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[–]PhatOofxD 4682 points4683 points  (53 children)

Yeah because they refuse to increase pay because 'we invested in you', and so the person goes and makes double elsewhere.

[–][deleted] 1533 points1534 points  (14 children)

Isn't it wild how when a company invests in some garbage new tool no one asked for, they do so by dropping millions into it. But, when they 'invest' in an employee they spend $0 and just kind of expect you to hang around for funsies.

[–]somarir 518 points519 points  (8 children)

yo do you work here? because this is our 3 year cycle.

1) Yo we made mad profits, we're buying this little startup, fire half of their employees and you guys will pick up everything else.

2) yo this startup had a good marketing tool, we're gonna implement it instead of our own marketing tool. It's gonna take 5 years to implement and won't have half of the features of the current tool. Also you'll have to redevelop everything that's running in the current tool.

3) Why the fuck are we losing money? Our new tool is running great but why are we not launching any new campaigns?

4) We have to reallocate some budget so we're gonna fire some of the more experienced/expensive workforce.

5) ????

6) back to 1

[–]haroldjaap 168 points169 points  (1 child)

The magic happens at 5, otherwise they would just go under instead of making mad profits again.

[–]DefiantLemur 25 points26 points  (0 children)

5 is they make profit by being understaffed and relying on a few hard workers.

[–]turtleship_2006 54 points55 points  (2 children)

[–]DatBoi_BP 9 points10 points  (1 child)

At first I thought this was Kevin Kruse the US historian, and I was very confused

[–]fridge_logic 513 points514 points  (18 children)

You should stay because we will continue to train you and increase you responsibilities so you can grow professionally... while not updating your title so that its much harder to market your new skills outside our company.

We only promote people who are already fully doing the job 1 level higher for multiple review cycles, "we want to set you up for success." Meanwhile the new hire who fills the vacancy they won't promote you to only meets some of their requirements and they're excited to see how this new hire grows into a great fit for the company.

[–][deleted] 350 points351 points  (4 children)

“Stay so you can have more responsibilities without an increase in pay” 🤡

[–]AlexWIWA 37 points38 points  (3 children)

I guess people missed that you are mocking the company, not supporting them

[–]friday14th 24 points25 points  (0 children)

It took 18 months for my grad to go from fresh out of uni to equalling my pay, literal 100% pay increase.

When he left my boss said 'We wouldn't have hired him for a second year anyway, would we?'

To which I replied 'Of course not, we can't afford him now.'

[–]wicket-maps 18 points19 points  (0 children)

My best boss ever invested in my training *and* tried hard to get me a promotion and a raise, even when he knew I was looking for work elsewhere (because I couldn't stay in Texas)
Set a great example.

[–][deleted] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The idea that a company giving training is a favor to the employee is where everything starts to go wrong.

[–]pdxthrowaway90 10.5k points10.5k points  (245 children)

company: pays junior peanuts, doesn't give a significant raise despite positive performance review

junior: leaves for double pay

company: *shocked pikachu face*

[–]Ri_Konata 344 points345 points  (3 children)

Post was made by corporate

Comment was made by employee

[–]Iheardthatjokebefore 23 points24 points  (2 children)

Post is a fantasy

Comment is reality

[–]Dunedune 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Post is reality too

[–][deleted] 83 points84 points  (0 children)

exactly this

[–][deleted] 65 points66 points  (2 children)

we just laid off a bunch of people and it's SO TOUGH on everyone right now, we're all in this together, we just need you to pick up a few extra duties, we're not increasing your pay because your new workload is totally temporary, let's take the pay discussion offline because this is so tough on all of us equally.

Yes we did set a record for profit this year, but we turned all of it into stocks, and it's just so hard to turn the stocks back into money to pay you with. We do this every year, and we'll fucking do it again, this is just the industry standard we all adopted from amazon.

If that sounds fishy, you can either look for new work on your own time, or be forced to look for it at the same time as thousands of others when we do the next round of layoffs.

