• Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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      1 hour ago

      I try and drop subtle hints around the office, like “my family members in unions don’t have this kind of problem” and “friend of mine has a union that got them out of a return to office order”. Feel like I need to go with stronger hints.

    • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Yep. Everyone knows the other person’s pay rate. Heck, you can probably look up most union’s pay scales online even if you’re not a member.

  • w3dd1e@lemmy.zip
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    12 hours ago

    When I transferred to a particular department, I was very open about salary. I never asked anyone else to be too, but it got people talking and a year later half my team quit to get a 25% salary increase at a competitor. Oopsie!

    I don’t regret it. 10/10 Would do it again.

  • BilSabab@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    what’s funny is that while the institutional gender pay disparity is mostly gone (at least where i work) - there’s still a couple of dozen ways women get screwed out of money for doing the same work.

    my favorite case from this year was with data engineer position - simple middle level position Pandas Airflow Databricks stack, 3k median. two candidates hired - same skill level, salary - male 3,5k, females 2,7k - why? if you look strictly at the skill assessment reports - you wouldn’t even be able to tell where is who. so what the fuck is going on? well, if you look at the HR report - dude been showboating and oversharing about his skills all the way for the ladies and that’s good thing that should be rewarded while the lady just laid down the facts as she was asked during the interviews and was deemed distant and not very personable, “she doesn’t seem happy to be here” so to speak therefore she is not that good. fucking literally. and then the very same recruitment and human resources specialists wonder why people leave.

    • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I have a very high suspicion they are pulling same trick to a degree depending on overall background like race too.

      • BilSabab@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        it’s more of a skill issue on recruiter’s part because you have to cut through bullshit like that. it is less of a problem with dev teams because loudmouths get humbled eventually but it is a huge problem for sales, business development and marketing - it can do a lot of damage. funnily enough - AI tools for candidate screening and chatbot interviews actually help spotting that kind of thing.

    • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Unfortunately, people who sell themselves to the company make more than people who don’t. Hell, sometimes just asking for a pay bump during the hire/on-boarding process can make a difference. Two of the last few gigs I’ve been at have given me 5-10k more a year simply because I laid out my creds and asked for the high end of the scale when I probably would have been given the mid range if I didn’t ask and justify it.

      Many people don’t understand that you’re selling yourself to the company, and they’re buying your time and labor. If you present a mediocre product, don’t surprise when you get a mediocre offer. I can’t stand it, but not playing the game doesn’t get you anywhere.

      • BilSabab@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        the whole “sell yourself to the company” thing is not what it seems. it has less to do with candidates getting around the idea of self-presentation and more with the overall degradation of recruitment and human resources talent pool. there are lots of people who bear the titles but can’t do their jobs properly. and they look for shortcuts and easy decisions. “selling yourself to the company” is one of them. it’s not a knock on the candidate trying to get by, but if the recruiter whose job is to spot that (among other things) can’t spot that - that’s a problem that makes a mess. hell, most companies don’t even have transparent pay scale systems to clearly communicate who gets what and why so the salaries are all over the place for no good reason and it leads to toxicity and disgruntlement.

  • boaratio@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Out of college, I got my first job at a decent salary. A woman I interviewed with saw the salary offer they gave me, and then promptly went to HR to demand that she at least make as much as I was offered. She had been at this company for 3 years. It shouldn’t be this hard. Women shouldn’t have to fight to make as much as men. Normalize discussing salary.

    • IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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      59 minutes ago

      All-male team here, but my colleague made considerably less than what I was offered as a new hire few years back. We discussed about salary at coffee break and now we all have the same salary and it’s even better than what I started with. I never understood why it’d be a secret that I make 4,5k€/month before taxes.

    • Flickerby@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      It’s everyone. Corporations screw everyone as much as they can. You think if they could hire the same equally qualified person for 30% less they wouldn’t do it in a heartbeat? Corporations care more about profits than they do being anti women (barely) otherwise every field would be dominated by low paid women. As OP, best solution is to discus wages openly so no one gets fucked over.

