Open Salaries: the Good, the Bad and the Awkward (yahoo.com) 258
gollum123 writes: More employers, from Whole Foods Market, with 91,000 employees, to smaller companies such as SumAll and Squaremouth, are opening up companywide salary information to all employees. They generally don't disclose it to the public—but one company, Buffer, posts all employees' salaries on its website. The idea of open pay is to get pay and performance problems out on the table for discussion, eliminate salary inequities and spark better performance. But open pay also is sparking some awkward conversations between co-workers comparing their paychecks, and puncturing egos among those whose salaries don't sync with their self-image.
Because... (Score:2)
Everything is going just fine for Whole Foods and they need something to fuck things up.
I would think a Board member would tell them that this opens a can of worms and will ultimately distract from the core business.
minimum wage and 29 hours a week max for lot's (Score:5, Insightful)
minimum wage and 29 hours a week max for lot's of workers makes them look bad.
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It's weird how things that make companies profitable make them look bad isn't it...
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Pangender Box Operative
Re:minimum wage and 29 hours a week max for lot's (Score:5, Funny)
We had to work 29 hours a day and pay for permission to come to work...
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I've actually worked an honest 30 hour day. Including 15 hours billable travel time.
Wasn't good for much the 'second half' of the day in the office. But I showed up.
State employees (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:State employees (Score:5, Informative)
State employee? I are one. And my salary is available via public information request. In fact, a few years ago our IT department had to provide a dump of name, position, and salary to a local newspaper which promptly posted it on their website, searchable, sortable, etc.
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State employee? I are one. And my salary is available via public information request. In fact, a few years ago our IT department had to provide a dump of name, position, and salary to a local newspaper which promptly posted it on their website, searchable, sortable, etc.
My only "day job" was working for the state of Indiana, at Indiana University. Each year someone would publish a list of all employees with salaries. I have a really good memory, so my salary negotiation each year was "so and so is incompetent and they're making $x, plus that represents an increase of $y over the year before that. Also, so and so always comes to me for help and he's been here 15 years and makes $z". I felt bad for my boss, as there was simply no refutation.
She told me when I quit after
No public information request needed (Score:2)
Are you sure that it even takes a public information request? There are sites on the internet that aggregate public employee salary data and make it available through a simple google search. My salary and my co-workers' salaries are available for anyone to see through such a search because we work for a public state university. It even includes previous years' salary data. In fact, a google search for just my name brings a link to my salary on findthedata.com within the first page of results!
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Good point!
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I don't think that public employees should be under such scrutiny, simply because they are employed with tax dollars. I think that the state needs to be accountable, but that the information shouldn't really need to linked to a name. They should only have to report the position and salary of the person. They don't need to get so specific that you can tell exactly how much each person makes. Obviously some positions like "mayor" might be obvious who holds the position, but I don't see much of a point to pub
Re:So what? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the difference between thoughts is that you are comfortable trivializing some of your tax dollars. It costs more money to scrub data and publish only salaries of X, and my taxes are high enough without paying for that too. If voters were all given the facts and all agreed to pay the extra expense to disclose only certain people's money then the people as a whole have spoken and I'm good with that.
Usually people are not informed about extra expenses and risks associated with not disclosing all expenses. There have been numerous cases of nepotism and cronyism where loopholes like yours are used to hide abuses.
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How does it cost more to export a table with position and salary instead of a table with name, position, and salary?
Re:So what? (Score:4, Interesting)
Because private companies don't get money from the government? How do you think defense contractors make their money, from selling equipment to other private companies?
No, they get their money by leeching* off the taxpayer.
Any company who gets money from taxpayer dollars should be required to list all employee salaries and compensation, top to bottom.
* There are those who consider government workers leeches. If that is so then so are companies who exist solely because of government contracts or who generate income from government contracts, in whatever capacity.
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+5 Insightful
Some cart before the horse? (Score:2)
Defense contractors would be able to make money in a free market, but we don't have a free market. Whether right or wrong (different discussion and interesting) the Government restricts what people make, how much they make, and who they can sell things to. They limit software as well as hardware, and in some cases even concepts and ideas. A company like Lockheed Martin can not sell a military plane to Bill Gates even though he could easily afford one or two. Let alone selling a plane to Sudan or Russia
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The trouble with posting everyones' salaries is that....it DOES tend to trend towards everyone getting paid the same, which penalizes those folks that work harder, are worth more...and are better negotiators.
