
Dec 14, 2016 ● Kate Lopaze
How to Earn a Six Figure Salary in Your Lifetime
If you want to earn a six figure salary, you have two main options: A) play the lottery and hope for five numbers out of six on your ticket to hit, or B) start building your career toward that goal. The odds are millions-to-one against option A, so really your best bet is option B. Now that leaves just one question: how?
A high-paying career that you enjoy is, when you get right down to it, just about everyone’s goal. And making a six figure salary or $100,000+, seems like an attainable goal. It’s not a million dollars, so it seems like a modest ask from the universe. Yet it also offers a kind of financial stability that is appealing. So it’s the ideal for many of us who aren’t creating the next hot startup or able to hit 35 home runs per year.
Your first step in reaching that goal is doing a self-survey of yourself and your career so far.
- How close am I to that goal right now? This can affect the timeline and scope of your goal. If you want to make $200K but are currently only making $40K, that’s a huge jump. Depending on your field, it might be possible, but you might have to adjust how long it will take you to get there.
- Is it even attainable in my field? For example, if you’re a lawyer, then sure, this is attainable. If you are a mid-level manager at a nonprofit, it might not be. It’s important to make your goals reachable, and if you’re working happily in a field that tends to top out at $80K, you’re not doing yourself any favors by working toward a financial goal that may not be likely or even possible.
- What career level do I need to achieve to make that paycheck? Is it only executives that make that kind of money in my field, or are there other jobs/roles that can do it? What does the promotion path look like in order to reach that goal?
- What do I need to do next? Are there specific skills, or a certain education or experience I would need to move me closer to that goal? Am I in a position to get another degree, complete a training program, or learn the next-level skills that would be required?
- Do I need to go elsewhere, or does my current job offer that kind of path? If you see this salary as a possibility at your current company, ask yourself if you’re willing to commit to that. If that kind of growth just doesn’t seem possible where you are, or you’re not happy or content there, start scouting for other opportunities.