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      It isn’t just women, although it does affect us more for sure.

      I used to work at a small startup making peanuts and a male colleague hired on was making even less. Thankfully, we went against the company policy of not being allowed to discuss salaries (an illegal policy in my state, btw), and managed to negotiate him up a bit.

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    20 hours ago

    I was pulled into a meeting with my director and told we’re not allowed to do this. I told her it absolutely was allowed under the law and she looked me in the eye and doubled down, stated that it has been like this at every company she’s ever worked at.

    My complaint to HR resulted in the HR person telling me that while it wasn’t allowed, it was discouraged; which is also against the law.

    My ethics report on both of them was “investigated and concluded”.

    My call to the NLRB resulted in an overworked federal employee telling me I could make a complaint but it was unlikely to amount to anything against a company that size.

    • JayleneSlide@lemmy.world
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      55 minutes ago

      I was leading a team of engineers (in contrast to managing). There was another team that hired a cohort of engineers straight out of a boot camp. One of them was a shit-hot Jedi of a woman, so I totally poached her for my team. It helped that my team was working on cool stuff and most people wanted in.

      After she joined my team, I asked what her salary was (leads don’t typically have access to pay info like a manager would). She was making $70k while most engineers of her tenure and skill were making $110k to $145k. I went to talk to motherfucking HR about this problematic disparity.

      The HR jerkwad had the nerve to say, “Discussing your salaries is a terminable offense.”

      “I will give you five seconds to amend your statement.”

      He stammered a bit and made some non-committal statements. I went to the division VP, to whom I directly reported. He fixed that shit the next day and got her back pay to her previous review.

      So yeah, absolutely discuss your salaries with your peers. And FFS don’t be cowed by these douchebags.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      The rule with discussing salaries is that you can do it (and you should do it), but you shouldn’t let your managers know you’re doing it. The law is on your side, but nobody with actual authority wants to support you doing it.

      So, if you’re on your way out in a contested wrongful termination case, there’s definitely leverage in pointing to your employer firing you for discussing salaries with your coworkers. But in every other case, you gotta play those cards close to the chest. Nod and smile and agree with every manager who says you shouldn’t discuss salaries. Then do as thou wilt.

  • LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I was one of 3 people aty office who got any sort of raise this year. It was based on merit. I’m thrilled about the raise, but I feel bad for my coworkers because management sucks. I discussed the raise with my work besties and one is pissed about it and the other is hyped for me.

    I’m also faced with the dilemma of being important at work.

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Being important can be tricky.

      I work in a very small city, and I wear a lot of hats. I do plan review, permit processing, GIS, Open Records, vested rights determinations, some code enforcement, am the in-house IT guy, city photographer, and more.

      What makes me valuable is my ability to multitask, and if I left it would be very hard to fill all those roles. But I’m also kinda a specialist in keeping plates spinning. My role is essential where I am now, but it’s fulfilled my specialists in each of those duties in other cities. My skills etc isn’t in high demand because there’s only a few cities in the country that have the the extreme development complexity we have while also having a municipal staff of fewer than a dozen people due to the city’s size.

  • khaleer@sopuli.xyz
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    21 hours ago

    In the same way, I discovered that everyone got paid. Except me. For a month. I left the job, best decision ever made.

  • Triumph@fedia.io
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    2 days ago

    In the US, not only is it completely legal to openly discuss compensation with anyone you like, it is also illegal for your employer to tell you not to, or to retaliate against you for doing so. It is a highly protected activity.

    • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      Though everywhere I have ever worked (in tech, in the US) it was highly discouraged to talk about salary.

    • Zachariah@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      If you’re in an at-will state, they can fire you this without saying this is why, and it’s very hard to prove this was why.

      • Triumph@fedia.io
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        1 day ago

        Montana is the only state where an employer needs “good cause” to terminate.

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      1 day ago

      Employers have all the power, though. It is they who may reliably hide behind the law for protection. Laws that protect employees are rare to be passed and rarer to be enforced.

