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Why do job-hoppers get bigger raises than loyal employees?

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I've heard it's pretty bad to take counter-offers too. I guess the logic is that you're basically on borrowed time with whatever 'bump' in salary you get until they can find someone new. Mileage may vary, though.
 
i was in a situation at my previous job where a guy in a similar role to me was earning $20k more simply because he was an external hire while i was internally promoted

was absolutely infuriating and needless to say, i got out of there as soon as i could
 
i was in a situation at my previous job where a guy in a similar role to me was earning $20k more simply because he was an external hire while i was internally promoted

was absolutely infuriating and needless to say, i got out of there as soon as i could

Payroll is usually the biggest expense at most companies. They will anything to keep it down.
 
Background check verifies prior salaries and can actually be a deal breaker for most job offers. If you lie they will most likely know.

They're not legally entitled for that information actually. If you have former job that verifies it, sucks to be you!

I'm only now starting to get past tier 1 positions into higher paying/skilled positions. If someone asks me this in an interview, what do you think is the best response?

Say you only share that with your info with your accountant, jokingly. If you can pull it off.

You will need to give them a range.
 
I'm only now starting to get past tier 1 positions into higher paying/skilled positions. If someone asks me this in an interview, what do you think is the best response?

call them on their bluff, your previous employer doesn't have to reveal shit or risk getting sued by you.
 
I'm only now starting to get past tier 1 positions into higher paying/skilled positions. If someone asks me this in an interview, what do you think is the best response?
I would look up salary estimates for the position (or something close to) you're applying for and tell them that's the ballpark figure. Maybe go a little higher and negotiate down to what you think is fair.
 
call them on their bluff, your previous employer doesn't have to reveal shit or risk getting sued by you.

Yep. Know your employment laws, friends.

Don't be fucked over by HR departments that are known to tip toe around employment laws.
 
I've heard it's pretty bad to take counter-offers too. I guess the logic is that you're basically on borrowed time with whatever 'bump' in salary you get until they can find someone new. Mileage may vary, though.

That makes sense. I imagine it'd be smarter to ask for a raise of the discrepency amount or more at your existing job. If they say no, put in your two weeks. If they say yes, it's not because you waved a job offer in your face.
 
That makes sense. I imagine it'd be smarter to ask for a raise of the discrepency amount or more at your existing job. If they say no, put in your two weeks. If they say yes, it's not because you waved a job offer in your face.

I've seen people successfully do it. Usually more established employees.
 
Almost exactly the same for me. I turned in my two weeks last Thursday for a 20k raise. They suddenly tried to match my new salary and I told them to try, knowing full well they couldn't get close enough, and they couldn't. Plus it's a more valuable skill I'll be gaining in the new place anyway so they would have had to go beyond to keep me. They are running around now trying to figure out how to complete upcoming client work and all I can do is shrug and say "Good luck." In my head I think, "If you promoted me two levels to where I should be then I probably wouldn't have been looking in the first place."
This happens at my company regularly. Engineers end up agreeing to working insane overtime for months to compensate. Not sure why. What are they going to do? If they fire you, they exacerbate the problem.
 
I've kinda job hopped, but not so much by choice. Each time I got more money.

In my first job though, I got a much deserved promotion after 3 years of hard work. The promotion? 1.5% salary increase and title change! Everyone on the team got 1% as the annual raise, so I got a mere .5% for a promotion.

I quit a few weeks later and they asked if they could match the salary. I kind of just laughed since they had plenty of opportunities throughout the 3 years I was there.

The real reason I left wasn't because of the pathetic increase though.

In the end, especially in the IT/Technology world you need to hop around to make more money. Unless you are in development (and probably even then) you are viewed as a non money making resource. Just BAU. Raises are limited because you aren't contributing any increase in revenue to the company. This of course is a bit BS...but thats how its viewed, you are an expense.
 
Well, people that are willing to go out and hunt for a better deal are gonna find it, right? If you just sit in your office and wait for HR to feel you rate a raise, you'll be waiting forever.

You can also use job offers as a negotiation tactic at your current job.
 
Background check verifies prior salaries and can actually be a deal breaker for most job offers. If you lie they will most likely know.

This doesn't sound right. A potential employer or someone running a background check on their behalf is welcome to ask for salary info, but neither you nor your current or past employers are under legal obligation to disclose that. In fact I think a lot of companies these days specifically instruct their HR departments to reveal nothing else outside of dates of employment because anything else (ie salary, if you were terminated, etc) is considered confidential.
 
