Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?
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Walmart store manager near me (I'm in one of the lowest cost major metros in the country) was in the $400K range. Which makes sense if you think about the volume of business a Walmart does and their need to have skilled people in those roles. If you can't pay prevailing wages, you'd be screwed. Department managers (real ones, not office managers) in finance can be $300-850K in a low cost area (easily seven figures in high cost ones) as a comparison for a competitive type job that depends primarily on broad management and business skills.
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@scottalanmiller said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
Walmart store manager near me (I'm in one of the lowest cost major metros in the country) was in the $400K range. Which makes sense if you think about the volume of business a Walmart does and their need to have skilled people in those roles. If you can't pay prevailing wages, you'd be screwed. Department managers (real ones, not office managers) in finance can be $300-850K in a low cost area (easily seven figures in high cost ones) as a comparison for a competitive type job that depends primarily on broad management and business skills.
Probably not definitive but Glassdoor suggests ~140k on average for Walmart store managers. That would put your acquaintance well on the north end of what people are reporting for compensation for that position.
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@NDC said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@scottalanmiller said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
Walmart store manager near me (I'm in one of the lowest cost major metros in the country) was in the $400K range. Which makes sense if you think about the volume of business a Walmart does and their need to have skilled people in those roles. If you can't pay prevailing wages, you'd be screwed. Department managers (real ones, not office managers) in finance can be $300-850K in a low cost area (easily seven figures in high cost ones) as a comparison for a competitive type job that depends primarily on broad management and business skills.
Probably not definitive but Glassdoor suggests ~140k on average for Walmart store managers. That would put your acquaintance well on the north end of what people are reporting for compensation for that position.
That does, although still higher than the doctors, apparently. Although I've been a lot of places and I always check Glassdoor for places where I work and the numbers are never close to accurate. That's a pretty isolated cross-section, but it is consistently wrong to an absurd degree in provable ways.
If Walmart is like places I've worked, GD would like numbers easily half of what everyone was making.
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Walmart themselves put the average at $175K. And that's recent.
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@NDC said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@scottalanmiller said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
Walmart store manager near me (I'm in one of the lowest cost major metros in the country) was in the $400K range. Which makes sense if you think about the volume of business a Walmart does and their need to have skilled people in those roles. If you can't pay prevailing wages, you'd be screwed. Department managers (real ones, not office managers) in finance can be $300-850K in a low cost area (easily seven figures in high cost ones) as a comparison for a competitive type job that depends primarily on broad management and business skills.
Probably not definitive but Glassdoor suggests ~140k on average for Walmart store managers. That would put your acquaintance well on the north end of what people are reporting for compensation for that position.
Yeah.. that seems to be more in line with the Walmart Dept managers I know.
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@Dashrender said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@NDC said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@scottalanmiller said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
Walmart store manager near me (I'm in one of the lowest cost major metros in the country) was in the $400K range. Which makes sense if you think about the volume of business a Walmart does and their need to have skilled people in those roles. If you can't pay prevailing wages, you'd be screwed. Department managers (real ones, not office managers) in finance can be $300-850K in a low cost area (easily seven figures in high cost ones) as a comparison for a competitive type job that depends primarily on broad management and business skills.
Probably not definitive but Glassdoor suggests ~140k on average for Walmart store managers. That would put your acquaintance well on the north end of what people are reporting for compensation for that position.
Yeah.. that seems to be more in line with the Walmart Dept managers I know.
If the department managers you know make that, and you live in a really low paying market, that definitely suggests that the store managers are quite a bit higher there. You'd expect quite a leap from department manager to store manager.
My next door neighbour is a department manager at the little local Walmart.
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@scottalanmiller said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@Dashrender said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@NDC said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@scottalanmiller said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
Walmart store manager near me (I'm in one of the lowest cost major metros in the country) was in the $400K range. Which makes sense if you think about the volume of business a Walmart does and their need to have skilled people in those roles. If you can't pay prevailing wages, you'd be screwed. Department managers (real ones, not office managers) in finance can be $300-850K in a low cost area (easily seven figures in high cost ones) as a comparison for a competitive type job that depends primarily on broad management and business skills.
Probably not definitive but Glassdoor suggests ~140k on average for Walmart store managers. That would put your acquaintance well on the north end of what people are reporting for compensation for that position.
Yeah.. that seems to be more in line with the Walmart Dept managers I know.
If the department managers you know make that, and you live in a really low paying market, that definitely suggests that the store managers are quite a bit higher there. You'd expect quite a leap from department manager to store manager.
My next door neighbour is a department manager at the little local Walmart.
I know two people (husband and wife) who are high up in walmart... one is a dept manager - around $150K/y in Oskaloosa IA (definitely not a high paying market) and his wife works for the optometry department earning way more than he does (her job requires her to travel between sites frequently).
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@NDC said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
Probably not definitive but Glassdoor suggests ~140k on average for Walmart store managers.
I wonder if this, as GD tends to do, gets managers in stores, and store managers confused.
That's one of the problems with GD... nothing is verified.
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@Dashrender said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
I know two people (husband and wife) who are high up in walmart... one is a dept manager - around $150K/y in Oskaloosa IA
That seems reasonable.
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So,back to the OP's topic. Among the IT team we've been using KeePass since before I came onboard. I saw Buttercup and skimming the site it looks like an interesting option https://buttercup.pw/
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@notverypunny said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
So,back to the OP's topic. Among the IT team we've been using KeePass since before I came onboard. I saw Buttercup and skimming the site it looks like an interesting option https://buttercup.pw/
I've installed that on my system, but not yet set it up beyond creating the bcup file.
We briefly talked about it a couple weeks ago.
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@JaredBusch said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
@notverypunny said in Deploying a password manager product to an entire company?:
So,back to the OP's topic. Among the IT team we've been using KeePass since before I came onboard. I saw Buttercup and skimming the site it looks like an interesting option https://buttercup.pw/
I've installed that on my system, but not yet set it up beyond creating the bcup file.
We briefly talked about it a couple weeks ago.
Alright, I couldn't remember if it was here or another site where I first saw the project.