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#YourCareer : Here’s How To Understand If You’re Getting Paid Fairly. Questions: Are you Paid Fairly? OR Do You Know?

Are you paid fairly? You probably don’t know, and that’s the case for the majority of candidates. Some states, like California and New York, have laws to mandate salary transparency, but many times, companies don’t share salary data and calculations with candidates.

The reality is the details that go into calculating employee compensation involve several nuanced inputs, such as individual experience, company profiles (e.g. revenue or funding), and market dynamics. Candidates often find themselves scrambling to validate their salaries by calling friends who work in similar fields or by browsing various unverified online resources like Glassdoor, Reddit, Levels or Blind – which are typically inaccurate, outdated, or miss nuances.

Today is Equal Pay Day, which is no accident. This date symbolizes how far into the year women must work to earn what men earned in the previous year. The wage gap is highlighted with women earning 84 cents for full-time, year-round work according to a report from the U.S. Census Bureau. While the exact day differs every year, it serves as a reminder that while equal pay is a conversation that concerns everyone, it continues to remain a real issue for women and many minority groups. The lack of accurate salary data disproportionality hurts women and underrepresented minorities from negotiating their pay fairly.

AJ Thomas, Global Head of Talent Experience at X, the Moonshot Factory and a strong advocate of pay equity, recently told me that “Transparency in pay isn’t merely about unveiling figures; it’s about nurturing trust, equality, and responsibility within an organization, illuminating the path for fairness and collaboration to thrive.”

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How Companies Create Offers

It’s important to understand how companies create offers to better negotiate your pay. Many candidates do not grasp the process businesses follow when assembling an offer for a new hire. Candidates can also fixate on one component of total compensation, such as base salary, and may not consider all aspects of total compensation including benefits and time off entitlements. Generally, total compensation includes some form of short term incentives in the form of base salary and variable pay like bonuses. Some companies, especially in tech, may also include long-term incentives like equity in the company.

An offer is is generated by taking into account the following key elements:

1. Following a company-established compensation philosophy

A compensation philosophy is a business strategy that guides all decisions related to candidate and employee total compensation. It serves as the foundation for pay equity, guiding teams in crafting offers and determining the company’s stance on a role’s market value. Most compensation philosophies are defined by a percentile. For example, if the top of the market pays approximately $100,000 as the base salary for a specific role, and the company’s compensation philosophy aims for the 65th percentile, the business will likely offer around $65,000 as the base salary for that role. Starting a candidate at a specific percentile also allows for growth within their role and rewards for performance over time. These percentiles can also be applied to bonus and equity calculations.

2. Paying for employer-only compensation datasets

Businesses pay for access to employer-only compensation data sets, allowing companies to exchange information about every employee’s salary for industry benchmarking data. Such exchanges enable a deeper understanding of the compensation other companies offer for each role.

Comparing these employer-purchased data sets with the data available to candidates from their network is akin to comparing David with Goliath. While both provide salary information, only one offers a level of accuracy that is comparatively more reliable.

What Can Candidates Do Today to Get Paid Fairly?

So what can you do? The reality is there is no solution for candidates to get accurate information, but here is what you can start with:

1. Ask the company to help you understand their compensation philosophy

Employers often share their compensation philosophies with candidates, although most candidates do not request this information. You can also request assistance in modeling your equity over time. Remember that you should consider all aspects of your total compensation, not just base salary.

2. Do your own research

You should do your own research to best understand the compensation details in your offer. However, it’s important to remember that your research will be based on limited data points that excludes nuances that contribute to your total compensation, such as the internal compensation philosophy.

3. Understand trade-offs: Compensation is not everything

It is important to consider your career goals as you evaluate your offer. The highest compensation may not provide you happiness or fulfillment. For example, I accepted a reduced salary when I switched my career from strategy and operations to the field of Human Resources mid-career. This trade-off eventually paid off several times over after 5-6 years, and also led me to a role I am extremely passionate about.

Looking ahead

The reality is there is no place today for candidates to get accurate salary data that is trusted and verified. Companies only collect and sell market data back from businesses, leaving the employees stranded. As the pendulum will eventually shift back to becoming an employee-driven market, there is an opportunity to help candidates access this data.

I believe that one of the ways to improve pay equity is by providing candidates with a holistic set of data points that is personalized to their role, company and market dynamics. I see a future where AI can help ingest large data sets with the specific job you’re applying for, analyzing market data, and generating a potential compensation and benefits package tailored to you. While there are several complexities involved in making this a reality, I envision a world where salary information can continue to be democratized, thereby helping to bridge the equal pay gap.

I recently discovered FairComp, which intrigued me as they are aiming to build a verified compensation database for consumers vs. organizations. Their initiative claims to help you understand if they’re being paid fairly by using data supplied by employees and verified through technology. I am curious to see how this plays out and the possibilities for other similar tools to follow. I also hope this will encourage existing compensation survey organizations to consider making their data available to consumers in the future.

