Ask Slashdot: Should You Tell Future Employers Your Salary History?
An anonymous reader writes:
During the interview process for a technology job, I was asked to fill out an application which included questions about my compensation history. When I asked why, I was told that it was part of the background check and wouldn't be used to determine the size of the offer... What is the risk for the employer of not knowing that info? Is this standard procedure or part of a trend at technology companies?
The original submission asks if this is ever a legitimate question -- or more to the point, "Is it anything more than an attempt to gain negotiating leverage?" So leave your best answers in the comments. When you're interviewing for a new IT job, should you tell future employers your salary history?
The original submission asks if this is ever a legitimate question -- or more to the point, "Is it anything more than an attempt to gain negotiating leverage?" So leave your best answers in the comments. When you're interviewing for a new IT job, should you tell future employers your salary history?
You should never ever ever give your salary history. It will NEVER help you and will only ever fuck you over. Anyone that claims it's for a background check is lying their ass off and no employer will ever confirm a number. Just put $1 or $0 and when they ask you can simply tell them that's not important and/or it's none of their business.
You only stand to lose leverage. Figure out what you need, or want, and go from there. Note this only works if you're willing (or able) to walk away from the negotiating table.
If you want to put something there, put "negotiable". If they ask/pressure you to provide something, tell them you'd be happy to discuss it after receiving an official offer in writing.
Give them the history that demonstrates the salary you want, then if they reject you you are better off.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
If they ask your salary history, then ask the salary history of people who have held the position and the salaries of everyone at the table.
Yes if you want at least what you were making previously.
No if you want a huge raise from what you were making beforehand.
No if you expect to make a lot less money than your last job, and are fine with this.
What I worked for at my last position has no bearing on what I'm willing to take this position for.
A significant part of that money was "earned" by refusing to pay contractors for work they completed.
But that's fine.. alot of people seem really psyched about this kleptocrat's bigoted and idiotic policies.
I guess they think that Donald Trump only steals from his other business partners?
It's not like he is about to line his pockets with American tax dollars, like his hero and puppet master Vladimir Putin....
Earlier in my career I never gave my current salary, because I was looking for 20%+ raises each time and giving the information would probably only hurt me. But now that I am in my mid-30's and making far more than most of my counterparts with similar job titles, giving my salary helps ensure I don't waste time with any company which cannot provide similar compensation. Most companies don't realize top IT talent often get Senior manager / Director level salaries even without many if any managerial duties, so I need to weed them out quickly. Either that or they immediately start treating me as a consultant, because many companies are more comfortable with $150/hr full time consultants than $200k "permanent" IT staff members (even for long term gigs).
-- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
Best story I heard was in the late 90s some guy added 50k to his last salary. He went from 40k to 110k overnight.
Troll much?
Things you should not tell potential employers:
1. Age
2. Sex
3. Race
4. Education
5. Certifications
6. Publications
7. Employment history
8. Salary history
Always pretend you are a recent graduate on an H1B visa and fresh off a plane. Otherwise you will never find work.
A few days ago my boss and I were laughingly puzzled over why anyone would ever provide salary history. We've been hiring and HR makes us ask for it, but what we was really shocking us was how many people were including it on their resumes even before we asked. As my boss said, "why would you ever give that before a negotiation even starts?"
That's why I posted as an Anonymous Coward. I'm a chickenhawk!
Been at this since '81 or so, several jobs (scary to think of the percentage of companies I worked for that no longer exist). I've never once been asked for a salary history. They usually ask for the desired salary, which I leave blank. Let them throw out a number and start negotiating.
Works for me, every job I've ever gotten had a higher salary that the one I left.
Most interesting? I was interviewing at a company when rumors started to fly my company was going to have a layoff. I went to the manager in charge of my job (not my supervisor), asked to be laid off if the rumors were true. Got hired by the company across the street (not kidding, I walked to both of them, they were 1 mile away). Held off on turning in my 2 week notice and, sure as snot, got laid off a week later. Got all the benefits of being laid off, plus after a 1 week vacation I started my new job.
(Posting anonymously since I am in the job market)
In addition to salary history, Employers in the United States often ask for tax forms or permission to obtain tax transcripts. Sometimes this is to prove who you worked for without contacting them. But other times this is used to see your salary history, and/or prove it is what you said it was.
The short US answer seems to be employers can require, and you can voluntarily give. But this information cannot be used to try and determine anything discriminatory (married status, if you have children, etc.) under Federal law.
In general, the *best* salaries I have received in my career happened when I did not reveal my previous salary, but only suggested roughly where it was. That way the new employer has to do their homework and hopefully give you a better deal. You should use various salary calculators to see roughly where you are as well.
It is perfectly acceptable to tell an employer that a previous employer considers your salary confidential.
I find that Nick Corcodilos' website www.asktheheadhunter.com, as well as the various third-party websites which have him as a guest are a very good resource on this as well as a variety of other topics. This is true even if you don't have the money to pay for his books.
The workplace at a tech company or in a tech department is a melting pot of global cultures.
Many of us work with or have worked with people who are impacted by Donald Trump's bigoted executive order.
I'm a nerd. Trump's bigoted actions blocking my friends from visiting their family, or from returning home after visiting their families.
This is disgusting. Donald Trump's bigoted presidency is a national stain which will stay with us like slavery and segregation.
I just went through change of job in last 6 month. In the process i found out that through background check and credit verification the new company had access to my full salary info for last 20 years. Not sure how the background verification company got that info but my new employee could easily validate my salary claims.
Rather than my flippant answer, I agree that instead it's far better to just tell them the salary you are looking for and let them decide if they can manage it.
Even if they never look it up, it's not a hood idea to fill out anything wrong in a form - just leave it blank.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Unless, of course, you work for the Federal Government. Then they can just go look up your entire salary history, plus bonuses.
https://www.federalpay.org/employees
It is always fun when someone new joins the Agencies I've worked for. They have the typical "I don't discuss salary" attitude of private sector employees. Then tell them their salary down to the penny and their eyes go wide like it is some terrible secret that has been told.
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
hillary lost.. deal with it. take your socjus misrepresentations elsewhere.. just because someone disagrees with your politics doesn't make them racist.
Like America has anything to steal, Obama spent us over 50 trillion into debt.
The Chinese are probably picking out new curtains for the White House as we speak.
I will not be silent in the face of Donald Trump's racist agenda.
And yet there isn't a single citation in your entire post as to just what, exactly, was recently blocked. In my book, that counts as "being silent".
