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JANUARY
2006 :: COVER STORY : CONSUMER ED
Your
First Real Job
Get
Ready for Big Expenses and Big Decisions
By
Karen Blumenthal
Staff
Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
After all the
time you spend hunting for and interviewing for your first real
job, the first week looms as both exciting and terrifying. There
are names to remember, new duties to learn and important details
to figure out-like where to eat lunch.
As you make
the transition from school to work, there will also be some real
financial costs for you to shoulder. And in that mountain of paperwork
that you fill out, there will be major decisions to make, some of
which could have a surprisingly long-term impact on your future
wealth.
To avoid ending
up short of funds or in debt, it helps to know what may be ahead.
Here are some tips and issues to consider:
CLOSET
ISSUES: Chances are, the clothes you wore to class won't
work as well at work. You'll need to arrive with nice "business
casual" clothes or suits-or both. When my husband started out,
he couldn't afford to pay cash for the suits needed for his first
journalism job, so he signed up for a department-store credit card.
It took us more than a year to pay it off-not because he bought
expensive clothes, but because our budget was so tight.
At the same
time, one nice outfit won't cut it. My friend Carlos was assigned
to interview computer magnate Michael Dell in his first few months
on the job. Just before the big day, Carlos's only pair of dress
pants was stolen from his apartment laundry room. Clueless about
fashion, a friend directed him to the high-end retailer Barneys
New York, where the cheapest pair of pants cost $239, about a week's
pay. He didn't have much choice-or a credit card-and the purchase
emptied about half his bank account at the time. Owning a couple
of pairs of slacks would have saved him a lot of money-and ribbing
from his colleagues.
Consider upgrading
your closet in the year before you go to work and asking for work
clothes instead of play clothes for birthday and holiday gifts.
PREPARE
TO PAY YOUR OWN WAY: Unless you plan to become an investment
banker or a professional athlete, you aren't likely to land a signing
bonus that could cover the deposit on your new apartment or buy
your new car. Instead, you'll have to pay your own moving costs
and figure out your transportation.
Cities that
seem like neat places to live can be very costly. A college graduate
today may start out at $35,000 to $45,000 a year, and "that
sounds like a lot of money," says Kerin Borland, senior associate
director of the University of Michigan Career Center. "But
if you're going to a city that has a high -cost of living, you can
find yourself near the poverty level."
Using the salary
calculator at www.homefair.com, you can compare the cost of various
cities. If you choose to rent in Manhattan, for instance, you would
need to earn about $55,000 to have the same standard of living as
$40,000 would buy you in Dallas.
You also need
to account for transportation costs. If you need a car, you may
have to pay a monthly bill for parking. And even public transportation
fares add up when you're traveling twice a day, five days a week.
THE
FAR-AWAY PAYDAY: Have some extra cash available. Depending
on when you start your job and whether your employer pays weekly,
biweekly or monthly, you might not see the first real paycheck for
two or three weeks. That can feel like forever when you already
have bills to pay.
FORMS,
FORMS, FORMS: Even if you're joining a small or medium-size
company, you'll have a stack of paperwork to conquer during that
first week. You'll need to fill out a W-4 form to let your employer
know how much to withhold for your future federal income taxes,
and probably a state form as well.
Most companies
offer health insurance and may let you choose among plans that vary
in cost, coverage and choice of health-care providers. If you know
your choices and the costs in advance, you can discuss them with
your parents, already-employed friends or some of your new co-workers.
Kathy Sims, director of the University of California-Los Angeles
Career Center, says that recent graduates in particular can be great
resources.
The Society
for Human Resource Management says that coverage at most companies
begins on the first of the month after you are hired. But at some
companies, you may wait one or two months or more for health coverage;
in that case, you'll want to extend your student coverage until
the company coverage kicks in.
NO
TIME OFF: If you have an important family event in the
first few months after you start your new job, work it out with
your employer up front. At most companies, you need to work at least
two or three months before you are entitled to paid sick days or
vacation days. At some companies, you may have to work a full year
to be entitled to a paid vacation.
RETIREMENT,
ALREADY? Most companies will offer you the chance to
contribute to a 401(k), which is a fund for your retirement savings.
In addition, most companies will match part of your contribution.
It may seem absurd to think of retiring on your first week of "real
life," but the money you (and the company) put away today has
many, many years to grow and can pay you back handsomely later.
Even if your budget is tight, you should try to sock some money
away-at least enough to take advantage of the company match.
Ms. Sims says
she cashed out her retirement money from her first job-and she regrets
it. Now 52 years old, she estimates those funds might have grown
to $50,000 today if she had worked at the company just a little
longer and left her savings alone. "I was careless about the
decisions I was making with my benefits," she says.
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