Forbes.com | March 12, 2024 | Q Hamirani

#YourCareer : The Great Resignation. Survey: 55% of Americans Indicated they were Likely to Look for a New Job in the Next 12 Months. Great REad!

You have probably heard the term – “The Great Resignation” (credited to Texas A&M University professor Anthony Klotz). Awareness of this phenomenon didn’t start during the COVID pandemic in 2020, but the virus did have a part in exacerbating the voluntary unemployment numbers. About 22 million jobs were lost in March of 2020 during the lockdown. 

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (USBLS) noted unemployment rates have stabilized to about the same as before the COVID quarantine, while the number of job openings is parallel at about 10.4 million in August of 2021.  The (volunteer; non-farm) resignation rates had a low in 2009 at 1.2%, but over the last 8-11 years have reached a rate of 3% (as of September 2021), according to the USBLS.  That is 4.4 million workers voluntarily leaving their jobs – the highest since the USBLS has been keeping records of ‘quit’ rates.  Almost 24 million workers have voluntarily left their employers since April 2020.

Is this a sign of a failing economy – or – a sign that workers are searching for a higher quality workplace environment, better pay, and/or growing workers’ ‘power to choose’ their employer of choice?  What has changed outside the COVID pandemic effects, especially since vaccinations have been available to the general public over the last nine months?  Was the trend already there and hidden by the ‘stay at home and prevent the spread’ government advisory?

A survey conducted by Bankrate (July 2021) found 55% of Americans indicated they were likely to look for a new job in the next 12 months.  A January 2021 Microsoft international survey found more than 40% of workers are likely to job shop in the next year, and a May 2021 survey by Prudential concluded 48% were seriously considering what type of job they wanted.

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Did the COVID quarantine exacerbate the joblessness? Or did the pandemic force workers to reconsider their careers, employers, and the work environment? Did work at home employees during the quarantine decide they preferred to telecommute? Were essential workers ‘overworked’ with staff shortages?

These elements and questions are one of the foundation elements of why the ‘quit rate’ is increasing.  Worker burnout prompted people to seek a better work-life balance in positions.  Employers who demanded employees come ‘back to work’ after the telecommute situation proved effective found workers are searching for new telecommute-based jobs.  Fear of the virus for those who refused or could not take the vaccine prompted workers to seek more ‘work-at-home’  jobs.  The pandemic and resulting quarantine prompted workers to rethink priorities, including personal and work-life balances.  Employers who mistreated the workers or failed to enable a comfortable,  rewarding environment, matching ethical values, or better compensation, benefits, or promotional opportunities were the first to see employees quit.

Employers are rethinking what they need to offer to new hires in working conditions, compensation, flexible scheduling, or telecommute opportunities. The service industry was the hardest hit, with 5.3-5.5% resignations in June 2021. Meanwhile, the United States Postal Service is attempting to fill 40,000 temp worker positions for the upcoming holidays (Nov.-Dec. 2021).  The federal mandate for COVID vaccines for health care and government (as well as government contractor) workers by the current administration will add to the unemployment rates and create even more job openings.  State mandates for teachers and state workers will force those with acquired immunity to the disease and anti-vaxxers to be laid off, with massive worker shortages resulting in the medical and academic fields.

 The COVID quarantine taught people, globally, what they could live with and without.  The pandemic has caused folks to rethink their priorities.  The massive number of newly created or current job openings is making workers seriously consider looking for new jobs with opportunities that match their work-life balance, commute needs, and promotional goals – as well as vaccine requirements.  The COVID-related labor market will continue to drive people to quit their current jobs to explore better opportunities for years to come.

 

FSC Career Blog AuthorDawn Boyer, Ph.D., owner of D. Boyer Consulting – provides resume writing, editing, publishing, and print-on-demand consulting. Reach her at: Dawn.Boyer@me.com or visit her website at www.dboyerconsulting.com.

Bio: Dawn D. Boyer, Ph.D., has been an entrepreneur and business owner for 20+ years, with a successful business and consulting firm (CEO) in Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Richmond, Colonial Beach, and Gloucester, VA.  Her background experience is 24+ years in the Human Resources field, of which 12+ years are within the Federal & Defense Contracting industry. She is the author of 903+ books on business, human resources research, career search practice, women and gender study, genealogy and family lineages, quotes for motivation and self-improvement, and Adult Coloring Books.  Her books can be found on Amazon.com under her author’s page for Dawn D. Boyer, Ph.D.

FSC Career Blog – November 17, 2021

Your #Career : What to Do About a #PayGap at Your #Workplace ….It Happens All the Time. Someone Who Has Just Been #Hired, or Hasn’t Worked for a Company for Very Long, Makes More Money than Someone Who has Been There for Many Years & Proven Themselves to Be a Valuable Employee.

It happens all the time. Someone who has just been hired, or hasn’t worked for a company for very long, makes more money than someone who has been there for many years and proven themselves to be a valuable employee.