As opposed to what? merkel's capitulation to a culture that does not respect such esteemed liberal values? Values are worthless if you're not willing to stand against those who do not share them. If you've got a problem with racism, sexism et al, why the hell are you defending islam?
It's pathetic how Trump supporters are fine with him stealing our national treasures, just because of some idiot misinformation which is absurd on its face. Of course peppered with numbers easily disproven by a simple google search, because they are fucking stupid.
Vladamir Putin prefers gold curtains, so his puppet trump has already installed them, much like Putin installed Trump in the oval office.
Don't worry though, like many American assets Donald Trump with steal the curtains on his way out - hopefully via impeachment.
As opposed to law and fucking order. The people arrested at airports around the country had valid legal permission to enter the United States.
Refugees are an asset to the United States, and some other countries around the world. Germany's unemployment rate is the lowest in Europe.
I'll trade racists for refugees any day of the week...
... on whether you want to pass the background check or not.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
Donald Trump's order to block residents, visitors, tourists, refugees, and others was blocked by a Federal Court.
That is a fair criticism of my post.. will try to do better. But seriously - this is on The Verge, and every other tech and news website.
Something is not right here.
I will not be silent in the face of Donald Trump's racist agenda. Why is Slashdot silent while Donald Trump establishes a national religion based on his own bigotry???
Because it's really annoying hearing about every single fucking thing Trump does. If you love him that much, then go make a whitehouse petition to put a camera in every bathroom so you can masturbate to a live stream of him taking a shit, and stop bringing it up here.
Of course it was, it's standard to issue an injunction in cases like this. All it means is that the judge didn't see cause to issue a summary ruling declaring the act to be unconstitutional. Since the judge didn't grant a summary ruling on the matter, the judge issued an injunction while the process is heard. That's more or less standard for cases like this where not issuing the injunction could lead to consequences that the courts can't fix.
This is similar to judges issuing a stay of execution while considering a prisoner's appeal. Since the courts can't rule people back to life, they issue an injunction no matter how flimsy the evidence may be as long as it's strong enough to justify hearing the arguments.
Salary negotiation isn't really that complicated. Know what you're worth, what value you provide, what the industry is willing to pay for that value, and then ask for it without reservation. If, at that point, the potential employer or client is willing to negotiate within those parameters, take it under consideration and figure out what concessions or modifications to the contract you're willing to make to close the deal. It's no different than negotiating for a car, or a house, or anything else.
Just put those magic three letters down: NDA
I've always been under the impression that if you don't disclose what your previous jobs paid, that it'll look like you have something to hide (i.e., you were paid low because you suck at what you do). Because of this, and because I know what I'm worth, I've turned down lower-paying jobs, even if they were temporary, because then I'd have to put down what I was making; then some prospective employer could point to that and say "Well, you accepted this much money for this job, why should we even consider paying you more than that? Obviously you were only worth that much."
Where was your outrage when Obama was bombing hospitals and wedding parties?
"The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
Do they ask for jizz samples, as well? How are employers over there just fucking everyone over by asking ridiculous questions and then hiring the candidate least likely to be able to think for himself? LEGALLY?
If your history showed that you made significantly more than the job you are applying for, the employer may be hesitant to make an offer because they will expect you to keep looking and leave again shortly.
No. Your salary history is private to yourself and should have no bearing on whether the interviewing company is prepared to pay you what you are asking for or not. It should be your skillas and their need that are the only determining factors.
Which treasures. Please do list something. If this is rally true we ALL want to know.
It is inevitable. Donald Trump has proven time and time again that he is a common thief and scam artist.
All I said was that Donald Trump will steal US assets before his impeachment, or the end of his term. I stand by that prediction.
I don't think this guy spent his life refusing to pay contractors, stiffing his business partners, and scamming Trump University rubes - only to then stop stealing once elected President.
Lol. Right. And I guess the fact they are reversing thier mistake and deporting them is not happening.
Refugees are not visa workers. Refugeees are not like the foreigners we see here in the USA. They are from bad areas doing bad things. They are the worst of the worst. Watch some real news for once. See them rioting in Scandinavian countries, Europe, and other western countries.
Saudi is not taking them. Do you know why? Because they live in that area, and they know what they are. You have absolutely no idea
The smaller the pigeon hole they can put you in the fewer jobs you have available to you and the more you have no options so you must take their offer if they offer.
Or you've just told them if you would accept what they want to pay. Which is another way of saying the same thing. Since they won't offer if they think you won't accept and won't offer you the job if they wanted someone worth more. Since the market always knows what you are worth as a person, according to current economic theory.
I also show my hand of cards to anyone who asks at the table when I'm playing a card game. I never ask anyone to see theirs because I don't want to seem rude.
A company should pay you based on your education, experience , personality and work history. Not how much you made, it's their attempt to low ball offers and it creates wage stagnation. There should be a law against this practice and a law supporting employees rights to discuss openly salary and benefits.
Most companies require a NDA. I tell the employer that I signed an NDA, and would they be comfortable with their ex employees breaking the terms of their agreements.
I had been laid off and ended up quickly taking a new job for $15k less than I was making before, but offered me a chance to build some additional skills I wanted. After about a year, I found a job I was a perfect match for, and while talking to the recruiter, she asked how much I was currently making. I gave her the answer, which was probably $40-50k less than what the job was likely to pay. She laughed and hung up on me. I was not amused.
Looking for a computer support specialist for your small business? Check out
>I was told that it was part of the background check and wouldn't be used to determine the size of the offer...
If it were used to determine offer size nonetheless, how would you know?
Trump is a rassist indeed.
he is steal national treasures like Nickolas Cage found hidden treasures in massonic symbolism in the movie, based off real facts and information. Nickolas Cage did a great job in that movie. Every succesful country has something like 'buried treasure' from it's initial founding because the founding fathers like Aberaham Lincoln was honest men thinking about the future, but now we are surrounded by rassists putting us into debt like Donald John Trump
http://workplace.stackexchange...
For the love of god, can we please collapse/grey out/auto collapse whole threads that start like this?
Reality is a slackware box running on a 386 tucked away in god's sock drawer.
If the background check does not define the amount of salary, why can't they give you an agreement to sign that states that it's pending the background check?
Otherwise I'd not provide it because of NDAs.