It takes the competition out of the equation, and caters to the lowest common denominator....
Where's the incentive to bust your ass and innovate when you can plainly see t
Re:State employees (Score:4, Interesting)
The trouble with posting everyones' salaries is that....it DOES tend to trend towards everyone getting paid the same, which penalizes those folks that work harder, are worth more...and are better negotiators
Removing negotiation skill as a factor for pay is a plus for any job that doesn't directly involve negotiation. If Frank does a better job than Bill, but Bill is a great BS artist, then Bill shouldn't get paid the same (or more) just because he puts a nice spin on things.
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The trouble with posting everyones' salaries is that....it DOES tend to trend towards everyone getting paid the same, which penalizes those folks that work harder, are worth more...and are better negotiators.
It's the "better negotiators" part that sticks in most people's throats. It's just another example of some people who are actually less good at their actual job getting rewarded unfairly over others. Like people who are good at internal politics or self advertisment getting promoted.
If you're a good negotiator, be a salesman and get your sales bonuses fairly and squarely.
Not a problem at my state agency, but we specializ (Score:2)
My last job was at a state agency. Salaries were online for everyone to see. I didn't notice any problems related to that.
In my department, at least, each person's job was a bit unique ; nobody else did exactly what I did, so there wasn't a direct comparison. Raises (without a promotion) were quite limited because the legislature only approved 1%-2% per year merit raises for the agency, meaning almost everyone got a similar raise. To give one person a 10% raise would mean 9 other people got no raise, so t
Re:State employees (Score:5, Insightful)
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The worst thing that can happen is that they start looking for your replacement, who you'll be asked to train.
That can happen at any time, and any person worth a damn in this industry knows how to ride that shit.
Be damn sure that your company values you at the level that you think you should be paid before bringing up this topic. I've renegotiated my salary, and stayed on for several years after that at a nice salary, but I think they resented it
You should always operate with that possibility in mind (and plan your A,B,C contingency plans accordingly.) ALWAYS.
, and I was let go with a chunk of my department the next time layoffs occurred.
Sorry to hear that. Still, I hope you were prepared for that. In this industry, you should always expect a layoff every 2 to 4 years, because it will happen regardless of whether you fight or not for what you want. So you might as well fight for what you want and expect to be let go (regardles
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Definitely they were going to lay somebody off. Clearly making more money moves you closer to the top of the list when management is looking to cut costs.
Re:State employees (Score:5, Insightful)
Still better to have high salary.
1. You earn more while it lasts
2. If you're worth the money, you'll be very safe in a well managed company.
3. If you're not worth your money, you shouldn't be paid said money.
4. If you're worth it and they fire you for it, it's a bad company and you shouldn't WANT to be working for them.
5. If there's a chance you'll lose everything without a job, your country is bad and you should help change that.
I know it's not as simple to pull off, but we're seeing now what happens if everyone just rolls over and licks boot at the threat of losing the job...
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No, chances are they were going to lay you off anyway. That has nothing to do with asking for a higher salary. Silliness.
Exactly. Layoffs every 2-4 years have been the norm in this industry for the last 20 years. Amazing that people still do not get this.
Re:State employees (Score:5, Interesting)
That's why I prefer contracting.
I mean, if you are going to get the same loyalty from the company as a contractor, and the same job security from a company as a contractor, you might as well get the BILL RATE of a contractor from said company, no?
And if you incorporate yourself, you get to write so much stuff off, if you do something like a "S-corp" you can save how much you have to pay in on SS and medicare (not paid on your full bill rate)....and you are free to negotiate your bill rate. Sure, you have to put on your Big Boy pants and do extra paperwork, think and invest for yourself for retirement, etc.
But really if you're going to be treated as a contractor, why not make the money a contractor gets paid for the risk undertaken?
These days, a W2 employee seems to get the worst of both worlds more and more...
Re:State employees (Score:5, Insightful)
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And you will quickly be replaced with someone who doesn't whine. Demand too much, and don't let the door hit your ass as you exit.
Only if you suck enough as a worker (or work in a sufficiently toxic environment) to be dismissed just like that. You'd be surprised how much you can argue back with force (while being respectful obviously.)
Once you have worked long enough under enough (and different companies), you will see this. You will see this even more if you do your homework regarding where to work.
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Buffer salaries (Score:5, Informative)
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It is amazing a company can make so much money doing something completely useless.
Welcome to the internet citizen.
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Also, they are paying 70k+ for a job with the title of Twitter Hero. And the company looks like it generates social media spam messages. It is amazing a company can make so much money doing something completely useless.