For instance, there are many instances where a male is going to earn more than a woman who has more training and experience. Have you found out that you are earning a lower salary than someone who is a more recent hire, or has less experience than you? If so, it may be time for you to look for ways to be able to do something about it.

Don’t Blame Co-Workers

First of all, you need to remember that it is not your co-worker’s fault that they are being paid more than you are. Yes, you can be angry, but it is never a good idea to confront a co-worker about their salary. All it does is cause both of you to feel uncomfortable, and it causes a lot of anger in the workplace. Instead of being angry at them, use the fact that they are earning more as a reason to ask for a raise.

One thing that you should never do is ask your co-workers what they earn. Unless you are making comparable salaries, someone is going to end up angry because they are being paid less than others. This can lead to conflict within the team, and a lack of productivity that is not going to help you get the raise you deserve.

Learn About the Equal Pay Act

If you are a woman, it is important that you know about the Equal Pay Act. This act prohibits employers from paying women less than their male counterparts when they have the same amount of experience. If you are not a woman but are a minority, you may be eligible for some form of protection. If you think that you are being discriminated based on age, gender, or disability, the best thing to do is to contact the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EOCC).

Unfortunately, most other employees have no legislative coverage. If you are not in one of the above-mentioned groups, you will need to consider your situation and decide whether you should address the issue with your employer.

Do Your Research

Before you walk into your boss’ office and ask for a raise, do some research as to what you should be earning, based on your training, experience, years with the company, geographic location, etc. If you do know for a fact that some of your co-workers are earning more than you, this is good information to be able to arm yourself with. Of course, as mentioned, it is not a good idea to ask co-workers about their salaries.

Just because you shouldn’t ask co-workers about their salaries, it doesn’t mean that there aren’t other ways to find out. For instance, if you work for a university or a public company, some of the salaries are going to be public information. Or, there may be an association for your particular industry that offers surveys about salaries. It is a good idea to research salaries at least once annually.

Consider Your Approach

One of the most difficult things about asking for a raise is how to approach the situation in the first place. It is never a good idea to ask if the company is going through a transition period, as the money just isn’t going to be there. You also need to be able to gauge your employer’s mood. If you get them on a bad day, you aren’t likely to get what you ask for.

When you do decide to approach your employer, don’t go in making demands. That isn’t going to get you anywhere. It is better to negotiate. Tell them why you feel that you deserve a raise, and have confidence in your own value. This is going to get you a lot further than just going in and saying you want a raise, or else.

Negotiate for More Responsibility

It may be that you are being overlooked for a lot of big projects at work. If this is the case, instead of asking for a raise right away, try asking for more responsibility. “Ask to be put on the teams that are doing the big projects, or to do an extra project on your own. Ask if there are training opportunities, and if not, take outside courses and workshops to gain more skills and knowledge,” suggests training manager at IGotOffer.

If you are given the opportunities you seek, don’t waste them. If you are getting training, take in every ounce of information possible. If you are given bigger projects to work on, show them what you are really made of. These are the things that are going to put you in the running for a raise, or even a promotion.

Set a Deadline

What will you do if your employer says that they will give you a raise, but they never follow through on their promise? Or, what if the company just can’t afford to give you a raise at this time? You can only wait for so long before you are going to become even more disenchanted, and your work is going to suffer because you will stop caring.

It is important to set a deadline for what you want. For instance, if you have been working at your company for more than a year without a raise, you may need to decide that if you do not receive a raise within the next six months, this may not be the company for you.

Consider Your Options

If you are not getting the raise that you deserve, or other forms of compensation such as extra vacation time, a paid bonus, etc., it may be time to start considering other options. There are other companies out there that will value your experience and skills, and be willing to pay you the salary you truly deserve. Basically, if your current employer doesn’t see your value, find one who does.

Glassdoor.com | April 13, 2018 | Posted by 

#Leadership : Why Everyone’s Salary Should Be Revealed…Transparency in Pay Provides Employees with Reassurance that They are Being Treated Fairly in Relation to Their Peers.

That’s because employees at companies that didn’t practice transparency just assumed that their coworkers were making more money.

“It turns out that pay transparency—sharing salaries openly across a company—makes for a better workplace for both the employee and for the organization,” David Burkus, author of Under New Management: How Leading Organizations Are Upending Business as Usual, said in his TED Talkearlier this year. “When people don’t know how their pay compares to their peers’, they’re more likely to feel underpaid and maybe even discriminated against. Do you want to work at a place that tolerates the idea that you feel underpaid or discriminated against?”

Keeping salaries secret does exactly that. Since companies are often transparent about expenses like health care and travel that have skyrocketed over the past few years, “It makes sense to pivot from the old way of keeping pay grades under a veil of secrecy to a more transparent way by sharing the compensation information on all employees based on the different roles,” says Tim Tolan, CEO and managing partner of the executive search firm The Tolan Group.