Personally, when I am interviewing people, it is helpful to better understand how previous employers valued the candidate. It isn't a baseline for what we will offer, but we want to be comfortable with a few things: were you overpaid at your current employer, and are we going to need to explain why we only offer a lateral move; or, were you underpaid, and we need to dig into the potential gap in expectations.
Lying gets you blackballed. Dodging is ok, until you are asked by the person who will be making the offer.
I've been seriously looking for a half-assed job that pays about a third as much as my old big-assed job. But I'm starting to realise that the big-assed job was actually a piece of piss the like of which I'll never fall into again. And a half-assed job would involve work and humiliation. Lately I've been thinking that a bit of jail time on the CV would be more useful.
Your salary history (with the possible exception of your current salary) is none of the employer's business. Don't ask about it, just leave the fields blank, make them come back to you and ask for it if they really want it. This puts YOU in the driver's seat.
In school, there was always that student that would ask the teacher if there was any homework, as the class was ending. Don't be that guy!
If you don't want to talk about your salary, just tell them what you're looking for. Make sure that amount is in keeping with the normal ranges for your years of experience, and the area where you live. The business is doing their homework, they know what you SHOULD be making.
>A Federal Court has already blocked Donald Trump's unconstitutional, bigoted power grab.
It only affects those already in the US and that were in transit to the county at the time the EO was signed. By court order they can't be deported, but neither can they enter the US. So, in effect, they're going to be stuck at the airports until the legal issue is sorted.
The refugees are indeed the result of Obama's actions (and France and UK's).
That would be a super useful feature. Which means /. will implement it in about ten years.
Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
And yet Trump's order applied to those Visa workers and Saudi Arabia has over half a million Syrian refugees.
Let these words resounde!
One of the only questions a new employer can ask an old employer is how much you got paid. I believe it is still required as a confirmation, such as "did Joe make 50K/yr salary?" and can't be an open question.
A lie during your hiring process may result in immediate termination.
As said above, it's best to know what you are worth and what to ask for. You can always negotiate down, but not the other direction. Always best to start a bit higher so you have some room. Too high, and you will not get a call back though..
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
Seeing as how their salaries are all "competitive" all of yours must also have been "competitive".
Just put N/A. Never ask, don't comment about it. If they look at it and ask again, just say you prefer to keep it confidential. If you already are there on the interview what are they going to do? Tell you never mind, go home? Nope, people have scheduled their day around your interview and HR is not going to mess that up. If you impress them on the interview it won't matter and if you don't then it still doesn't matter.
Now, if you don't have an interview yet and they are asking prior to arranging one then it may be another story. Specially if it is an entry level or low skill position.
What kind of a place makes use of applications for filling positions in IT?
To be honest, I've never gone through the job search process the way other people do. I've never made a proper CV or resume and sent them out to a bunch of places hoping for a bunch of interviews and such. So, I can't say I properly understand the modern job hunting process. It seems to me like a form of speed dating where a company and a person do a relatively half-ass job of finding each other and establishing a commitment with each other. I would imagine this only works for the first or second job you get with any degree of success.
But please explain this job application thing. Is this a job at McDonalds? Will you be flipping burgers? Has there been no previous vetting process involved? You sent out a resume first right? They are asking you questions as well right? Did they simply search for resumes meeting a list of buzzwords and then decide to be so lazy that no one with a pen and paper taking notes would be involved?
Al I can say is, it sounds like they want you to work for them while they do the absolute minimum work involved in filling the position. Any job with an application sounds like they consider you to be barely worth their time to begin with.
As for salary history. A person changes jobs for :
- More money
- Easier logistics (morning traffic sucks)
- Greater growth potential
- Better people
- Nicer work environment
If they're asking for your salary history, they'll make an offer relative to what you already make which might provide a greater increase than normal raises where you already work. But instead of salary history, a far more relevant question would be
1) What would you like to make working for us?
2) What's the bare minimum you would take to start here?
3) What's the bare minimum you would take and not feel underappreciated starting here?
Companies when they are filling positions establish a budget to pay for the position. They will hopefully use reasonable methods of identifying what a reasonable budget for that position would be. It should consider salary, taxes, workspace, etc... once that number is calculated, instead of publishing "This is how much we'll pay for this position", they instead call people in an hope they can sucker someone into working for less. Of course, you're walking in knowing you have to play a bidding game and they're walking in knowing about this game.
Let me explain how I would do this
"I know you're hoping for me to be in a position of responsibility for helping you achieve business goals through the use of technology. At some point, I believe I'll be involved in the hiring process. When this happens, I'll be in the discussions where we identify the budget available for a new hire and I'll get a clear view of what you likely considered your budget for what you can pay me. If you tell me the number that's in your budget, I'll tell you whether I can work for that amount. If we're to negotiate from that point, let it be based on performance based achievements that would give me an invested interest in the performance of the company. Let's skip playing games with the salary."
My current employer made me an offer than was embarrassingly low. Without disclosing my previous salary, i told him that would not get someone with half my experience hired. We negotiated, and i took a pay cut because i wanted to work for this company. Four years later my salary is back on track and my compensation package is better than before, and i am working for a company I believe in.
Does not always work to negotiate, but giving a little can pay later.
Many/most large companies will have policies that require you to provide this, or be disqualified. They are certainly doing it so they don't give you an unnecessarily large bump. Due to the bureaucracy there is no getting around this for a mundane position (essentially, 'the form requires I put in a value and we're going to check it). Providing a bogus value is worse since they will attempt to check it and if they find out it is false they will fire you as well.
There are definitely exceptions, and I imagine for C-level positions and special scenarios they may be motivated to work around it. They'll have to want you worse then they want to follow their standard hiring procedure, so most of the time it won't apply.
Snowflake, kill yourself, or get the fuck out back to your indian jungle you goat fucking parasite.
Recruiters should be dealing with this from the start so you both don't waste each other's time. I recall interviewing for a sysadmin position back in the 80s and it was clear I could do what they needed. When I quoted a range slightly higher than what I was making, the interviewer went white. Apparently, they hadn't done their homework. I got a call a couple days later from HR asking to reschedule another interview but I wasn't interested. They were a really cheap company. For years when filling out the actual HR employment application, I've left salary blank. By that time, they're taking information for a background check. I don't disclose that info. Period. A background check company wanted back tax forms to cover 10 years of self-employment as a sole proprietor. I gave them redacted forms with all the numbers removed, which wasn't good enough for an extended-background check required for the banking industry or telecom. Now I warn recruiters for those types of jobs ahead of time. And that I fucking HATE Wells Fargo. That's worked so far.