      • Triumph@fedia.io
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        1 day ago

        You’re not wrong, but it’s worth contacting DoL if you need to on this one.

        • shalafi@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Worked for a payroll firm and 99.75% of lemmy would be astonished at how powerful the state labor board is. And this was in Florida! Hardly a bastion of labor rights.

          “waGe TheFT!”

          “Have you called the state labor board and inquired?”

          “NOAWW! I’m a victim and I make memes!”

          Only our worst client, and only 1, wasn’t scared shitless of a call from the state labor folks. And these clients were rock-bottom, minimum-wage employers like restaurants, churches and thrift stores. Part of our payroll service was protecting the employer from fucking over the employees!

          While I’m on about knowing your rights, a $26 legal insurance plan can save you 10’s of thousands with a single use. I call mine every few months.

          “Can they do this? What about this? What are my rights? What if I do this thing? What form do I fill out and how?!” Mostly super-simple stuff, but my divorce and child custody cases alone saved me far than I will spend in the next 40 years.

          The difference between rich and poor is legal representation. $26/mo.

        • unfreeradical@slrpnk.net
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          1 day ago

          Support from the state is likely to vary based on local context and the current administrations.

          No one should be naively hopeful.

          It is most optimal to rely on labor organization for finding individuals with specific relevant experience.

          • Signtist@bookwyr.me
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            22 hours ago

            Yeah, my buddy got fired from his job working at a hospital right after going on medical leave for a mental health diagnosis. Easy open-and-shut case of illegal discrimination. Not only has he been in a legal battle over it for several years now with no end in sight, but he’s had absolutely no luck finding jobs at other hospitals in the area, which given his experience is unusual, causing him to believe he’s been blacklisted in some way. For all intents and purposes the US legal system is pay-to-win, and employers are playing with very big pockets.

  • Steve Dice@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I used to work at a shitty company that banned discussing salaries. I never thought anything about it because it was a call center and I just kinda assumed we had standardised salary across the board. One time when having drinks at a friend’s house who worked with me but had a higher position, I found his payslip lying around and I was making, I shit you not, about 70% more. Fucking hell.

  • plz1@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Yep, that’s why companies try so hard to intimidate people into keeping that info secret. I think most if not every company I’ve ever worked for has had some version of

    • It’s against company policy
    • It’s illegal
    • It will just create jealousy

    And of course, my responses have always been

    • Too bad, it’s federally protected
    • Liar
    • No, your payroll policies do that; same job, same pay
    • TheOakTree@lemmy.zip
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      8 hours ago

      It will just create jealousy

      Ah yes, because if that worker just happened upon others’ salaries, they wouldn’t be jealous.

  • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Serious question: how do you start that conversation with a coworker if you’re not 100% certain they’ll be receptive?

    • adminofoz@lemmy.cafe
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      1 day ago

      As someone who detests small talk, this is one of the few times when it is essentially.

      First step is learning if they are a snitch. Second is seeing if they can be critical of workplace. Third is bringing up your own salary. Fourth is asking for theirs if they don’t immediately reciprocate on step 3.

      In practice there are many ways this can happen. Here is one reasonable example:

      Did you see the bosses [insert anything, tie, shoes, car, your pick] today. OmG!

      [Wait a day or two for any sign that made it back to your boss. Prepare a convincing cover up story in the event he/she/it is a snitch.]

      2-4

      Our health insurance is terrible isnt it? I swear its like they pick the cheapest option. [Replace the above with any other unpopular opinion depending on how critical the response is of your workplace you can jump immediately to steps 3-4]

      I heard a lot of employers like to pay people differently for the exact same work and I dont think thats right. Thats why I want you to know I make Y. If you make less I can help you argue for more. Do you mind sharing your salary too?

      You can sometimes just jump straight to step 3 or 4 if you are feeling confident. But do be aware. You can save someone’s job and the boss will corner them in an office and some of them will still rat you out. Happened to me personally. The above isnt without risk. But do not be afraid of humans, especially middle management humans. They are usually the weakest people I’ve ever met.