In fact, being open about what you pay employees can have benefits that exceed the savings companies can have by negotiating with each individual employee.

IT BOOSTS EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION

“Transparency in pay provides employees with reassurance that they are being treated fairly in relation to their peers,” says Jeanne C. Meister, coauthor of The Future Workplace Experience: 10 Rules for Mastering Disruption in Recruiting and Engaging Employees. “They may still leave, but pay may not be part of the equation.”

Workers who are paid less than the market rate for their jobs were more satisfied if their employer was transparent about their pay, according to PayScale. And if someone sat down and openly discussed the reason behind the compensation, their job satisfaction rose from 40% to 82%.

 

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IT INCREASES EMPLOYEE PRODUCTIVITY

In a study from Cornell University and Tel Aviv University, researchers found that keeping salaries secret is associated with decreased employee performance. In an experiment, students were paid a base salary for completing three rounds of a computer matching game. While participants played the game individually, they were assigned to a four-person work group. Half of the participants were informed about only their own performance and bonus pay, while the other half experienced pay transparency, being told what the other team members were being paid. The study found the group that had pay secrecy also had decreased performance in the task.

IT ENCOURAGES GROWTH AND RETENTION

Pay transparency provides an incentive for employees to climb the ladder, says Burkus. “The research shows that when people know how they’re being paid and how that compares to their peers, then they’re more likely to work to move up it,” he said in an interview with Harvard Business Review. “And even those high performers are more likely to work hard to stay high performers in order to demonstrate why they bring that much value to the organization.”

IT HELPS FIGHT GENDER BIAS

Transparency requires employers to justify their decisions, and makes it less likely that these decisions will be based on bias or discrimination, says Kate Mueting, a partner in the Washington, D.C., office of Sanford Heisler, LLP.

“For example, D.C. has one of the lowest gender pay gaps in the country (11%), and this is largely attributable to the fact that the federal government has lock-step, transparent compensation,” she says.

Earlier this year, Fast Company reported that President Obama had announced a proposal aimed at closing the gender wage gap by requiring companies with 100 or more employees to report their staff’s pay broken down by race, gender, and ethnicity to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). This information would be an update to the EEOC tool that currently collects wage data from businesses and isn’t scheduled to start until September 2017.

BUT THERE COULD BE DRAWBACKS

“In reality, salaries remain a sensitive topic,” says Lauren Griffin, senior vice president for Adecco Staffing. “Before openly speaking about your income with peers, it’s important to consider whether those conversations would offer any benefit.”

For example, sales environments commonly share performance rankings, which hint toward a person’s paycheck. “In that situation, openly discussing pay could encourage teams to share best practices and drive them to get better,” she says. “In addition, it could help retain less tenured employees who want to know what to expect as they move up within an organization.”

While there may be justifiable reasons why one employee commands a higher salary, such as increased responsibilities or experience, pay discussions can cause team members who don’t have access to the big picture to become disgruntled and feel undervalued, says Griffin.

“Once you open this door, you can’t close it,” she says. “Employees who perceive that their salary isn’t fair when compared to a peer’s can spread those frustrations to other colleagues and teams, ultimately leading to poor engagement, turnover, and decreased productivity.”

HOW TO SHARE THE NUMBERS

Potential drawbacks make the way that you share the information important. Choosing a method that fits your company culture can help. For example, Buffer puts all of its salaries on its website for anyone to see. SumAll shares numbers within the company, and Whole Foods employees can make an appointment to view the company’s “wage report.”

Other companies post pay rates for certain positions and let employees figure out individual salaries based on the hierarchy or their organizational chart. Some companies share their formula for calculating pay rates, while others provide the median salary for key roles and make this transparent both inside the company as well as on the company’s Glassdoor page.

“Some executives are concerned about the privacy issues,” says Tolan. “A way around sharing exact amounts would be to use salary bands and provide ranges for each role—and while you would still know which band a coworker is in, you probably would have to guess at their actual salary.”

Sunlight makes it impossible to hide things, said Berkus in the HBR interview. “And so in a transparent culture, regardless of how you do it, you tend to find people who have a higher sense of the organization being fair,” he says. “You tend to see increases in collaboration and all sorts of other positive effects.”

 

Your #Career : How to Tell If you’re Underpaid…Employers Generally Hold Comparative Salary Information Close to the Vest, and Unless you can Tease Exact Dollar Figures out of a Colleague to See If your Pay is in the Same Ballpark, you May Be Left Wondering if you’re Earning a Fair Wage for your Title and Field.

It’s notoriously difficult to find out how much other people make for doing the same job as you. Employers generally hold comparative salary information close to the vest, and unless you can tease exact dollar figures out of a colleague to see if your pay is in the same ballpark, you may be left wondering if you’re earning a fair wage for your title and field.