Google and Facebook both seem to think that it matters.
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
Not today, yokel...
Open your eyes, or go back to your shitty small town, you uneducated, cousin-fucking retard.
Donald Trump brags about Sexual assault like it's something to be proud of.
I'll bet you just sit there with a slack jaw when he grabs your daughter by the pussy, and fumbles around her crotch with his tiny hands, cuck.
Tell them to fuck off.
There's no R in July...
Uh, just say "Sorry, I can't disclose that as per the terms of an NDA with my current employer"?
don't wait get the fuck out... won't miss you
You may want to check whether it is even a legal question. In MA, for example, it is not legal for an employer to ask your previous salary --
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/03/business/dealbook/wage-gap-massachusetts-law-salary-history.html?_r=0
I expect not everyone out here knows yet, since it is a recent law.
I have this bookmarked as a reminder whenever I apply for a job. Read it over and over.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/making-sense/ask-the-headhunter-never-ever/
Never give your salary history. It's bad news for you and power for your prospective employer. It cannot help you so why would you do this?
You are applying for a new job, not your old job. By asking for your salary history, the new employer is chaining your negotiation for a new position to the past. Your new position needs to be about the future, not the past.
Don't be a dick about turning down this request. You need to be polite but professional about this, firm and yet approachable. If the prospective employer persists after this, just keep saying that you don't understand why they need this information when that information is about the past. Stand your ground and don't start negotiating the position away for something else. This is a no go zone and you need to make that clear.
There are some naïve people in this thread who are saying "yes, but then you won't get that job!" So, first of all, a new employer won't respect you if you don't set any boundaries. They have boundaries and so should you. Would you ask your new boss what he makes? Would you ask your old boss? No.
Second, if this really disqualifies you from that tasty new job, then you don't want the job. That is a poor employer and they are setting tone right from the beginning that you are the supplicant, not the applicant. They don't respect you now and that situation isn't going to get any better in the future.
I can appreciate that turning down a job might seem like a self-destructive strategy. It's just a number, right? Give them the number and make the issue go away...
The problem with that is, if the prospective employer cannot respect you now, they certainly aren't going to respect you when you've got their new job. Set the right tone. Your old salary is part of the past and you want a new relationship with a new employer.
Like America has anything to steal, Obama spent us over 50 trillion into debt.
The Chinese are probably picking out new curtains for the White House as we speak.
As much as I hate Trump, and I do, I really don't think this thread needed hijacked. That being said, Obama inherited the bush tax cuts complete with an economy in free-fall. During the two years he actually had a congress to work with him, it was not the time to raise taxes. Nor is now the time to lower them more. Balance the budget first. There is no sane reason not to. In fact balance it such that you begin paying off the debt. Once that is done, you can argue allocation of the remaining money and fiscal policy.
The economy is doing pretty well, save that people on the lower end aren't feeling it, and part of that is exaggerated. A low standard of living in the US is still higher than most places...
If now is not the time to start paying down our debts then when? I'd just argue that you need some additional revenue, and it likely has to come from those that actually have the money to spare.
One reason is to get a notion of what your expectations are. Another reason is to see if you are telling the truth. Because if they make an offer they will get your previous salary info from your previous employer. At which point if they determined you lied you don't get the job.
I've been on both sides of this part of an interview process. The tech company I work at always paid the same with minor changes based on experience or degree (my offer was slightly more than I was expecting right out of college), and if you did the research on the company through places like Glassdoor you would know what to expect for salary.
We got a few people who were acceptable candidates but when asked how much they expected their offer to be gave numbers in the $100k plus range. For an entry programming or IT position you should be reasonable in your request (something in the $50-80k range for entry level). You can get paid 6 figures, but not right out of college.
It's not part of your background. If you don't get a job because of this, it's a very good indication that you'll be nickel and dimed by the company after you start working there. The "salary history" is remnant from the time when we had a robust inflation. During the times of 0% interest rate, salaries don't go up all the time. They go up and down depending on the type of work you do at your job, how "close to the money" you are on the job and how many hours you actually work. The up and down jumps can be as high as 50% for people in tech fields. And if you are going for a job which requires higher qualifications than your previous job, then your previous salary has nothing to do with the compensation you should be requesting. If they are looking to instill some sort of inferiority complex in you from the start, it's a good indication that they will try to overwork you and underpay you in the future. Leave it blank. If they don't like it, you will be lucky because you'll avoid taking a job you would regret taking otherwise.
Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
The Work Number has salary information. I've gotten my information from the service and it's available to prospective employers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Fine. We'll balance the budget by ending theft programs: welfare, medicare, foreign aid, food stamps, et infinite cetera.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
The President does not have the authority to set taxes or spending.. That's the job of Congress... which has been in republican hands for the past six of the last eight years. So which party has the white house isn't really going to make that much difference, since the white house isn't setting that policy. reducing taxes on Billionairs, though - that lands on Congress. Just one thing about POTUS Trump - you and I pay more taxes than he did. I don't have billions. I guess I don't have "a very good brain" like Mr. Trump. I sure didn't pick the right daddy to leave me money, anyway.
Also, I believe the debt is closer to 20 trillion than 50, and also the majority was spent in the administration prior to Mr. Obama's, but wasn't accounted for until after the G. W. Bush administration left office. That's what happens when you go fight two unnecessary wars on the nations credit card - the bill comes due eventually.
Current Debt
Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
Never
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
When asked over the years, I have always told potential employers that my value is based on my skillset and interpersonal skills. I ask that they make an offer based on the value that I will bring to their business, and that my past compensation is private and confidential. They typically don't like it in HR, but you get respect from the good managers. I have found that you get much higher offers than if you put down your past salary, where you get a ~5-10% higher offer than your past salary, rather than the true market rate for your skillset, which is typically higher.
If you disagree, please post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like
Just let all the BLM members keep fucking your wife and you up the ass, if you don't you're a racist.
I'm not sure i've been asked for salary from an employer, but certainly have from agencies. I've a feeling if a prospective employer asked for my salary history, i'd say that I wasn't comfortable giving them that information, and would ask what they needed it for, and would help in any way I could. Basically, if they want to understand expectations, or maybe a split between salary and bonus, i'd be able to help them with this.
The biggest change in salary comes from changing role, either moving into a more senior role, or into management, or into a different industry. Let's face it, there are some fantastic programmers earning basic salaries writing firmware for answering machines who could earn great money in finance, or some other market where embedded skills are more highly valued. Working out how to value the skills you have to a prospective employer is the real challenge.
