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How much pay to ask for. -- 0 -- 
4/22

I am interviewing for a CNC woodworker. I am experienced in CNC programming. Although that was with metal working. I was wondering what I should be looking for as a pay rate. I am sure the machines are different and the feeds and speeds. I should be able to pick up everything rapidly.
4/23 #3: How much pay to ask for. ...

Set your hourly rate slightly below what the employer is willing to pay an illegal immigrant and you might be able to find a job.
4/23 #4: How much pay to ask for. ...

No way. I have strong interviewing skills. I asked for $15 and was offered $14 with $16 in 30 days with all standard benifits, no 401k. I am I Va.
I hope this helps anyone else that has the same question.
4/23 #5: How much pay to ask for. ...

What are "benifits"?
4/23 #6: How much pay to ask for. ...

Hopefully you are kidding. In case you are not. Insurance 2 weeks pto and overtime are benifits in my opinion. Some places 401k
4/23 #7: How much pay to ask for. ...

Noah: ESL is just pulling your chain. There are guys on this forum who like to knock down anyone who doesn't know the answer before they ask the question. Or he may be surprised that a CNC operator doesn't use spell check - it's kind of a red flag for someone who should be computer literate.
Your $14/hr is lower than what I pay in Philadelphia, but that might be correct for your area. I would suggest that you take the job, and then blow them away with your skill and commitment to the job. Once you have them eating out of your hand, ask for a raise. If you are worth it, a smart boss will do that in a heartbeat. Much easier than taking a chance on your replacement. If you aren't ready to take responsibility for improving your skills, then you will probably stay at $14/hr.
Good luck,
Paul Downs
4/23 #8: How much pay to ask for. ...

I feel like $14 is just to see if I am all talk. I am a motivated individual, with no life other then crafting. The job Im leaving has bent over backward to try and keep me but there pay cap is only $20 for a machinist. Also it 1 1/4 hours away.
What would you pay someone in my position. I am extremely handy I can design and build these multi-head routers myself. My employer will find out soon enough.
4/23 #9: How much pay to ask for. ...

I have 30 years experience in the woodworking biz. The last 17 years with CAD and CNC.
You say you come from the metalworking industry.
If I walked into a machine shop and said I want a job programing and running their CNC, but I have woodworking experience not metal working experience what do you think they should pay me?
Point is, if you have no woodworking knowledge, being able to draw some parts and program a tool path doesn't make you as valuable as someone that knows the business.
No offence but a shop owner probably would have an easier time training a good cabinetmaker that knows his way around a computer than training someone from scratch that has no practical experience.
If you were offered $14 then $16 with no industry experience I think you are probably doing OK.
4/23 #10: How much pay to ask for. ...

No offense taken I took the job. I just didn't know what to ask for, that was fair for both of us. I understand about the cross industry issue. The shop does trophies and recognition type woodwork.
I am sure I will be able to pick it up. I taught myself g-code. In a machine shop I am required to go from print to part. (Or broken part to part). I am also responsible for jig and fixturing as well as running multiple machines and programming almost all parts on the fly.
Do you think I have what it takes?
4/24 #11: How much pay to ask for. ...

Since they are not asking you to detail and program cabinets you probably should do ok.
If you are doing plaques and engraving you should be able to pick up quick.
4/24 #12: How much pay to ask for. ...

Wow...tough crowd this morning. Noah; best to you in your new endeavor.
I just retired after 35 years as a wood finisher and if you ask me, the trades could use more energetic "kids" like yourself.
I retired early because I didn't want to work "60 years doing woodwork" and end up a sad lonely and grouchy old fart.
4/24 #13: How much pay to ask for. ...

Thanks. I can do it for sure. If he can tell all that from my post more power to him.
4/24 #14: How much pay to ask for. ...

Being literate is a good thing. I have no idea when that stopped being desirable, nor when being literate became divorced from being a skilled worker. It is possible to be both.
Good luck in your new position. Pay attention, learn, and most of all, crack open a book occasionally - it can't hurt.
0 -- 
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