Sorry this is a particulary un PC rant but here it goes. We dont have kids and I work in IT - we have a release due out soon and all are working flat out to get things done on time - yesterday I put in a 13.5 hour day - today will probably be the same...
The parents of children - gone after the 8 hours - leaving the rest of us to pick up the flack...
This is just an observation of someone who has been there, bought the t-shirt etc.
I worked for 30 years up until recently in IT for the best multi-nationals. The fact I had children, was the reason I really suffered.
Firstly, because of the demands of IT, my wife (better career, but, less earning potential) was forced to jobshare, resulting in a signifficant loss of monthly income. Admittedly, in the long run and in hindsight ,our children benefitted from her being at home and being able to take part in extra-curricular activities after school e.g. swimming lessons, sport, girl guides & scouts, afternoons at the beach in the summer etc. We also didn't move from our first house to the bigger second house and take out too big a mortgage.
Secondly, I missed out on substantial parts of my children's early childhood e.g. home too late for meals, home too late to say goodnight at bedtime, not helping out with homework, sometimes working at weekends for application rollouts or infrastructure installation, missing school parent-teacher meetings and sports days, basically not being there for them etc.
I worked for an excellent company. I was not on overtime, but, was on a good general package which forced the no-brainer when choosing between work and home life. The big difference I noticed in recent years was that younger people walked out at 5.00pm! They had no interest in overtime if they were offered it. However, they were not on as good terms and conditions as me either. Some were also on contract. Whatever their reason for leaving early, they are right! Employers in recent years have used longer serving staff to burn the midnight oil while paying newer staff less.
Earlier on this year, the sudden availability of a redundancy package dovetailed with the mid-life realisation that I had missed out on a lot of family life. I bailed out! I have enjoyed spending a lot of time with my youngest child (9 years of age). I am still deciding on what to do next!
My advice... buy a smaller house, live nearer the workplace to minimise commuting, leave work early to enjoy a life that passes quickly regardless of whether or not you want children, plan to have your children while you are young and either of you take turns at jobsharing or downshifting (a concept I laughed at 20 years ago!) at different stages. Too many people are putting the big house, SUV/second car, two holidays a year and other transient materialistic rewards first. Identifying what you really need as opposed to what you want is more important. You can work the long hours for the materialistic things when the kids are reared!
The rewards in an IT career are not in the right proportion to the hours worked or the responsibility. My advice to my kids entering corporate life... become an accountant, HR manager or marketing executive!