As an American expat living in Germany, I can safely safe stfu and you are full of shit. Get out of your SJW armchair, because your worldview, much like your penis, is tiny.
These refugees are trash people, I can't wait until they are all isolated from the rest of us. I don't care about the rights of someone that wants to rape my wife, kill me, and take my stuff.
I've been jumped twice, and both times I put those fucking sand moons in the hospital, and no charges were filed against them.
If any of them put a hand on me or my wife, it will be the last thing they do before they meet their "god".
The economy is doing pretty well, save that people on the lower end aren't feeling it
Fine. We'll balance the budget by ending theft programs: welfare, medicare, foreign aid, food stamps, et infinite cetera.
While I am pretty sure the people on the lower end will feel something if your 'interesting' proposals are implemented, but it won't be something good.
Due to previous confidentiality agreements I am unable to release this info.
lol, you're a real e-tough
i bet you'd piss yourself and run away screaming like a little bitch if someone really tried to jump you
Pitching in from Scandinavia. I don't know about your other points, but I haven't seen anything about any rioting here.
Just like your age, religion or sexual persuasion they cannot ask you such things in my country.
Besides, it's usually the good engineer screening the company for how much they're looking to pay and not the other way around. I don't even interview if it's below what I consider my worth on the open market.
In Sweden it is simpler: All income tax results are public. Simply call or write the tax agency with the name of the person you want to know more about.
This means that you can (and should!) look up how much your future boss and collegues made the last 5 years (how much total income they declared) before an interview. You can count on that they will do the same.
Interestingly, even though everyone have all this information it has not led to higher wages. Sweden still has relatively low wages for engineers compared to other western countries.
Is it scary? A lot of work for your tiny brain to just move on and not read it?
You fucking dimwit.
Why is Slashdot silent while Donald Trump establishes a national religion based on his own bigotry???
Because we're unable to boot our computers due to systemd so have other problems right now.
You should not.
I would imagine The Donald will continue this behavior or increase it. There are no white knights. And you are an idiot if you see no shades in the gray.
That is all.
No, you should never disclose your salary history to any prospective future employer.
Employers will ask this question for one reason and one reason only, to find the lowest possible offer you'd be willing to accept if they decide they want to offer you a position. Many people in this thread that are representing the employers perspective have said that they need this information in order to determine if a candidate's expectations are in line with their budget. Well, that can easily be achieved by either the employer being up front with the salary range on offer, or by asking the candidate not for their actual previous salaries but for their expected salary. That's a whole different question and one which you as a candidate should be prepared to answer (although ideally, you'll avoid giving a direct answer to this question also - see below). Of course, if you do give an answer here, you should still respond with a range rather than a specific number to allow that all important wiggle room within negotiations if you get far enough into the application process.
Too many employers here seem to be expecting the candidate to do half of their job for them - i.e. to divulge information that is detrimental to the candidate and helps the employer make a hiring decision (especially in the negative direction - i.e. helping the employer to discount the candidate rather than offering reasons to hire).
Here's some very useful tips I've picked up over the years for answering the "What is your current salary?" question without actually divulging the salary information the employer so desperately seeks. Also, some great answers to the "What salary are you seeking?" question, too. For this, use the Noel Smith-Wenkle method which avoids giving a direct answer and naming a number - something that will instantly give the other party the upper hand in any salary negotiation.
So, when asked "What is your current salary?", answers are:
- "I'm seeking a salary in the range of $x to $y" (i.e. the Politician's answer - you answer a different question that what was asked).
- “My current employer does not allow me to discuss the terms of my employment”
- “This position is not exactly the same as my current job, so let’s discuss what my responsibilities would be here and then determine a fair salary for this job.”
or finally, for really pushy interviewers:
- “I’m happy to help you evaluate what I’d be worth to your business based upon my skills, experience and the value that I can add to your organisation, but my current salary is personal and confidential, just as the salaries of your own employees are.”
And the aforementioned Noel Smith-Wenkle method in a nutshell is that when asked "What salary are you seeking?" you give three answers for the number of times they repeat the question, or try to pin you down to mention a figure:
1st answer: "I am much more interested in doing (type of work) here at (name of company) than I am in the size of the initial offer."
2nd answer: "I will consider any reasonable offer."
3rd (and subsequent) answers: "You are in a much better position to know how much I'm worth to you than I am."
If you think you can get away with not telling them then don't tell them. The caveat is that if you refuse to play along then it may end the interview process right then and there. In that case, if you would have been willing to entertain an offer of "whatever you were getting paid at your last job plus a small delta" then you your decision not to play along was in error.
Unless you were drastically underpaid at your last job relative to the one you're interviewing for, the new job's offer will be whatever you were getting paid at your last job plus some amount that's 1. big enough to not be trivial, but 2. not much bigger than that. So maybe $5k/yr. That will be the starting point of any post-offer negotiations. Your leverage is low, though, because you already told them what you were making before.
Another tactic is to answer the question, but ask them for similar information in exchange. For instance, "What's the average compensation for someone with my experience in this position that I'm applying for?" If they won't answer, the you can credibly say, "I'm not sure I'm comfortable divulging my compensation history if you're not willing to do the same. Does that seem fair?"
So the Iraqi that got detained at JFK on Friday that had a valid visa was doing a bad thing when he worked as a translator for US forces in Iraq? And let's not forget that family of Syrian Orthodox Christian extremists that got turned back in Philly. Nothing but terrorists they are.
The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
Nice strawman shit for brains.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse...
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse...
I think I've also read someplace that some states make it illegal to ask for that BEFORE making an offer, but I can't find a reference at the moment.
-- Karl --
This came about in response to the huge IT growth around 2000 before the bubble burst on the dot com world. People were getting offers for huge salary increases because there was a skills shortage. HR groups added this as a way to stop the madness. They use your salary history to validate career progression to some extent, but they also use it as a way to guage a reasonable offer - say a 10% increase over your current may be considered the company rule.
Most large companies do this. If they offer you a job, they may even ask for W2 to compare to what you put on application.
Do some searching on "The Work Number". They already have your salary history most likely through this service. Most payroll services report through this service.
I thought the work number couldn't possibly exist, but you are able to get a copy of your own report for free. Mine had every paycheck and salary listed for the past 15 years in jaw dropping detail.
NO! Unless one is a sheeple and will voluntarily divulge all personal passwords to all social media accounts.