It is surprising that people who create nothing can make so much (WTH is a "happiness hero" anyway). Sadly they make more than I do and if no one was doing my job then a significant portion of global travel would literally stop within months.
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Someone else would do your job, and no single job is required for global travel to continue. You have an inflated sense of self-importance, perhaps to the point of it being a psychiatric condition.
As I said, if no one did my job, a portion of travel would stop. Because I make sure that pilots receive the training they need first to get type rated on the aircraft and then the training to keep flying. Without that training none of them would be able to continue to fly within a few months. Yes, other people can and do do this job, but without it planes wouldn't fly because there would be no one to fly them.
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It is amazing a company can make so much money doing something completely useless.
I think the social media space is full of these kinds of companies only because ad agencies are full of clueless executives who only know that they need "social media capability" and don't have it, so they farm it out to this kind of company, mark up the cost, and pass it on to their client.
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Re:Buffer salaries (Score:5, Funny)
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In Norway, EVERYONES salary is available (Score:5, Informative)
In Norway, EVERYONES salary is available and guess what, nothing bad happened.
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In Norway, EVERYONES salary is available and guess what, nothing bad happened.
Not exactly. Total income after tax deductions are published. But you have no idea if that total is from one job or several jobs or stock market profits or real estate profits or whatever taxable sources of income a person may have. All you get is the sum. Also, you don't know what tax deductions have been subtracted from the published total - people are always surprised when some millionaire has 0 taxable income. Probably paid a lot of interest or invested everything . . .
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You don't say...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Yeah it has nothing to do with salaries but it has everything to do with "nothing bad happened".
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Re:In Norway, EVERYONES salary is available (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, Norwegians are atypical. They jump out of saunas into frozen lakes... nothing fazes them!
Only when they hear the words "The lutefisk is ready!". It's a purely defensive measure.
I Nannot Believe That This Is Legal (Score:2)
Huge breach in privacy.
Might cause more problems in a big company (Score:5, Interesting)
Everyone who works for a big enough organization has probably run into people who you have no idea how their salary is justified. I'm not just talking about "oh, I'm better than him because I know more," I'm talking about the secrets that confidential salaries can hide:
- Board members' less-than-qualified family members/business associates/friends getting paid a relatively huge salary compared to their role/contribution
- Senior level people who have been "parked" after a division closure or similar event -- often because they have lots of knowledge that would otherwise disappear, more often because they are politically connected
- Revealing how much politics really affects salaries would be a huge morale-buster.
The bigger the organization, the more these become apparent. For example, look at HP laying off 30,000 employees or IBM laying off 20,000. Most of it is probably offshore talent replacement in these cases, but I'm sure there are plenty of highly-compensated people left over from acquisitions, etc. that they're just taking the opportunity to purge because they were making a lot of money and not contributing a lot.
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A little off topic but similar in result. I was working for Compaq when HP took over. HP execs were outraged to find out Toshiba was charging Compaq substantially less for a particular HDD they both sourced.
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We are running an open payroll (to other staff, not public, though we did consider that).
We are small and a start-up and not paying anything astonishing to anyone, but it sure takes away some furtiveness and toxicity that we can just have the discussions out in the open. Some do stuff for us for free for the open source goodness, some we pay "London Living Wage" to which is a bit above minimum wage, and some we pay a little more than that. Only myself and my co-director are full time and we get paid less
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Everyone who works for a big enough organization has probably run into people who you have no idea how their salary is justified. I'm not just talking about "oh, I'm better than him because I know more," I'm talking about the secrets that confidential salaries can hide: - Board members' less-than-qualified family members/business associates/friends getting paid a relatively huge salary compared to their role/contribution - Senior level people who have been "parked" after a division closure or similar event -- often because they have lots of knowledge that would otherwise disappear, more often because they are politically connected - Revealing how much politics really affects salaries would be a huge morale-buster.
The bigger the organization, the more these become apparent. For example, look at HP laying off 30,000 employees or IBM laying off 20,000. Most of it is probably offshore talent replacement in these cases, but I'm sure there are plenty of highly-compensated people left over from acquisitions, etc. that they're just taking the opportunity to purge because they were making a lot of money and not contributing a lot.
I agree with your first paragraph- there are about 6 father/son pairs in my company of just ~55 employees, and in many cases, one of the employees is terrific, and the other is completely worthless. Sometimes it is the father, and sometimes the son. It is impossible to get rid of the "bad" one without risking the "good" one leaving as well.
