10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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Are you thinking about changing careers but feeling intimidated about the education and
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licensure associated with well-paying jobs?
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Exactly how much GRUNT work does it take to get the GRATIFICATION of a new career making
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at least six figures?
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We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect
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to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, in this episode
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of The Infographics Show, 10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs.
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Don’t forget to subscribe and click the bell button so that you can be part of our
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Notification Squad.
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Number 10.
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Railroad conductor Up to $104,000
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Did you know that in the U.S., professionalized railroad conductors are still around?
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Neither did we, but they exist, and they cash in in some areas.
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The national median salary is just $54,000, but it does go all the way up to $104,000.
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The grunt is working your way up in a dying industry and learning on the job without many
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mentors or companies to choose from.
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You’re away from home for long periods of time.
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But the grat is you get to see the country in an old timey kind of way, you get to feel
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like that kid you once were with your first train set, and you can avoid the 9 to 5 and
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tell corporate America to kiss your – uh – caboose.
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All aboard!
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Number 9.
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Crab fisherman Up to $200,000
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Tolerating the miserable work of capturing crab through terrifying squalls for five figures
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per month was popularized by Discovery Channel’s reality series The Deadliest Catch.
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Even negotiating the dynamic between the personalities on board seems treacherous enough to think
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twice.
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But in recent years, changing safety regulations have made fishing for Dungeness crab more
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doable.
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There is also an after-season for other kinds of crab, as well as fish.
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All said and done, you can still clear $200,000 a year after a few years’ experience.
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The grunt work is working your way up, because there is no school for crab fishing.
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You have to find a crew you trust and respect to show you the ropes when you start as a
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deckhand.
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And you’ll be away from home and leave your loved ones behind to worry.
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The grat is having a nontraditional career and six figures to roll hard on your few days
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on land.
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Number 8.
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Building inspector Up to $117,000
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It’s not super scintillating, but if you’re good with checklists and you have a mind for
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structural engineering, working for a city government inspecting buildings could bring
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home six figures.
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The grunt part is working your way up in the kind of large bureaucracy – that is, a major
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U.S. city – that is big enough to pay at least $68,000 per year, and all the way up
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to $117,000 per year.
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It’s also highly specialized, so you’ll give up other career tracks.
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And there are a few months of studying for a standardized exam.
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But the grat is a well-paying job with predictable days and permanent demand for your skills.
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Number 7.
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Egg donor Up to $114,000
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Here is one for the ladies.
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It can be lucrative, but it has its dilemmas.
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And it’s not really a job, as in an existing role in any company, but an opportunity you
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could make your full-time gig if you’re really, really determined to get some cash.
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The grunt is altering your cycle, feeling like a human petri dish, and the whole ethical
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conundrum of creating a human you’ll never meet.
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But the grat is up to $14,000 per cycle, so you could, if you go on back-to-back cycles
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and take two months off, clear $140,000 in a year.
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Number 6.
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Anesthesiologist Up to $500,000
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Anesthesiologists, in their quiet bedside role near the superstar surgeon, look like
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some kind of low-level nurse or technician.
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They’re actually doctors, and they make bank.
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The grunt is med school like any other doctor.
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That’s completing a four year degree, doing the MCAT preparation to take the standardized
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exam to get into a decent medical school, then going through four years of medical school,
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and four years of residency that actually comprise a one-year internship plus a three-year
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residency.
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Some anesthesiologists do additional residencies beyond those 12 years mandatory, and then
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have to study and take the board exam to become board-certified.
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That board certification is an important credential to earn the trust involved in taking someone
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safely through a major surgery and recovery.
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But then the grat is you make more than a family doctor, general practitioner, pediatrician,
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or psychiatrist does.
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That is, anesthesiologists take home, on average $294,811.
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That is a national average.
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In larger U.S. cities their annual salary is in the $400 to $500 thousand dollar range.
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Number 5.
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Write for the federal government Up to $123,234
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A writer-editor for the State Department, in which you don't do any foreign policy analysis
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or speech writing, but analyze communication documents and systemic functions of the department
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itself, grosses you $95,000 to $123,000 per year.