Pay back your debt. Now.
I agree that in general, employers asking for transcripts, W2s, or 1040s is inappropriate
However, if you are apply for a security clearance, the clearance folks will get all this. It's not clear whether the "employer" gets a copy. And it's also not clear where a private security firm might ask for this for similar reasons. But that's an outlier, and a special kind of job.
If you reply to such threads, that means more leakage to show that the original ever existed at all when it gets modded down to -1. Making a post that gets modded up to 5 is the worst thing you can do. SO STFU AND LET MODERATION DO ITS WORK.
Right back at you?
Will they tell you what everyone in the company makes currently?
Will they tell you what anyone in the company makes currently?
A n1gger like you who hates his home n1ggerland, has no culture, and is entitled to what his ancestors didn't build - deserves to die like a piece of shit leeching cockroach.
Waaaahhhh someone has a different opinion that I don't like waaahhhh take it down wwaaaaahhhhh
It's pretty simple. The employer holds all the cards here. If they ask and you say that it's none of their business, they have less motivation to hire you because you come off as hiding something and what else are you going to hide if they hire you. Plus, there are people out there who will tell them. If they ask and you lie about it, they can find out and then you either won't get hired or you will be a marked person who started out their time at the company as a known liar. Human resources doesn't work for you. They work for your boss.
At best, you can say, "Respectfully, I'm not going to negotiate against myself. You have a salary range in mind for this position. Make me an offer and hopefully we can come to an agreement." A good employer should respect that.
I think it all depends on where you are in the hiring process. If it is because you are at the offer stage, then tell them. You can give general numbers. I don't think they can actually verify that information though. In general, most companies will only verify that you worked for them from this date to that. Depending on the job, they may do background checks, and they could be extensive. So... they may be able to verify your story. I honestly only vaguely remember how much I was making at some of my last jobs. So as long as you are close it shouldn't be an issue. Lie, and they find out, and you will be dropped immediately.
I have hired many people over the years, and I know exactly where you are coming from.
However, most of my experience has been with companies that have a hiring process. Therefore, I don't get to ask those questions. The recruiter may, i don't know what they do as part of their vetting process. I also know that the position pay range is between X and Z, with Y being the mid-point. HR wants you to hire at the mid-point (unless you are hiring internally, then it is 'as low as possible'). Not my rules, but the reality I have seen.
There are obviously downsides to this situation, in that I don't always get all of the information I may need. Also, it doesn't always work out for the candidate. I know, because I have been on that side as well. I was at one job where I was paid well, I got about a 12% increase when I joined it. It was higher-up the food chain too. But my boss was a nightmare, from day 1. I hated every single day I worked there. I tried to make it work... but after a year I started looking.
Recruiters wouldn't ask my salary history, but would ask my current salary. When i told them, they usually would start backpedaling. I would then explain what I was willing to take. There was one promising job, two rounds of interviews went great, it was a great work environment and I really wanted it. I told the recruiter what I was making but what I was willing to take. Unfortunately, he only told the employer what I was making. So I didn't get the job.
How do I know all of this? Because they hired me. A month or so later I got a call from that recruiter, wanting to know if I was still interested. I was! He said salary was an issue, and they couldn't meet my current pay. I reiterated to him what I was willing to take, and after a little negotiating I got the job. As it turned out, the recruiter was a dumbass and didn't tell the hiring manager (my new boss) about my willingness to take less than my current salary. The person they had chosen over me didn't work out, and I am really glad that they came back to me because I am still there and it has been great. I have since learned more about our corporate recruiters, and how terrible they are. I keep that in mind as I have started hiring more people. Remember this - their job is to get people hired, not necessarily to hire the right people. I know that sounds crazy, but it's true. And the strange thing is, they aren't very good at it.
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
If you work for the city of Seattle you won't have a choice. They are publishing everyone's in March (2017). Under the guise of their "race and social justice initiative" that permeates all policy there.
The City Of Seattle employees won't have a choice. The City will post all salaries online in March (2017), under the auspices of their racist policy called "Race And Social Justice Initiative."
I would never tell a future employer how much I made in the past, they don't need to know for any reason.
Fine. We'll balance the budget by ending theft programs: welfare, medicare, foreign aid, food stamps, et infinite cetera.
Nope, sorry, you lie, and you don't even know why.
This is why all of you haters reveal your true sentiments, you don't even bother to stick to truthful accusations.
Sure, in my earliest years, I was accumulating experience (I remember having the title "Junior Programmer"), but once I was valuable, I named my own price. My last decades were as a consultant, and I peaked out at $2,000/day, because I had letters of recommendation from major executives (with phone numbers, so prospective clients could call them; the never did, but that was often a convincer.
The 1%-ers win because there's always some jerk who will accept their offer, no matter how demeaning it is. Turn the tables: Spend all you time performing, and learning how to perform even better, and ask superiors (the highest-level you dare approach; preferably "CxO") for letters of recommendation that describe how much money the company made and continue to makes, because of your work. The best time to ask is right when the project is about to become that "all hands" push near the end...they NEED you then, and if you promise not to leave for some time, they'll give you the kind of recommendation you can use a year later, when the project's been long done.
Some tricks from a well-paid consultant, now happily retired.
Because the details of my previous contracts are proprietary.
Have gnu, will travel.
It's 100% OK for an employer to ask what your expectations are. I think the best thing would be for employers to post a desired salary range, which unfortunately doesn't happen that often anymore. It's pretty annoying to have to apply and interview for a job where you have absolutely no idea if the offer will even be worth your time. However, as a hiring manager, my time is also important. I have to organize an interview by exchanging a few emails, coordinate several other people's schedules internally, follow up with HR that I want to do a background check, then HR has to call and actually make the offer (which usually has a relatively narrow salary range we can work with). While this is all happening, someone else may be on hold for a couple weeks that would actually take the job and may become unavailable. Without having any idea what ballpark salary people expect, this is obviously a huge waste of time. So salary history, no....salary expectations OR post the salary range in the job description, yes.
I have started declining to tell my current salary. I explain that my offer should be related to the value I bring to the company, not based on previous work at another company.
I went through a screening process a couple of years ago with an enterprise level company. A recruiter reached out to me about a position that looked appealing to me. One of my first questions to the recruiter was the salary range for the position. It was right in line with what I was expecting, and I replied that the range was satisfactory.