A lesson learned as a Scout (Score:3)
As a person with 30 years of experience, it seems likely that I make more than my boss, who only has 6 years of experience. In fact, by boss's boss once hinted something to the effect to me. So, is that unfair to the boss? We could debate whether he or I contribute more to the organization, or whether I'm worth X times what he makes. But that's irrelevant. Presumably, when my boss has 30 years of experience he likely also will make more than someone who has only six years of experience.
This is a bit like the union "seniority" system. Fairness comes not in terms of value-added per pay-received but in terms of the fact that ostensibly underpaid younger people will eventually become ostensibly overpaid older people.
You may disagree with the above, but what if everybody in this story knew each others' salary? I think that would just lead to a lot of bad feelings by those who feel they are underpaid (which was me in a past life), and wouldn't accomplish much of anything. It seems like a very bad idea to me, and not just because I'm now a highly paid senior person, but primarily because I saw the problems it caused among me an my coworkers when I worked at a Boy Scout camp at age 15: being young, we didn't know not to discuss these things, and when we discovered apparent discrepancies in our pay, it led to a lot of bad feelings.
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Not in the slightest. I've worked for several organizations, both in the .gov contracting sector and in the private sector, where job salaries were posted on the job postings (and available for lookup in "the book" or now on an intranet somewhere). You could grouse about how lousy someone was at their job (just remember, someone is most likely grousing about *your* performance, too), but we all knew what we got paid.
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I would argue that it led to trouble because you and your co-workers were 15 years old and couldn't behave and think like responsible adults. The entire Federal Government basically has open pay data. There is actually a site, I'm too lazy to look up atm, which lets you lookup how many civil servants, and of what pay grade, work for every agency. Within agencies everyone knows what pay grade everyone else is in. Many people will complain about how the government can't do anything right, but when it comes to
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Looking back on that time now that I am a "responsible adult" (tee-hee), I still don't think what went on back then was fair, and I don't think that knowing the discrepancies did me any good.
As has been pointed out here, there are many cases of open pay that seem to work. I just don't think it's the generally preferable thing. Specifically, I don't know what the big advantage is. One thing I can think of is that it might somehow lead to some sort of "fairness" by treating pay in some sort of systematic w
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Why would you think that government employees would be immune to it? What makes them different, other than the fact that they work for an employer that uses an open system? Do you think only people who are okay with openess work for the government? On what basis?
I don't work for the federal government, but like many state employees my salary is public information. I deliberately *don't* look at what other people make because it is too depressing (anyone who thinks that publicly disclosed pay makes it equita
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Why would you think that government employees would be immune to it? What makes them different, other than the fact that they work for an employer that uses an open system? Do you think only people who are okay with openess work for the government? On what basis?
Maybe government employees also are somehow immune from irony*.
*more irony...sorry :-)
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
anyone, employee or not, can (and should) buy stoc (Score:2)
> as his earnings from any assets he may hold in the buffer corporation such as interest from stock or dividends paid.
Fyi stocks pay dividends, bonds (loans) pay interest.
If someone loaned the company $100,000 and they are being paid 4% interest on that loan, that's an entirely separate transaction from whether the person is also an employee of the company. If the company issued bonds, anyone, any employee or non-employee can buy that bond (make the loan) and be paid interest on the money they loaned.
Si
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this is how the vast majority of millionaires BECOME millionaires - buying a bit of stock each month, typically through a mutual fund.
This is a widely held belief, but its false. The average millionaire is a millionaire because of the concept of dynastic wealth. They are rich through the lottery of birth
{{citation-needed}}, for both of you.
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I know a lot of boomer millionaires, and most weren't born into it. Most saved a lot during the 60s, 70s and 80s to get there.
I think your point holds true for people with net worth > 10 million. But a million dollars isn't much these days.
bull, you are not a victim. $275/month for 35 year (Score:2)
Less than 10% of millionaires inherited significant wealth.
I'm currently DOING this, getting rich, and it IS working, just like it's always worked for other people who do it. It's not quick, but it works. At this point you decide which is most important to you - holding on to a mistaken belief or retiring as a millionaire. Because this is how it does work.
Here's a calculator for you to run different scenarios, but the bottom line the calculator will tell you is that you need to EITHER save $480/month (PR
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you introduce your unspecified "millionaires club" and then point out that, over someone's work life, they can easily make a million dollars. So what? WTF does that have to do with the question at hand?