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A recent Glassdoor survey found that close to 40% of employees think they aren’t paid what they’re worth, with more women than men feeling this way. But believing you’re underpaid and knowing it are two different things. Here are some convincing signs that suggest you’re not making enough.

Your numbers are below industry norms

While it can be challenging to determine whether you make less than a co-worker in your company due to lack of pay transparency, you can find out average salaries of others who share your title in the industry at large. Several career websites offer salary benchmarking, includingSalary.com, PayScale.com, Glassdoor.com and Indeed.com. These online sites offer resources (many of them free) to help employees research how much they’re worth using tools such as national and regional compensation reports and salary profile databases that are searchable by title, experience level, geographic location and company. Check out the salary bands for your position on several of these different career sites, average the salaries from all of the sources and see if yours ranks near these numbers or falls below the threshold.

 

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Your salary progression has stalled

If you came on board in your entry-level job at a salary you knew was low (after all, you were a newbie) but haven’t moved up the pay scale much since then, it’s likely you haven’t caught up enough. Once you accept a position that’s below market rate, it can be difficult to prove to subsequent employers what you’re really worth and make up the difference, since hiring managers often base starting salaries on the amount you made previously. Minute raises year over year (in the range of 1 to 3 percent) mean that even those who started at the same level as you may be raking in more by now if they’ve received more substantive annual raises. Think about this point in relation to how much your level of responsibility has changed as well. If you were promoted by being given more tasks or a higher title but your boss has made no mention of a raise, chances are you’re being underpaid for what you’re doing now.

You’ve never asked for more money

Salary negotiation is an important part of making what you’re worth. While many employees balk at the idea of broaching the topic of getting paid more, research has shown that asking for a salary bump often results in receiving one. A 2015 study by PayScale found that 75% of those who requested more money got it. Yet many people never work up the nerve to ask — particularly womenand millennials. This fear of salary negotiation can have very expensive consequences over the lifetime of your career, resulting in potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost income.

Being underpaid can be discouraging, but it doesn’t have to be inevitable. If you find out you’re making too little money, be willing to step up to the table and start negotiating — or start seeking a new employer who will pay you as much as you deserve.

Read the original article on U.S. News & World Report. Copyright 2016. Follow U.S. News & World Report on Twitter.

Businessinsider.com | October 12, 2016 | Robin Madell, U.S. News & World Report

Your #Career : I’m A CEO—Here’s How I Decide Whether To Give You A Raise Or Lay You Off… This Exec Reveals the Arithmetic Companies Typically Use to Assess Employees’ Value.

When I express these opinions, however, I often get disgruntled rebuttals like, “Yeah, right. Corporations have no concept of loyalty”; “Layoffs are completely arbitrary—it doesn’t matter what you’re worth”; and, “The only way to get a raise is to change jobs!”

Since these complaints are made to me—the CEO of a company that clearly isn’t so callous—it’s obvious that these stereotypes cannot be universal. Putting aside this irony, though, even if every company in the world were as ruthless and coldblooded as some believe, value and compensation would still be inextricably connected. Let’s take a look at why this is the case and how you can increase your value as an employee to get paid what you deserve.

WHAT HAPPENS BEHIND CLOSED DOORS

Let’s be a fly on the wall in that dim, coffin-shaped room where lanky, black-suited business misers drum their spindly fingers together and cackle over that most evil of subjects: layoffs.

When they discuss the customer support floor, they decide they need to lay off one person, and gradually narrow the options down to two employees:

Option 1: “Bill” is an old-and-true company standby. He’s worked at the company for 20 years and has been completely faithful to his job expectations. He clocks in and out on time and delivers his customer support perfectly on script. As a result, he’s accumulated a number of raises over the years and now makes $20 an hour.

Option 2: “Shelly” has only worked in customer support for five years but has obtained advanced technical certifications, has an excellent interpersonal manner, and routinely turns upset customers into loyal patrons. Clients who get support from her are 30% more likely to purchase additional services and to refer friends.

She talks off script a fair amount but keeps track of what she says and how customers react. As a result, she has submitted many helpful modifications to the basic IT script, resulting in a 10% increase in customer satisfaction for the whole floor. Due to her high performance, Shelly also makes $20 per hour.

Which one gets the boot? It’s Bill without question.

The company is actually losing money on Bill. If they fired him, a new employee would work for only $12/hour and could read the script just as skillfully as Bill does within two weeks.

If Shelly were fired, however, the company would lose out on a major source of sales, referrals, customer satisfaction, and an internal system for improving the whole department—they can’t afford to lose her!

 

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VALUE IS NOT THE SAME THING AS YEARS ON THE JOB

But what about faithful old Bill? It would be so mean to fire him! Bill’s problem is that he hasn’t really done anything to justify his increased wages. Small raises have accumulated on his paycheck like moss on an old river rock, but his real value is still around $12 an hour.

However, since Bill has been working at the company for so many years, he probably “feels” like he’s worth $20 an hour. Never mind the fact that he couldn’t get paid $20 an hour at a different company, he’s “put in his time,” so he’s worth $20 an hour, right?