During the phone screen (done by the recruiter, not the hiring manager), I passed all of her questions. Towards the end she had some background questions, including my current salary. I explained that I was unwilling to divulge that information, but that I found the agreed salary range to be acceptable.
The recruiter explained that she could not continue the screen without that information. When I explained that I declined again, she hung up on me.
Since then I have spoken to other people that work for the company, and they have nothing good to say about working for the company. So I guess my policy paid off.
- (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
Regarding salary history, AB168 (Susan Talamantes Eggman, D-Stockton) may make it illegal for employers to ask for salary history by 2018. Governor Brown vetoed a similar bill, AB1017 in 2015. AB1676 was signed into law in 2016 which partially addresses salary history when gender comes up.
The pussy grabber in chief is swinging a bat.
Facebook and Google "think," but thoughts are useless as tits on a boar and don't actually matter.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
Golden showers, not coprophilia
Never again though. I live in a small city (approx. 400,000 people) so the cost of living is low. I rent a two bedroom 1100 square foot apartment for less than $1000 a month. I applied for a job in Tokyo, where the cost of living is much higher than here. During the interview I was asked my current salary as well as my salary expectation for the new job. As soon as I told them, all I got was "Oh, you're looking for a raise." The interview was pretty much over then. They couldn't accept the fact that Tokyo was a lot more expensive than where I lived, they actually tried to argue that with me. I live less than a 10 minute drive from my office. I wouldn't be able to afford a car in Tokyo. And to live in anything bigger than a shoebox you're looking at a lot of money or living on the outskirts which means an hour or more commute.
I work in HR for a very large company (60k+ employees overall) in Massachusetts. I am in Compensation and my team handles employment verifications as well. We consider it a breach of confidentiality to provide or confirm salary without a signed release from our employee. While not every company will be so careful, I feel comfortable saying at least that this is what companies should be doing. That being said, other people have mentioned this above, but this can be a 2-way part of the vetting process. If you make $60k now, and want to make $70k, you don't want to waste your time with them if they think you're going to (or can only budget for you to) bite for $40k. It is *really vital* to understand what the realistic regional salary ranges are for the type of job you're looking for, too - particularly if you are pretty much at the top of the pay scale to begin with. We all want to get a big bump in pay when we move between companies, but even if you're the best around, it's going to be tough for anyone to justify paying 20% more to you than anyone else unless you are sure to demonstrate the value you add over someone who can do 90% of your work for 80% of the pay. I guess overall I think it would hurt you more to not provide any info. Bear in mind you can be generous in rounding if that is a concern...
You have no leverage, if you have no skills. When I most recently changed jobs, there was a bidding war for me. One company went up 25% from their initial offer.
Hey, that's the most sensible thing I've heard all day! I should try that myself.
"Before I sign up, could you please tell me what this health insurance policy's premiums were last year? Yes, I understand that you'd like 25% more this year, but I think we should all agree it's more reasonable to expect an increase of 10% at most. Now, let's talk about my expectation for you to go the extra mile when there's additional medical work to be covered -- without additional pay, of course."
Apologies to those readers in first- and second-world countries where this "signing up for health insurance coverage" analogy is sensibly unintelligible.
Cool story bro.
Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
Indeed, poor people should starve and/or die of illness. Fucking leaches.
So, I read thru about 75% of the answers that were offered and I agree with pretty much all of them. The real question is, how much do YOU feel comfortable telling them?
This really boils down to your outlook on life and the reality of the present.
I personally do not give out salary history: :maybe I've recently come into a lot of money and willing to work less hard for less money :I actually work for a state agency right now where I am paid at LEAST 30-40% LESS than private sector (the average being 50%, $50k vs $75k), and believe me the benefits are not all that it is cracked up to be.
-it's none of their business, it has no bearing whatsoever on any work I may be hired for
: I may be looking for more of a reasonable worklife balance and willing to accept less
should I really have to hear that stupid question from a recruiter "What makes you think you are worth 50% more?" gee, I dunno, market forces? maybe you should ask your CEO who is making $5mil/yr and has a contract with guaranteed minimum 10% increases?"
regardless of the above, is it any of their damn business? NO
-do not lie about your salary history :yes, it can be grounds for dismissal. although you could make the argument that statement was made prior to hiring you so does not apply. still.... :tell them your prior company had an NDA or similar regarding salaries. many companies do have this :if you want to be an ass about it (they started it), ask them how much they make :leave the fields blank
this one is for you HR types, I know how you score applications and resumes. No answer, points off; mis-spelled answer, points off; answers put into the wrong field, points off; this is how many paper-pushers (SPHR) justify their jobs when in reality they don't know squat about combing through the resumes
(digression: I had to sort thru 30 state applications to fill a position, even if they were over-Qualified I still had to include them in my interview rounds. out of 5 interviews, I had:
- 1 (average-qual) no-show/no-callback
- 1 (highly-qual'd) who found out some more info and then politely called back to cancel the interview
- 1 (average-qual) who couldn't tell me about any of his experience except "I've got lots of experience! ho ho ho!"
- 1 (above-avg qual) tele-conference interview who took control of the interview reading off all the questions and his responses
- 1 (basically-qual'd) tech who actually showed up with a good attitude if a bit short on some of the experience we needed
Guess which one I hired? and his was the very last app submitted just under the deadline. and I have had no regrets hiring him in the last 3 years.)
-I've had companies ask for credit scores and consumer reviews :for what reason? my job has NOTHING to do with handling money or the financials system :if you don't supply it, we can't arrange an interview .... oh, you won't? and you expect me to work for YOUR company? .... you will now hand back all the paperwork I gave when applying for this position
really? please sign this document right here that says my personal data will be locked up tight (destroyed, if not hired) and that your company will be personally responsible for any data breach that results in my personal data being spread across the Internet because you certainly don't need it if I'm not hired.
FINAL THOUGHTS
You are the one who is going to have to decide how much data to share. Is it worth not getting that job? I mean, in the midst of an economic depression (ci
I'm good with numbers -
I always made up a figure, one time 30% higher and they made a higher offer.
Google and Facebook think with dollars. Billions of them.
You were saying...?
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
I was saying ...
The pussy grabber in chief is swinging a bat.