I'm not going to claim to know what GP meant by millionaire in "the average millionaire is a millionaire", but he clearly referenced income ("and each returning approximately 25 cents of interest"), not savings.
If you are trying to imply that an average worker can become one of the wealthy elite by simply sav
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get employees to compete amongst eachother for salary equity
You forget that national and multinational corporations employee people all over. I for one know that I make a less than those in my department that live in CA, although I am probably in a better financial state than them because the cost of living in the mid-west is considerably lower. I don't gauge my salary by what the company pays everyone else but instead by what other companies are paying for talent in my area.
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the concept worked for U.S. C.E.O.s (Score:2, Interesting)
When U.S. publicly traded companies had to disclose top managers' compensations their collective compensations increased. Employers couldn't really screw them over. (Arguably, it was these employees screwing them.)
Capitalism/shareholders really can afford being squeezed of profits in order to pay fair market value for labor.
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Are you sure you have your timeline correct? I thought it was the trend of their compensations increasing that lead to the disclosure requirement.
Market Forces (Score:2)
This is actually quite smart. When you have low skilled employees, a poor economy, and weak organised labour, making salary data available basically turns your employees on themselves. It would make it harder for a single employee to negotiate a higher salary, and general labour market conditions (outsourcing, unemployment etc) will keep aggregate salaries suppressed. Pretty much the opposite to why tech companies are so secretive about the astronomical amounts they have to pay technical staff.
As for those
Transitions are allways awkward (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is not that salaries are now open. The problem is that they were secret for so long allowing various forms of corruption to grow and fester. It is always awkward when previously hidden rubbish is exposed to the light. The solution, though, is not to go back to hiding salaries but to keep them open. That way existing inequities get cleaned up and new ones are not allowed to sprout.
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Something rotton in the department... (Score:5, Informative)
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My Father decades ago worked writing software for mainframes in assembler. Part of his compensation was some percentage of commission on sales and licensing of stuff he wrote. A fellow co-worker and him both noticed over the years that whenever either of their pay managed to exceed their managers pay for the year the commission percentage would get trimmed a little for the next year. My Father never seemed to indicate that this upset him, but he did seem to take perverse pleasure in pushing his pay high eno
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That manager was an idiot.
In old school companies where you must always make more than your 'down reports', you use the most successful of your 'reports' to drive your own salary up. You don't hold his down, that's just stupid.
Not that new (Score:2)
Maybe long term this will be good. Maybe. (Score:2)
But in the short to medium term, it's going to cause a lot of problems. In most companies of any size there are wage disparities between people in the same job for a variety of reasons, exacerbated by the simple fact that companies rarely pay you more than they think they can get away with. So when a company institutes transparency like this you will have a lot of people who were reasonably content suddenly very unhappy to discover that some of their teammates who are doing the exact same job are making m
My dad always told me... (Score:4, Insightful)
A company can never pay you what you are worth because they'd never make a profit doing that.
I think, he was telling me to that I should work for myself if I really wanted to get paid. I think he was right. You don't get rich working for somebody else. It's a good living sometimes, but after 25 years I'm not getting rich doing what I do...
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A company can never pay everyone what they are worth. They can pay more than you in particular are worth. (For a fun game, ask three people across the political spectrum if CEOs fall into the second sentence or not).
And worth is relative. You can certainly be worth a lot to one company, but almost nothing to any other.
Re:My dad always told me... (Score:5, Insightful)
While that's literally true, it's more complicated than that.
If you work at a company, you are able to devote 100% of your time doing what you are best at. Call it $100k worth of work. Your pay may be, say, 70% of that 100% productivity's value - $70k. So the company is "only paying you" 70% of what you are worth.
You say screw them and decide to work for yourself. You get bogged down doing a lot of bureaucracy and paperwork running your own business. Taxes, accounting, tracking down and wooing new clients, dealing with defective product returns, booking your own trips or scheduling vehicle repairs, etc. If that takes up 30% of your time, then you are only able to produce only 70% as much work as when you were working at the company. Consequently, you end up making... $70k. Same as when you were at the company.
When you worked at the company, you spent 100% of your time doing what you are best at. Someone skilled in taxes and accounting spent 100% of their time doing those things. Someone good at getting new clients spent 100% of their time doing that. etc. So the stuff that takes 30% of your time when you are self-employed, is done for only 10% of these people's time because they are much better at it than you are.