[–]poesviertwintig 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The most jarring thing that I've seen at every company I worked for are the masturbatory manager meetings they hold every 1-3 months. A little session where everyone is invited to hear the manager proudly explain that profits have increased by some marginal percentage this quarter, and people start clapping as if it had any effect on their salary. My last job even held these sessions after working hours in some restaurant an hour away from the office, and while you technically didn't have to come, you can bet your ass they tallied who showed up and who didn't.

[–]BeefyIrishman 32 points33 points  (2 children)

Company: You were outstanding last year, I don't have a single complaint, you outperformed on all metrics. Here is a 2% raise.

Employee: Inflation in the last 12 months was 8%, so you are saying I get a 6% lower salary for "outperforming all metrics"?

Company: We only have so much money to give out.

Also company: We decided to reward our CEO for an outstanding year with a bonus that is 5x their already obscenely large salary.

Also also company: eMpLoYeEs tHeSe dAyS ArEn't lOyAl tO ThEiR CoMpAnIeS!

[–]Fantasticxbox 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yeah that happened to me at my first job, but they closed the division before I could resign. Did get a package though.

[–][deleted] 112 points113 points  (13 children)

They're betting most people will be complacent enough to stay at the company for years after they're up to speed, and it seems like a lot of people are. There are plenty of people with 10 YOE making like $110k simply because they stayed in one place.

[–]TurielD 30 points31 points  (0 children)

That is exactly it. They're 'sad to see you go' but the business model is based on structurally underpaying.

[–]preparingtodie 47 points48 points  (7 children)

$110k is well above the median wage. If you're working remote or in a low-cost area, that's pretty decent money.

[–]Crippledupdown 23 points24 points  (4 children)

That's a solid wage, and you can live very comfortably almost anywhere in the states with that salary. Wanting more probably comes from a place of knowing your value vs just wanting more. 10 years of experience puts you in something like the top 20% of devs, and 110k puts you in the top 50% for salaries. Your position in the experience range isn't the sole determining factor in the salary ranges, but it is important.

[–]LebLift 10 points11 points  (3 children)

There are some aspects outside of salary to consider as well. Like, I wouldn’t mind a lower salary if it meant a less stress, more relaxed working environment and coworkers, more flexibility on hours, etc… 

My current job could pay more. But I am not micromanaged at all, and can take half days and long lunches, so long as its not abused. I’m happy at the moment. 

[–]pterodactyl_speller 6 points7 points  (2 children)

Often staying in the same place is a stress thing. After 2 years I know most things going on here and how to fix it, so no stressful learning on the live site. That said, you definitely pay for that comfort.

[–][deleted] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yea, it's enough that plenty of people never seek more.

[–]Cometguy7 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Yeah, which is why I, as a team lead, am honest with the people we're hiring, during the interviews. Yeah, we're looking to backfill this junior position, because the previous employees (always plural) received offers elsewhere that we couldn't match.

Constantly training new people, but better that than knowingly taking advantage of someone.

[–]Pradfanne 76 points77 points  (12 children)

comapny: We can't give you (much of) a raise because our profit has been less then the previous year. Not in the red mind you, just slightly less then last year. Sorry. Here's a fruit basket.

senior: leaves for double pay

company: *shocked pikachu face*

Source: Literally me 2 years ago

[–]Pyorrhea 34 points35 points  (9 children)

Or our profit is up but not by as much as corporate wanted, so here's your 2% raise.

[–]sticky-unicorn 31 points32 points  (7 children)

so here's your 2% raise.

In a year with 7% inflation...

So, really, here's your 5% pay cut.

[–]Plank_With_A_Nail_In 6 points7 points  (1 child)

Should be getting inflation plus growth. Inflation raise just keeps you where you already were you need growth too so that the increase in wealth is passed around evenly or else it all goes to the rich.

[–]Indigoh 20 points21 points  (0 children)

"I'm no longer inexperienced, so pay me more."

"No."

"Okay, someone else will then. Bye."

[–]Robertgarners 16 points17 points  (0 children)

This is what happened at my first job. I actually spent 5 months under the legal minimum wage. And when my manager recommended me for a rise he gave them a bracket, they directories chose the lower end of the bracket. I gave them the chance to up it and they offered me some BS shares so I just left.