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If you'd like to do something similar for the Department of Energy, and recommend standards
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for documentation for audits and other reports, you could start as low as $79,000, but also
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go up to $123,000.
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The grunt is working your way up in a dull bureaucracy and memorizing templates and standards
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and learning to speak bureaucratese.
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The grat is the money, the great benefits, and the job security.
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Number 4.
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Longshoreman Up to $200,000
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This job loading and unloading ship cargo at large ports is of course only available
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if you’re near a big port like Houston, Los Angeles-Long Beach, or New York – or
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are willing to move.
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But you might be willing, for the money.
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There is no education requirement – just experience.
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West Coast longshoremen average $98,000 according to shippingwatch.com, but with overtime and
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union power to play hardball on negotiations, that salary gets north of $100,000.
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And an LA Times analysis in 2015 showed over half of longshoremen made over $100,000, while
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foremen and managers top $200,000.
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A few bosses get $300,000, and all get free healthcare.
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A New York longshoreman makes at least $124,000, with another round of negotiations coming
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up in 2018.
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The grunt is working your way up and the intense physical labor with never ending stacks of
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cargo waiting to be moved.
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But the grat is the cash, the health care, and holding one of the few jobs that globalization
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actually needs.
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Number 3.
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Mine operator – underground Up to $165,000
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It’s not for you if you’re scared of tight spaces, and it’s not glamorous, literally
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digging around in the dirt.
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And there’s this coal miner image out in the pop culture lexicon of being, well, white
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trash.
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But you can laugh all the way to the bank, because if you’re willing to work underground,
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you’ll clear $150,000 to $165,000.
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The grunt is learning the trade on the job, the danger, the dirt, and taking such a specific
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career track that it doesn’t prepare you for much else.
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But the grat is the earnings.
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And while automation continues to improve mining, you’re not being replaced by a robot
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quite yet.
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That is, you will be in demand for a while.
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Number 2.
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City employees – at least those of affluent towns
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Up to $142,903 You can actually make more than $143,000 without
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any education requirements in some cities, like Santa Monica.
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But we picked the silliest job in that particular city that pays six figures: farmers market
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manager.
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In fact, 105 City of Santa Monica workers cleared over $300,000 in 2016, to the horror
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of watchdog blog Transparent California.
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The city’s global caché and resulting steady stream of tourists, produce high occupancy
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taxes – that is, the city’s share of hotel bills – and parking taxes, filling city
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coffers and boosting salaries for all jobs.
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The grunt is a dull bureaucratic job – and perhaps your nagging conscience if you happen
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to be the Assistant City Librarian bringing home $220,558, or occupying another overpaid
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post.
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The grat is, well, you’re overpaid and you’re in sunny Santa Monica, or another rich city
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living large.
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Number 1.
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Firefighter Up to $121,104 as a starting firefighter
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Mmm, running into burning buildings and maintaining the fitness level to regularly charge flights
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of stairs.
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Maybe not?
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Think again: it has its advantages.
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Salaries vary by city and position, but in major cities like New York and LA, you’ll
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clear six figures.
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You’ll make at least $121,000 from Day One in Los Angeles, but in New York, you’ll
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have to work for five years to get to $110,000 as a low level firefighter.
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But then you get promoted on your way to Chief and earn more at each level, over $300,000
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in some fire departments.
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The grunt is you’re working in fire, putting yourself in danger, worrying about your coworkers,
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dealing with deeply distressed people who are watching their homes and offices burning,
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and you’re also a paramedic, meaning you have to see terrible injuries from violence
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and witness other human loss.
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But you work days at a time and then have chunks of time free, so you can travel and
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buy toys with the six figures you’re earning, with solid job security.
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And you get to contribute to your community and truly help people every time you go to
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work.
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So, which of these high paying jobs took you most by surprise?
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Would you consider working any of these jobs?
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Let us know in the comments!
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Be sure to check out our other video, 10 Tallest Buildings in the World.
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Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe.
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See you next time!