I'm a headhunter for a living and have been doing this job for 6 years. Only in very rare and exceptional circumstances will anyone get less than a 10% increase for moving jobs in the industries I've operated in.

Here is the rule of thumb:

- your past salary should have nothing to do with your future salary. Every company has a budget for each position they sign off on to hire for. You should be seeking to find out what the range of that budget is and understand what skills/competences you need to display in order to come in at the top end of that salary bracket.

- if you stay at the same company for say 5+ years and never get promoted you will only ever be subject to ~3% year on year salary increases in the best case scenario (on average). Dependant on how your company is performing you might not even get a salary increase for at least 2 out of those 5 years.

- if you change job on average every 2 years your salary can go up anywhere from 10-30% (30% being if you are getting a promotion while moving) upon changing job on average.

- if you are staying in the same company for more than 3 years without having your salary increase by at least 10% and getting a promotion of some sort, something is wrong and you seriously need to start thinking about moving on for the sake of your career.

- if you have steady promotions throughout your career and steady salary increases in line with your promotions/years of experience you should "peak" anywhere from 20-25 years (dependant on industry) of experience on the job. At that point, the rules above no longer apply and you will most likely reach a point where your salary has plateaued and that there is nowhere for you to get promoted to. At this point your only options to continue increasing your salary will most likely be one of the following: become an independent consultant/ join a boutique/ or set up your own company in your area of expertise.

Job hopping too much can set off alarm bells however and my rule of thumb is that you should wait until you have served at least 1 and a half years before starting to look for pastures greener. That way by the time your job hunt is completed and your notice period is served you will have been at your company for roughly 2 years.
 
I'm a headhunter for a living and have been doing this job for 6 years. Only in very rare and exceptional circumstances will a anyone get less than a 10% increase for moving jobs in the industries I've operated in.

Here is the rule of thumb:

- your past salary should have nothing to do with your future salary. Every company has a budget for each position they sign off on to hire for. You should be seeking to find out what the range of that budget is and understand what you need to show in order to come in at the top end of that range.

- if you stay at the same company for say 5+ years and never get promoted you will only ever be subject to ~3% year on year salary increases in the best case scenario (on average). Dependant on how your company is performing you might not even get a salary increase for at least 2 out of those 5 years.

- if you change job on average every 2 years your salary can go up anywhere from 10-30% (30% being if you are getting a promotion while moving) upon changing job on average.

- if you are staying in the same company for more than 3 years without having your salary increase by at least 10% and getting a promotion of some sort, something is wrong and you seriously need to start thinking about moving on for the sake of your career.

- if you have steady promotions throughout your career and steady salary increases in one with your promotions/years of experience you should "peak" anywhere from 20-25 years (dependant on industry) of experience on the job. At that point, the rules above no longer apply and you will most likely reach a point where your salary has plateaued and that there is nowhere for you to get promoted to. At this point your only options to continue increasing your salary will most likely be one of the following: become an independent consultant/ join a boutique/ or set up your own company in your area of expertise.

Job hopping too much can set off alarm bells however and my rule of thumb is that you should wait until you have served at least 1 and a half years before starting to look for pastures greener. That way by the time your job hunt is completed and your notice period is served you will have been at your company for roughly 2 years.

So just like new dick or new pussy?
 
I'm a headhunter for a living and have been doing this job for 6 years. Only in very rare and exceptional circumstances will a anyone get less than a 10% increase for moving jobs in the industries I've operated in.

Here is the rule of thumb:

- your past salary should have nothing to do with your future salary. Every company has a budget for each position they sign off on to hire for. You should be seeking to find out what the range of that budget is and understand what skills/competences you need to display in order to come in at the top end of that salary bracket.

- if you stay at the same company for say 5+ years and never get promoted you will only ever be subject to ~3% year on year salary increases in the best case scenario (on average). Dependant on how your company is performing you might not even get a salary increase for at least 2 out of those 5 years.

- if you change job on average every 2 years your salary can go up anywhere from 10-30% (30% being if you are getting a promotion while moving) upon changing job on average.

- if you are staying in the same company for more than 3 years without having your salary increase by at least 10% and getting a promotion of some sort, something is wrong and you seriously need to start thinking about moving on for the sake of your career.

