How to Compare Job Opportunities Properly
This article is part of the Your Next-Move Profile guide.
When you have more than one opportunity on the table — or when you are comparing a new role to your current one — the instinct is to compare salary figures and go from there. This is a mistake. Salary is one factor. The full picture is considerably more complex.
A structured comparison framework
For each opportunity, score it against your prioritised wish list:
| Dimension | Current role | Opportunity A | Opportunity B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base salary | |||
| Total package | |||
| Hours / shift | |||
| On-call burden | |||
| Travel / patch | |||
| Progression clarity | |||
| Training investment | |||
| Employer stability | |||
| Culture / management |
Weight each row by how important it is to you (high / medium / low). Then score each option honestly.
What the comparison usually reveals
Most candidates who do this exercise find that the "obvious" choice is not as clear as they thought — or that their current role is better than they realised on several dimensions. Equally, an opportunity that looked less attractive on salary turns out to score better on the dimensions that matter more to them.
The point is not to produce a definitive numerical answer but to make the decision with full visibility of the trade-offs.