Thanks all for the useful replies.
Interesting around the consensus and feedback on the bigger companies.
I guess after 8 years of having extra roles dumped on me for no more salary and zero upwards or sideways opportunities, I was hoping the situation would be slightly different at a larger and good employer. Obviously it depends on which one in particular as mentioned.
Any reliable friends always seem to paint the picture of bigger companies ensuring your future skills and experience with more interest through formal training.
As Mike (tony_danza) says, that kind of 'push you on because you want to learn' won't be present in smaller businesses, particularly in time of decline or recession. I don't think I've had £10k of formal training invested in me in the last 5 years, let alone last one or two. This was also part of my thinking.
I work for a massive UK bank, and the same BS still goes on. Mid year and end of year reviews are a con. Everyone is rated according to a "curve" and even if nobody in my team of 10 (in IT Service Delivery) deserve a low performance rating, at least 2 people "have" to get it. Which affects everything including your bonus and payrise.
Benefits are good though. 4% of your salary to spend on what you like, some tax free, some ni free, some free from both. I take Cycle2Work as it suits me.
However, due to the state of the economy and massive headcount reductions. In the 5 years i have worked here, there have been 0 promotion opportunities in my department. Due to a rather large merger, all our payscales were restructured. Now i would need 2 promotion grades to even get a sniff of a half decent payrise, yet if i moved to the wider business, i could get a job with about 5% of the responsibility for more money and a better pay grade.
Personally, i look after 300 servers including systems of Citrix, VMWare, Fibre channel SAN, all server patching. But i am paid the wage of someone working on level 2 desktop support.
This is the big thing stopping me moving to another company at present. I get good overtime on a monthly basis and im On-call 1 in every 5 weeks for 24 hour support. It helps me bring home another £10k a year on top of my salary.
This is more or less where I'm at, at the moment Luke (in terms of software support & experience) too and am looking to move into a second line support role or something similar to that.
Sounds like you've got a neat setup there.
The other big thing generally is a lot of older working people I speak to are advising not to jump ship at the moment and not to do it until the economy picks up - this obviously could be more than five, possibly ten + years away.
Is it a calculated risk to think about changing employment to a stable and profitable business given the 'condition of the market'?
Thanks again