Now, I’m not trying to understate the value of experience and wisdom. Good employees learn and grow over time, so they provide more value for their employer. As a reward, they get raises. The problem is, those raises are often based on meeting minimum standards for specified periods of time—not the value an employee brings to the table. As a result, when push comes to shove and a company needs to actually evaluate the worth of an employee, “years on the job” means far less to the business than added value.

Related: How To Ask For A Raise

BUSINESSES PAY FOR VALUE, AND EMPLOYEES ARE THEIR ASSETS

Many employees are confused about what their salaries pay for. When people first enter the workforce as teenagers, they usually start with an hourly wage. The equation is simple: The more you work, the more money you get. Unfortunately, after a couple of years, many people begin to translate time into money and begin to think, “I’ve put in a lot of time at this job, so it stands to reason that I should be making a lot of money! I need a raise!”

Allow me to burst that bubble. Value isn’t a function of time. There are 24 hours in a day whether a company pays for them or not—it’s what you do with those hours that counts. Even for hourly employees, businesses aren’t paying for time—they’re paying for value. To put it simply, an employee is a company asset, and compensation is an investment in that asset.

Let me explain what I mean: If I were to invest $5,000 in a new asset for my business—say an online marketing account—you might think that I would have to make $5,000 in sales to justify the expense. Unfortunately, it doesn’t quite work that way. I won’t get too deep into the math of contribution margin, but in short, since my business expenses aren’t just limited to what I spend on marketing, it turns out that the account would have to make me at least three times my investment ($15,000) just to break even.

If the asset started producing four or five times more money than I put into it, then it would really be profitable. In fact, I’d be willing to invest more if I knew my payoff would be that good.

The same goes for employees: If I’m going to invest in people, I need to know that having them around will make my company at least three times what I’m paying them. The more revenue an employee drives for my business, the greater their value and the more I’m happy to pay to have them as an asset. An employee who produces less value, however, loses me money and—unless they can become more productive—I can’t afford to keep them in the long run.

Related: The 10 Highest-Paying Finance Companies In America

HOW TO INCREASE YOUR VALUE

Now, I think we’ve looked at things like a ruthless businessman for long enough to show why companies care about the value their employees bring to the table.

In most real businesses with real, warm-hearted people (like I try to be), the same principles are still at play, but the focus is more on encouraging employees to become more valuable than on eliminating dead weight. In general, this encouragement comes in the form of salary. The more value an employee brings to the table, the more they deserve to be paid. The question then becomes, how do employees increase their value?

There are three basic steps:

  1. Ensure that you’re meeting the basic expectations of your job.
  2. Identify areas where you can add more value.
  3. Create and execute a plan to exceed expectations.

Step 1: Meet expectations. Before you start trying to expand your horizons, it’s a good idea to make sure that you’re at least fulfilling the minimum requirements of your role.

Of course, it can sometimes be hard to figure out what those requirements are. A recent Gallup poll revealed that up to half of employees don’t really understand what is expected of them at work. Many companies have very little in the way of formal job descriptions. Others have long lists of tasks and expectations around hiring time, but when you start the job you find that half the stuff on the list you never do and half the stuff you do isn’t on the list.

So if you’re not sure what your job expectations really are, the easiest way to get that question answered is to talk to your manager. Havea discussion about what workplace success looks like. You might even ask how your position adds value to the company. This gives you a target for increasing your value later on.

If, in this discussion, you discover work expectations that you weren’t aware of or that you haven’t been meeting, your first priority should be to start meeting those expectations. You may also find that, as Gallup’s poll also suggests, somemanagers are just as confused about your role as you are. If this describes your supervisors, then a sit-down conversation is especially important. Defining together what your core responsibilities are will help them to know when you are exceeding expectations.

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Step 2: Find areas in which to excel. As part of your conversation, you should also determine a list of projects that could add extra value to the company that fall within the scope of your job.

It’s important to choose these projects in conjunction with your manager because you need to be sure that when you go above and beyond, it’s in areas that your company finds important. What’s more, you want your extra efforts to be recognized for what they are.

It’s helpful at this stage to come up with a way to document your performance. Remember Shelly—how she increased customer satisfaction by 10% and got 30% more referrals than average? These numbers make her value pretty undeniable, but they wouldn’t exist if she or her managers weren’t keeping track of them.

If you work in an area like sales, it’s pretty easy to document your performance with hard figures, but for many other jobs performance is less easy to quantify. Documentation is still important in these cases, but it may look a little different. For example, this is a scorecard my marketing director and I use to measure his performance each month (shared with his permission):

The first column contains a list of his basic job expectations. If he meets all of these he’s producing enough value to justify his base salary. The other two columns contain things that he can do to go above and beyond his normal duties to provide added value to the company.

