is looking for couriers, i want to apply. its the kind of thing i'd love to do. out and about, not stuck in an office all day, but not outside all day
i'm a bit confused by some of the questions, but never mind. the question is, what sort of salary would i expect? it asks what my expected salary is, i obviously don't want to put too much, or too little. anyone know? want definites, not what people thing they should get
highest paid job i've done so far was about 14k i think... i'd probably like at least 18k, but think thats maybe a bit high?
don't want them to think i'm expecting too much, or sell myself short lol
I would start by stating your last salary as an hourly rate and say that you'd work for the same. That way, you're not asking for £12k for a
60 hour week and not asking for £30k for a 24 hour week!
Some companies around here are paying lorry drivers, delivery drivers, van drivers £10/hour. Those that want to keep their staff pay around £16/hour.
thats the thing, i don't know whats fair for a courier
hopefully i'll get a parcel dropped off tomorrow, i'll just ask him what to put lol.
it seems to be these type of jobs they get paid more than i'd expect. glasgow subway drivers start on about 20k now. and the trains practically
drive themselves.
i don't know if 18k is too cocky. or not enough! lol
good idea! well the last decent paid job i did was £7 per hour, and based on DHLs 45 hour week, work out to just over £16k, so maybe 18k isn't far off the lowest end of the scale for the 45 hour week? does that make any sense? lol
quote:
Originally posted by flibble
Might be useful?
Sounds reasonable to me, they won't want you to guess the correct number, probably just to weed out the ones hoping for 28k+
Go for it
Found This quite interesting too
These numbers are freaking me out a little!
Are these salaries being quoted as gross income or is this after tax? The reason I ask is that they seem very low compared to here in Australia.
I.e. I work as an Analyst/Programmer (Oracle PL/SQL) in Higher Education. My base salary (before employer superannuation contributions, which I
can't access until I retire) is about £46k at the current exchange rate. The employer super is another 17% (government required minimum is 9% or
10% from memory) so that adds nearly £8k on top to the package. My wife is a loans processing officer for a bank and is on about £33k (again, plus
super - 11% for her).
£14k sounds like less than our minimum wage! Actually, just went and checked - Australian minimum wage is now $15/hr -> £9.50/hr so £380 for a
standard 40 hour week i.e. near enough to £20k/annum.
Admittedly, our dollar is currently very strong (1AUD=63p right now - was as low as 40p or so in the last few years) but, still!
Anyway, I'm probably missing something about relative cost of living etc.
Oh, and good luck with the job Blake
Dominic
quote:
£14k sounds like less than our minimum wage! Actually, just went and checked - Australian minimum wage is now $15/hr -> £9.50/hr so £380 for a standard 40 hour week i.e. near enough to £20k/annum.
Admittedly, our dollar is currently very strong (1AUD=63p right now - was as low as 40p or so in the last few years) but, still!
Anyway, I'm probably missing something about relative cost of living etc.
i work for them but not delivering parcels.
so far i have found,they like to keep you under their thumb and micro manage you to the inth degree
I can't believe that you can get £16 an hour for driving a lorry and £10 for driving a van!
quote:
Originally posted by franky
I can't believe that you can get £16 an hour for driving a lorry and £10 for driving a van!
I thought it was quite high... A nurse gets £13 an hour.
dominic, why do you think everyone's trying to get out of here and move to australia?!
some good advices (is that a word?) thanks everyone.
micro manage to the inth degree sounds a bit worrying though, but i guess its a case of try it and see. i can always try for something else if it
doesn't work out
quote:
Originally posted by blakep82
dominic, why do you think everyone's trying to get out of here and move to australia?!
some good advices (is that a word?) thanks everyone.
micro manage to the inth degree sounds a bit worrying though, but i guess its a case of try it and see. i can always try for something else if it doesn't work out
I am a bank courier (banks internal mail only) for DHL in Edinburgh, the pay aint great as only backshift (just over £7 per hour). The dayshift guys are busy with the sale of DHL domestic to HDN, to form the lauched with rebranding, ongoing, YODEL .. LINKY A lot our parcels are delivered by service partners paid day rate or per parcel.. which is real hard graft from what the guys are saying.
I think if you can get £16 an hour over 30K a year to drive a truck i might apply.
I know a couple of lads who drive vans at £7.50 an hour and a HGV1 driver who is on £9.20 an hour who hates his job but carnt afford to move as nobody
will pay the same or more and he has worked for a few of the so called good companies.
Apparently he lives in an area were drivers are in demand!
my mate has done a lot of couriering, and he says its bloody hard work. Cant see why myself, but apparently its a relentless pace to keep up, sometimes 100 drops a day. He's often up at 5 or 6am. Provided his own van and reckons it can pay £700 a week before tax, but he needs to get his own fuel.