Consequently the net cost to the company to produce the same amount of work you did when you were self-employed is $70k + $10k = $80k (keep it simple and assume everyone gets paid the same per unit of productivity). The value of your work is $100k, they paid you $70k, other workers $10k (for the fraction of their work they do related to you), and the remaining $20k the company kept for operations and profit.
You were working just as many hours as when you were self-employed, but you were doing only what you were best at doing, thus you were more productive. You were getting paid just as much as when you are self-employed ($70k), but your higher productivity by putting you together with other employees is what allowed the company to make a profit. There's also synergistic effects. If you're a specialist in materials and another employee is a specialist is biochemistry, the two of you together may be able to come up with a great product which neither of you could've made alone.
Adjust these numbers a little and you could actually end up making more money working for a company than you could alone. It takes a special blend of someone with a trade skill, plus accounting skills, plus management and organizational skills, plus people skills (to woo customers) to succeed on their own. If you are deficient in any one of these skills, you are probably better off working for a company where people better at these tasks can handle it for you. (Or you can start your own company but hire or partner with someone skilled in the area you're deficient in - how Jobs and Wozniak complemented each other.)
The real benefit of working for yourself isn't that you make more money per hour of work you put in. Most self-employed people work more hours because they spend 8 hours doing their trade skill, then 2-3 more hours afterward doing all the management and paperwork. The real benefit is that if you succeed, the fruits of your success pass directly to you, instead of being absorbed by the company. (The flip side of course is that if you fail, you don't make money or even lose money, whereas working for a company you're guaranteed to make at least your salary. Employment is like a savings account at a bank - you can't lose money, but you pay for that safety with a very low interest rate. Starting your own business is like taking your money and investing it in stocks instead of putting it in a savings account - you could make a lot more money, but you could also lose money.)
Google employees do this informally (Score:4, Interesting)
Some employees chatting about salary openness decided to take it upon themselves to do it. Someone created a Google Form and shared it on a very widely-used internal mailing list (~40K subscribers). People could choose to provide their username or not; many did. About 3000 employees added their data in 2014, which included career ladder, level, location, gender and base pay rate. For 2015 the form was revised to add "total compensation", because a significant part of Google employee compensation is in the form of stock grants and bonuses. Analysis of the numbers shows that compensation is pretty fair. There's no gender gap (not surprising because Google HR watches those stats closely). There are some significant differences between people at different locations, but those correlate pretty well with cost of living differences.
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Sheds A Tear.... (Score:2)
and puncturing egos among those whose salaries don't sync with their self-image.
Awwwww. We need some of this on wall street and every corporate boardroom.
Glassdoor? Salary.com? (Score:2)
Haven't these been around for a while? Is this news?
The formula is not transparent (Score:2)
The number of independent variables exceeds the number of data rows. Therefore, it is possible for a set of rules to be created to arbitrarily map each employee to any desired salary. In other words, these "rules" are less effective AND LESS TRANSPARENT than arbitrarily setting each person's salary.
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family and friends seeing the information might make things awkward. Imagine the increase in loan requests from friends or the disapproving looks from relatives who think you should be "doing more with your life".
Especially if you tell your family you earn a lot less than you actually do, and spend the rest on hookers and booze :)
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I deliberately do not tell people what I earn. Especially co-workers.
The reason? I generally earn more than them. Not that I think I'm so much better than them or anything else, but that I negotiate my pay solely on my terms. This is what I earned at my last place, this is what I need to earn to come to you, and I was owed this raise that never happened so if you could do that too I'd look on that extra responsibility you want me to take on in a much better light.
And, as a result, I've earned more than
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Pretty much the same reason so many guys seem to have a hard time getting laid.
You just gotta ask and be confident about yourself in SO many facets of life.
So many men are scared of asking a (pretty) girl out or talking to a boss about a raise.
sad
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How do you negociate the net? The company can not know your tax rate. Your spouse salary, short term capital gain, or external consulting activities are not known by your employer. Therefore you can not negociate based on this.
Though I agree with you that you need to take into account insurance, and all deduction to make your decision, but you can not negociate based on that.
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If you are flexible when negotiating and make it clear you value other things it can make it easier for HR or the hiring manager to meet your needs.
Often the easiest thing for HR to adjust during hiring is vacation. An extra week or two can be worth 2-5% to you, but not actually show up as a salary increase. Similarly you can negotiate for stock options, or bonus percentage that often does not require escalation for approval.
Just negotiating a higher salary often results in tiny raises until you come in l