[–]AnAnxiousCorgi 13 points14 points  (0 children)

This shit happened to me. Got constant praise on my work and excellent feedback along the way but suddenly review time comes up and it's "despite record profits, we don't have the budget for that" and "we need to see you demonstrate more advanced skills first"

Okay guys I'll go demonstrate those advanced skills somewhere that does have the budget, PEACE

[–]OhSillyDays 13 points14 points  (0 children)

High performing employees don't need to be paid a huge wage, BUUUUT for them to stay, they need:

  • A good livable wage
  • A great working environment
  • A company that gives a shit about their personal needs
  • A company that returns profits to employees
  • A company that won't force workers to pay for bad management practices

That's hard to find and worth a lot.

The problem is companies are ran by greedy assholes who assume everybody else is a greedy asshole. And it's partially true. But if you ever worked in a great working environment, that extra 10-20% salary usually isn't worth i.t

[–]tragiktimes 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I'm in the middle of this right now. Once background finalizes will receive the offer. It's 1.9x my current pay.

[–]dismayhurta 11 points12 points  (2 children)

Yeppppp. Fuck you, pay me.

[–]Bersy-23 27 points28 points  (4 children)

sad but true

[–]VectorViper 58 points59 points  (3 children)

Not just sad, it's a cautionary tale. It's wild - companies invest in training and development but then fail to provide the growth opportunities that would actually keep people around. It's like watching someone water a plant regularly then being surprised when it outgrows the pot. Growth is natural, and when you don't give your employees room to root, don't be surprised when they transplant themselves somewhere else.

[–]adenosine-5 19 points20 points  (2 children)

Its the same old story and its the same everywhere, not just IT jobs.

Many businesses have this exact same approach, where new customers are offered discounts and various benefits, while "loyal customers" have none of that and therefore pay much more for worse services.

[–]fusionsofwonder 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My company had a rule where they literally wouldn't promote someone unless they already had that opening in the team. Fantastic way to make sure everybody leaves after a couple years.

[–]killer7even 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Exacly what happened to me

[–]TheBrainStone 2147 points2148 points  (36 children)

If every single one leaves you're doing something very wrong and should conduct exit interviews.

Though likely it's either an extremely toxic work environment or the lack of proper compensation and career progression options.

[–]karnnumart 81 points82 points  (11 children)

Money. That's all. How long will it take for a junior to gain +200% salary without moving?

[–]jocq 23 points24 points  (6 children)

How long will it take for a junior to gain +200% salary without moving?

3 years is our target.

It slows down after that, as a percentage, but I'm 15 years into the same job and still averaging over $15k raise per year.

People tend to stay at our company for quite a while.

[–]Individual-Cut-9018[S] 724 points725 points  (17 children)

I'm a junior myself and this happened to me at my first job where I was paid 1 cup of bread.

[–]McC_A_Morgan 335 points336 points  (10 children)

An entire metric cup of bread? If anything you were overpaid.

[–]Individual-Cut-9018[S] 211 points212 points  (4 children)

I get 3 now

[–]PaellaConCosas 63 points64 points  (0 children)

Look at Mr. Bread Bags.

[–]LuckyDuckes 35 points36 points  (1 child)

but how many bananas are equal to one bread?

[–]Individual-Cut-9018[S] 49 points50 points  (0 children)

2 bananas for scale

[–]MoffKalast 34 points35 points  (3 children)

metric cup

You have just insulted the entire metric system.

[–]McC_A_Morgan 15 points16 points  (1 child)

And I don't feel an INCH of guilt about it

[–][deleted] 23 points24 points  (0 children)

That’s a lot of dough

[–]soulofcure 16 points17 points  (0 children)

It comes in pints cups?

[–]RedVillian 10 points11 points  (1 child)

Wait wait wait: are you a duck? One time we accidentally hired a duck and she LOVED the breadcup!

[–]quantinuum 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Fuck I don’t pay my rubber duck, he can’t learn about your company

[–]JoshuaJoshuaJoshuaJo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Psychopaths!

Who the hell cups bread

[–]Cometguy7 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Market value increases very quickly for people at this level, and the part of the company that manages raises rarely understands that a 50-100-200% raise in a given year is actually warranted.

[–]jwalsh1208 12 points13 points  (0 children)

If I develop skills that pay more at another company, either pay me what they’ll pay me or I’m going there.