This is a very simple documentation system, but it’s surprisingly effective. When it comes time for me to hand out bonuses and raises, I don’t have to wonder whether he’s earned it or not—I just look at the scorecard. If he’s consistently performing above expectations, then he’s adding extra value and he deserves to be rewarded.

Step 3: Make a plan and execute it. Finally, you need to put everything you’ve learned into action. If your goal is to increase your compensation at work, you can start by deciding how much more you would like to be making.

Take your current job expectations and salary as the baseline for what you’re worth to the company. Then realize that for every dollar that you hope to get in increased pay, you need to bring in three to five dollars to the business for your raise to make sense. Pick from your “above and beyond” list some projects that would add this kind of value to the company. Make a plan to complete these goals in addition to your regular tasks and present the plan to your manager.

Trust me, this will go over a lot better than the old, “I’m getting married so I need a raise” conversation. Your manager may not agree with every detail of your plan, but you will definitely come off as a motivated employee who really gets it. And even if your managers don’t buy in right away, it will be a great opportunity to discuss their priorities again and work together to come up with a plan that accomplishes things that really matter.

Don’t skip this important conversation. I’d hate to get a comment on this article saying, “I wasted six months doing what you said only to find out that nobody cared about my contribution.”

If you haven’t figured out by now, communication with your superiors is going to be a critical part of this whole process. Unfortunately, business plans are rarely static and you may have to chase a moving target, but if you’re willing to be flexible, you should be able to keep moving forward toward your goals.

Related: 9 Work Habits That Could Be Killing Your Chances For A Promotion

REACHING YOUR GOALS

Now, I know you’re probably thinking, “This all sounds great, Jacob, but it also sounds a little too idealistic. It would never work at my business.” Maybe not. I can’t predict every circumstance, and there’s a chance that yours is an exception. But isn’t it worth a try? The relationship between employee value and compensation holds just as true in “big ruthless corporations” as it does in more supportive ones.

For example, one of my employees recently related to me his experience at a prior company. This was one of those more stingy jobs and had a high turnover rate for entry-level employees. However, he applied the principles I’ve described. He developed a number of specialized skills and got deeply involved in some really important projects.

The miserly company was happy to be getting more out of him for the same pay—until the day he started looking at taking his skills elsewhere. His value was so great by then that the company would be set back months or years if he left, so when he suggested that he would need a 40% pay increase to stay, they felt like it was a worthwhile investment.

Despite the money-grubbing attitude of this company, he was providing so much value that he had become an asset they couldn’t afford to lose. As a result, he was able to negotiate a much better situation for himself. The moral of the story? If you feel that you deserve a raise, don’t get drunk and holler about it every Friday night. Take inventory of your worth, talk with your managers, and start working to become a more valuable asset.

 

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#Leadership: As Minimum Wages Rise, Smaller Firms & Companies Get Squeezed…If you Raise the Minimum Wage on People Who are Doing Data Entry or Washing Dishes, What Does that Mean to my Skilled Employees who are Only Making a Few Dollars more?”

Hannah Joseph dreams of bringing gourmet grilled hot dogs to food lovers coast to coast. But she now rules out owning any new restaurants beyond the two she and her husband currently operate in Indianapolis.  The reason: high staffing costs, and growing competition for low-wage workers.

King David Dogs has been coping with high staffing costs and competition for low-wage employees.

“I don’t want to deal with more employees,” said Ms. Joseph, co-owner of King David Dogs, whose 10 or so staffers start at $7.50 an hour, 25 cents above the federal minimum.

In May, U.S. small businesses paid their workers roughly $16.36 an hour, according to seasonally adjusted payroll data from some 250,000 businesses with fewer than 20 workers, compiled by Intuit Inc. That is up about 2.2% from a year ago.

In comparison, U.S. companies of all sizes paid workers in nonsupervisory positions an average of $24.87 an hour last month, up 2.3% from a year ago, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

 

State and city lawmakers’ recent push for higher minimum wages is poised to raise pay for the bottom fifth percentile, for workers at both big and small businesses, according to economist Susan Woodward, of Sand Hill Econometrics, Menlo Park, Calif.

On Wednesday, the Los Angeles City Council voted to increase the city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020, from $9 an hour. Delaware’s state minimum wage increased to $8.25 per hour June 1, from $7.75 per hour.

 

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Some big employers such as Target Corp. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. announced this year they would start pay at $9 an hour, and McDonald’sCorp. said it would raise starting hourly pay by $1 above the local minimum at company-owned restaurants.

“People can’t work for the minimum wage and afford to pay rent, in any state,” said Raina J. Johnson of Milwaukee. The mother of a 5-year-old left her job at Starbucks in January, where she said she was making less than $8 an hour, to work as a freelance writer and blogger.

“I have student loan debts, but I don’t even want to think about paying them off because I have to think about keeping a roof over my head,” she said. “The minimum wage should be enough so people can actually live, and not be so stressed out and depressed about how to pay their bills.” A Starbucks spokesperson said that no employee currently starts below $8 an hour, but she could neither confirm nor deny what Ms. Johnson was earning in January.