Facebook and Google "think," but thoughts are useless as tits on a boar and don't actually matter.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
I've been out of the game for more than a 1.5 years due to illness and I have a full year license suspension (financial responsibility, not DUI). I know this makes it very hard for me to get back into the saddle and the salary I need to make is $150k bare minimum. I'm in the SF-Bay Area. My resume is other than for this gap pretty good, I'm good at what I do and I never had much problems getting hired before. Now I am thinking about filling the time-gap with something that is plausible
and not too to easy to verify. I know I could probably take a hit and start to work at a $80,000 level which would leave me with crap after taxes, but that would just make me absolutely resent the employer that is taking advantage of me and I would jump ship at the earliest opportunity. So what should I do? I know I already have the license suspension against me, something I can't hide but do I need to aggravate things further with copping to having been ill for a lengthy period of time?
My experience with Glassdoor is it's most valuable if you're already researching a specific company you want to work for. The comments people leave about the pros and cons of the companies are usually pretty accurate. (You'll often see the random one that paints an especially good or bad picture. But just like Yelp and other ratings sites, it's wise to discard that as "fringe" and read everything else to get a good average/overall sense of how things are there.)
I also agree that salaries posted from specific companies and job titles are pretty accurate. (I doubt many users are motivated to post false numbers there?) The problem is -- there aren't a huge number of users willing to leave that information at all. So for small or mid-sized companies, you might only see one or two salaries posted. Not that helpful if those were people doing entry level work and you're looking for a management or senior position there, etc.
One thing I'm coming to grips with, having worked in I.T. my whole working career (and in my mid 40's now), is that a lot of companies simply don't want to pay for "top I.T. talent" anymore. The whole reason they're entertaining the idea of hiring a permanent I.T. person in the first place is the idea it'll be more convenient and save some money over the outside consultants they have to schedule to come in and pay by the hour (or project).
If you're really good and experienced, and believe your talents should be worth well into the 6 figure range? You might be absolutely right, but you're pricing yourself out of what many, many companies are actually budgeting for and interested in getting.
Competition is really heavy, these days, to just "cloud-ify" many of the things a business used to do internally. That means less need for on-site I.T. talent to care for those servers and applications. The need doesn't disappear to make sure the network is still working well, the company's Internet circuit(s) are up, and new hires receive training and the hardware they need to work. And there will always be the trouble tickets put in to get assistance when something's malfunctioning and they don't know if it's on "our end or the other end". But this is all stuff a person can do competently for them without being a "top tier" I.T. support engineer.
I might be biased due to my location (DC metro area, essentially).... but the #1 thing I've seen that justifies a bigger salary for I.T. around here is possessing an active "top secret clearance". A whole lot of govt. and military contractors need I.T. support for even mundane things, but need the person doing the work to be "top secret" cleared because of the information getting handled. That's a really costly and lengthy process to run someone through, so they'll gladly pay above market rate if you already have one. Also tends to mean ex-military get cherry-picked for great paying, easy to do work around here.
In Japan it is common practice that companies 'require' you to state your most recent salary.
It is only for the purpose of offering you slightly more. Don't allow the country you live in to fall into the cesspool hiring scam that Japan has become.
My last IT contract had a clause prohibiting me from disclosing my remuneration to anyone,
and I mean anyone.
Company confidential, and a future employer should respect abiding by a contract.
Go well
No, you should never disclose your salary history to any prospective future employer.
Employers will ask this question for one reason and one reason only, to find the lowest possible offer you'd be willing to accept if they decide they want to offer you a position. Many people in this thread that are representing the employers perspective have said that they need this information in order to determine if a candidate's expectations are in line with their budget. Well, that can easily be achieved by either the employer being up front with the salary range on offer, or by asking the candidate not for their actual previous salaries but for their expected salary. That's a whole different question and one which you as a candidate should be prepared to answer (although ideally, you'll avoid giving a direct answer to this question also - see below). Of course, if you do give an answer here, you should still respond with a range rather than a specific number to allow that all important wiggle room within negotiations if you get far enough into the application process.
Too many employers here seem to be expecting the candidate to do half of their job for them - i.e. to divulge information that is detrimental to the candidate and helps the employer make a hiring decision (especially in the negative direction - i.e. helping the employer to discount the candidate rather than offering reasons to hire).
Here's some very useful tips I've picked up over the years for answering the "What is your current salary?" question without actually divulging the salary information the employer so desperately seeks. Also, some great answers to the "What salary are you seeking?" question, too. For this, use the Noel Smith-Wenkle method which avoids giving a direct answer and naming a number - something that will instantly give the other party the upper hand in any salary negotiation.
So, when asked "What is your current salary?", answers are:
- "I'm seeking a salary in the range of $x to $y" (i.e. the Politician's answer - you answer a different question that what was asked).
- “My current employer does not allow me to discuss the terms of my employment”
- “This position is not exactly the same as my current job, so let’s discuss what my responsibilities would be here and then determine a fair salary for this job.”
or finally, for really pushy interviewers:
- “I’m happy to help you evaluate what I’d be worth to your business based upon my skills, experience and the value that I can add to your organisation, but my current salary is personal and confidential, just as the salaries of your own employees are.”
And the aforementioned Noel Smith-Wenkle method in a nutshell is that when asked "What salary are you seeking?" you give three answers for the number of times they repeat the question, or try to pin you down to mention a figure:
1st answer: "I am much more interested in doing (type of work) here at (name of company) than I am in the size of the initial offer."
2nd answer: "I will consider any reasonable offer."
3rd (and subsequent) answers: "You are in a much better position to know how much I'm worth to you than I am."
I just tell them its part of the NDA I signed when starting with the company. Too many companies are including NDA's in their on-boarding paperwork. I have never had a problem it.
None of the Fortune 500 companies I've worked for in 20+ years has ever asked for my salary info or W2's from previous jobs. As an IT support contractor, I typically get a 40% salary increase when starting new contracts.
I signed an NDA stating I cannot share that. However, while salary isn't the only important aspect of job satisfaction, it is an important one. This job posting stated, the position is 80k to 120k. That is a 40k range. I am looking to be in the top half of that range, and even at that, you are likely getting a steal of a deal.
...ask them what they're paying their other employees.
Mods should keep comments on topic.
My 2 cents on this is it is a salary negotiation tactic as it has nothing to do with your ability to perform the new job.
If the president,a public figure, can refuse to report his taxes, you can refuse reporting your, private, salary history.
Funny, I seem to remember someone shutting down the government twice because he refused to sign the budget that was voted on and delivered to him. When the RNC tried to cut spending to some programs, all we heard about was the "terrorists" who were holding the government hostage, and refusals to do any negotiation.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
Sure there are, every ThuRsday, FRiday, and SatuRday.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?