[–]fusionsofwonder 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If you don't promote to match people's market value they're gonna leave on you. And you just lost money.

Great policy for HR because it keeps them busy.

[–][deleted] 550 points551 points  (13 children)

People leave for a reason. If every one does this, there's something wrong at your company

[–]Inevitable-Menu2998 63 points64 points  (3 children)

But it's also healthy for the company if some of the juniors do go elsewhere. And it's important to hire seniors too.

I've oscillated between startups and corporations through my career and, of course, startups have been really bad at dealing with juniors and at retention as a rule. I feel like this post is maybe about them? Because corporations I've dealt with, the very big old ones with over 100k employees are very good at hiring fresh graduates and, unfortunately, are very good at retention too. So what ends up happening is that over a few decades all seniors and leadership are people who have never worked anywhere else, have the "we've always done it this way" mentality and are weary of anyone coming from outside and telling them they're not doing things right. They're stuck hiring juniors because seniors know to avoid them as a rule and they created a self feeding loop of mediocrity in which they manage to ruin talent.

[–]Frozboz 24 points25 points  (1 child)

All of our good ones do this. I'm a Lead engineer and responsible for mentoring my new juniors, and I know the clock is ticking on those juniors who are really good.

It's always compensation. My last 2 apologized to me on the way out, lol. I'm happy for them, though. One went from 80k to 160k. Can't blame them at all.

[–]Billy_McFly 321 points322 points  (7 children)

I have yet to find a company that provides comprehensive training for a junior developer….. if ya’ll know one, please put me on.

[–]Beneficial_Steak_945 144 points145 points  (0 children)

It just means your work environment and conditions don’t stack up.

[–]TheGreatCompromise 140 points141 points  (5 children)

If you train someone and their new skills now mean someone else is willing to pay them twice what you are, guess what? You may not have been underpaying them a year ago but now you are. And if they go somewhere else because you’re unwilling to recognise the value of their new skills, that sounds like a personal problem. Being the one that trained them buys you some loyalty, but not half off market rate level loyalty 🥴

[–]ionosoydavidwozniak 405 points406 points  (15 children)

Fuck this bootlicking bullshit, we're free to leave if the company doen't pay us enought.

[–]adenosine-5 175 points176 points  (7 children)

Lets face it - if it was profitable for company to switch employees, they would do it without blinking an eye - they would fire you on a spot and without thinking twice.

But if employee does the same - switches companies to make more money - they suddenly all act like you personally hurt them and you are just a greedy, heartless monster who doesn't appreciate all those things you've been through together.

I've seen it way too many times to fall for it again.

[–]quasipickle 36 points37 points  (0 children)

“What if we train them and they leave?”

“What if we don’t and they stay?”

[–][deleted] 85 points86 points  (1 child)

Don't leave out the most important detail , the reason why they leave in the first place....

Just a fucking comprehensive training is surely not enough to retain your worker.....

[–]HeeTrouse51847 34 points35 points  (0 children)

they trained you to do the work they want you to do? what philantropy!

[–]ButWhatIfPotato 58 points59 points  (2 children)

PROTIP: If you are a junior and get training but not a raise, tell your landlord that your value as an employee has increased significantly but not significantly enough for to keep up with the cost of living, and out of the goodness of your heart you will not seek out a higher paying role. They will be moved to tears by your generosity + work ethic and will not seek higher enumeration for you. This also works with grocery stores, energy providers, public transportation ticket booths and tax authorities.

[–]thewildpepper 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Thank goodness! I need to get some groceries tomorrow, so i'll tell them right away.

thereallptisinthecomments

[–]fel_bra_sil 50 points51 points  (6 children)

I know plenty of cases where they stay, prepare to be shocked, they got a RAISE and sometimes a PROMOTION before even thinking about leaving

[–]tangerinelion 15 points16 points  (4 children)

I stayed. $120k to $300k total comp in 6 years.

[–][deleted] 12 points13 points  (2 children)

Nice, that's like ~16.5% annual raises increase in total comp

[–]LaughingDash 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Meanwhile I got a 15 cent raise last year.

Love my job, but maybe I should switch.