The shift to an economic recovery period following the 2007-2009 recession has made workers scarcer. “We finally reached the point in the business cycle where companies have great difficulty hiring workers at the minimum wage,” said Ethan Harris, co-head of global economic research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “We’ve had a total focus on cost-cutting instead of motivating and retaining workers.”

U.S. employers added 280,000 jobs in May, according to the U.S. Department of Labor, the 56th consecutive month of job gains, which is the longest streak on record.

Small-business owners were evenly split in their opinion of raising minimum wages, according to a May survey of 728 small firms by The Wall Street Journal and Vistage International. Forty-nine percent of respondents said the federal minimum of $7.25 an hour should be raised, while another 49% disagreed.

Dillon Edwards, who founded Brooklyn-based roaster Parlor Coffee in 2012, said entry-level positions, usually those dedicated to bagging coffee beans, start at $4 above the New York state minimum of $8.75 an hour. “It should definitely be more than that,” said Mr. Edwards, who has eight employees. “The cost of living is just so much higher. It needs to be at least in the double digits.”

If initiatives like the $15-an-hour one that passed in Los Angeles were to be approved in New York, Mr. Edwards said he would “be happy to pay” that amount, though it may require a ceiling on the pay of some of the higher-paid workers. “We know that it would ultimately reward our business and reward our community.”

King David Dogs has been coping with high staffing costs and competition for low-wage employees.
King David Dogs has been coping with high staffing costs and competition for low-wage employees.
PHOTO:ANDREW HANCOCK FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Many other owners of small firms already pay above the minimums to attract or keep the entry-level workers they need. Yet some owners say raising wages even further is out of the question, because there is a ripple effect that comes with increasing pay at the lowest levels.

For instance, Beth Fahey, co-owner of a custom-cake maker in a Chicago suburb, said her cashiers start out at $9 an hour, 75 cents above the state minimum, “just to stay competitive.”

Ms. Fahey, whose Creative Cakes has 34 employees and recently opened a cafe, said she offers full-time employees paid time off but couldn’t afford raising pay even more, especially for lower-wage workers.

“If you raise the minimum wage on people who are doing data entry or washing dishes, what does that mean to my skilled employees who are only making a few dollars more?” said Ms. Fahey. “I can’t raise everybody. If I do, the price of a doughnut is going to be $3 and nobody’s going to buy it.”

To cope with the wage hikes, some owners are rethinking their business models and how they allocate staff, in an effort to keep payroll costs low.

For example, in Los Angeles County, Dudley De Zonia, the founder and president of 180-employee Royal Truck Body, said he is considering moving some manufacturing work to branch locations in order to sidestep the expected increase in the minimum wage to $15. “Over the next few years, the minimum wage will be one of the biggest issues we face,” he said. The company manufactures work trucks for tradesmen and utility businesses.

The company has 100,000 square feet of manufacturing space in Paramount, Calif., and another 68,000 square feet in branch locations in Northern California and Texas. “We’ve already started moving stuff around,” said Mr. De Zonia. “It certainly makes it more affordable.”

While only a handful of entry-level employees at Royal Truck Body earn the minimum wage, about 80% of its staff makes under $15 an hour, he said. Because of that, he expects wages to rise about 30% by 2020, when the $15 minimum-wage hike will take effect.

Mr. De Zonia said he doesn’t take issue with an increased minimum wage, but he says the disparity in state minimums—makes it difficult for his business to compete on a level playing field. “I’ve got competitors in the Midwest who pay their workers $7.50 an hour,” he said.

In Indiana, the minimum wage has been $7.25 since it was last raised in July 2009. A bill that would have imposed a $10.10-an-hour minimum failed to pass in the Indiana legislature this year.

Staffers at King David Dogs in Indianapolis start at $7.50 an hour, 25 cents above the federal minimum.
Staffers at King David Dogs in Indianapolis start at $7.50 an hour, 25 cents above the federal minimum.
PHOTO:ANDREW HANCOCK FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

King David Dogs in Indianapolis currently generates about $250,000 a year. “We’re barely making a profit as it is,” said its founder Ms. Joseph, noting that she works outside the business as a lawyer to support herself and her family.

She and her husband once hoped to open 10 King David restaurants. But in light of potentially higher staffing costs, and challenges recruiting low-wage workers, their new plan is to sell King David Dogs products directly to grocery stores, or convert their business into a franchise operation.

Either approach would make it possible for them to expand the reach of King David without adding staff.

“We financially can’t” raise wages “without passing it on to our customers,” Ms. Joseph said. “There is only so much people are willing to pay for a hot dog. It’s not like we’re serving a foie gras burger.”

Write to Leslie Josephs at leslie.josephs@wsj.com and Adam Janofsky atADAM.JANOFSKY@dowjones.com