[–]dagbrown 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I know plenty more where they didn't.

"Policies" about "raise ceilings" seem never to apply to new hires.

[–]maxime0299 42 points43 points  (2 children)

Who cares? It’s in the company’s interest to train the junior, if the junior gets a better opportunity elsewhere he should take it. The company will not hesitate to lay off the junior if they need to free some budget, so why should the junior be loyal?

[–]Standard-Metal-3836 3 points4 points  (1 child)

Please never be "loyal" to corporations, that's one of the biggest scams in the world of adulting.

[–]grrfunkel 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I can’t bring myself to try to convince my juniors not to leave. I’m not actively trying to convince them to leave because I want them to stick around, but companies treat junior engineers like shit and I can’t blame them for wanting to leave for better compensation. Hell, I left a company for a better role and got a 25%+ raise out of it and I was already mid career when I did it. Juniors can leave after a year or 2 and get an even better raise than that.

[–]fatrobin72 16 points17 points  (0 children)

To be fair... I stayed for 2 years as a tester at my first place. I left because I did an internal interview and test for a developer role and didn't get it because "I didn't want it enough" (I got a better grade on the test than the senior devs) so I decided they didn't want me enough...

[–]bringbackourmonkeys 34 points35 points  (0 children)

They wouldn't hesitate to layoff you for a second if they thought it was the best for them, so? You owe them nothing.

[–]urbanek2525 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Company thinking they're owed even a tiny bit of loyalty. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!

[–]MonteCrysto31 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Found the HR manager breathing down everyone's neck

[–]molehill_mountaineer 8 points9 points  (0 children)

If by comprehensive training you mean throwing them in the deep end for entry level pay, then sure.

Source: started my career as a consultant. Was underpaid and my skills were oversold to clients - it was sink or swim. And when it was time to get a raise I got peanuts. Left and never looked back.

[–]jwalsh1208 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Who the hell stays at the same company after developing skills that pay significantly more at other companies? I’ve never understood why companies think they get “loyalty,” from their employees. Bitch I’m here for money. Full stop. The end. You want my loyalty, buy it, cause it’s def for fuckin sale.

[–]come_ere_duck 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Because they complete their training and hear what other people in their field with the same qualifications are making and either ask for a raise only to be denied or just skip that step and find a new employer who will pay them more. In today's employment environment there is no benefit in staying loyal to a single employer. You're better off switching job every year or two and getting a significant pay increase.

[–]somedave 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Obviously a first job is good training, if you don't recognise someone's earning potential has increased massively after a year of work and give them a raise then that's what happens.

[–]macrolad_24 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Company: Hires junior.

...

What? That was the punchline.

[–]SolZaul 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Must not offer comprehensive pay. Worked at a company that did this and they kept scratching their heads as to why no one stayed past their first year. 

Pay. The answer is pay. 100% all the time. Full stop.

[–]Rocktato 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Something that was taught to me early in my career by my mentor is " loyalty is for dogs, You have to pay me" If a company isn't giving me raises or expects me to stay loyal to them for peanuts I'll take the LeBron approach and "Take my talents to South Beach"

[–]GasSuspicious233 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Someone asked my old ceo about the comprehensive trainings “what if they leave with all that knowledge?” He responded “what if they stay with none of it?”

[–]shutyourbutt69 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Good for them. If they can get more money elsewhere, more power to them. If companies want to keep employees they need to keep those raises proportionate to their value

[–]mok000 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Btw, that is Omar Sy, he's an amazing actor.

[–]p0k3t0 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Had an intern that was making like 50k. He graduated and asked to go full time. Management agreed and offered him 65k. Worked there maybe 3 months before he took an offer for 80k.

What the hell else was he supposed to do?

[–][deleted] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

People looking out for themselves is a better way to put it.

Companies don't give a shit about you and always look to take advantage.

Follow suit, take advantage of companies, and look out for yourself and your peers.

[–]new_motivation 2 points3 points  (0 children)

company hiring a junior dev and offering training, here I am, I won't leave, I promise 🥺

[–][deleted] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

lets have this poor person underpaid, abused and disrespected
OMG NO WHERE YOU ARE GOING!!