- if you have steady promotions throughout your career and steady salary increases in one with your promotions/years of experience you should "peak" anywhere from 20-25 years (dependant on industry) of experience on the job. At that point, the rules above no longer apply and you will most likely reach a point where your salary has plateaued and that there is nowhere for you to get promoted to. At this point your only options to continue increasing your salary will most likely be one of the following: become an independent consultant/ join a boutique/ or set up your own company in your area of expertise.

Job hopping too much can set off alarm bells however and my rule of thumb is that you should wait until you have served at least 1 and a half years before starting to look for pastures greener. That way by the time your job hunt is completed and your notice period is served you will have been at your company for roughly 2 years.

This is good wisdom thank you for posting it
 
Seems mathematically sound. You increase your options/opportunities.

2 years jobhop safe cooldown seems unexpectedly short.
 
I'd be interested in reading about what percent of the workforce could even job hop. The general consensus here that job hopping is the key to attaining a high salary seems like it's only applicable to specialists who have in-demand experience in very specific fields.
 
So just like new dick or new pussy?

In my experience, looking for new pussy is a costly exercise, especially if you are married. In some cases you will most likely better off sticking with what you have.

But having said that, it's all about the opportunity cost right?
 
This doesn't sound right. A potential employer or someone running a background check on their behalf is welcome to ask for salary info, but neither you nor your current or past employers are under legal obligation to disclose that. In fact I think a lot of companies these days specifically instruct their HR departments to reveal nothing else outside of dates of employment because anything else (ie salary, if you were terminated, etc) is considered confidential.

Have you ever reported your salary? It can absolutely show up on a background check.
 
In my experience, looking for new pussy is a costly exercise, especially if you are married. In some cases you will most likely better off sticking with what you have.

But having said that, it's all about the opportunity cost right?

you see, in marriage, unlike the job market, loyalty still has some value.
 
In my experience, looking for new puss is a costly exercise, especially if you are married. In some cases you will most likely better off sticking with what you have.

But having said that, it's all about the opportunity cost right?

Exactly. If you can present the opportunity right... Or make it seem worthwhile... $$$

If not, your new sheets are the streets
 
Apply for new job. See what they offer you if they want you. If you are considering it talk to boss. Say you love the company but that the money is too good. Ask if they can at the least match the offer.
 
Apply for new job. See what they offer you if they want you. If you are considering it talk to boss. Say you love the company but that the money is too good. Ask if they can at the least match the offer.

I like what the other poster said about asking for a raise equivalent to the offer you got from the new employer
 
Job loyalty doesn't mean much any more. It used to be mutual. Pensions, profit sharing, incentives, etc. There's no point in loyalty, now. I'll do my job to the best of my ability, I'll always be ethical, but I'll always have an eye out for better opportunities.
 
Just told my supervisor that I would be leaving in a month for a new job that pays 20k more and has bonuses and other perks. He immediately started trying to figure out if he could afford to match it or not. Made me wonder why he didn't give me any sort of raise over the last couple of years? I am not staying.

It's easy to see why, this is exactly what they hope you do. Stay silent and keep working away. You are the ultimate employee.

The last company I worked for was littered with people far too comfortable and insecure to stand up and even ask for a raise. They'd bitch like hell about how much they were on, but would never do anything about it and couldn't negotiate to save themselves.
I resigned a few months ago after getting a hefty rise the year before(they offered me 5% but I negotiated...), and just last week they offered me a new role with a further 25% increase. They would never have offered me more money this year if I hadn't resigned.
I already envisioned the CEO saying something to me along the lines of "Well seeing as you got a large raise last year, we'll make next year a big one too OK?" etc

Sometimes you just have to let them know what they're missing out on.
 
I'm a headhunter for a living and have been doing this job for 6 years. Only in very rare and exceptional circumstances will anyone get less than a 10% increase for moving jobs in the industries I've operated in.

Here is the rule of thumb:

- your past salary should have nothing to do with your future salary. Every company has a budget for each position they sign off on to hire for. You should be seeking to find out what the range of that budget is and understand what skills/competences you need to display in order to come in at the top end of that salary bracket.

- if you stay at the same company for say 5+ years and never get promoted you will only ever be subject to ~3% year on year salary increases in the best case scenario (on average). Dependant on how your company is performing you might not even get a salary increase for at least 2 out of those 5 years.

- if you change job on average every 2 years your salary can go up anywhere from 10-30% (30% being if you are getting a promotion while moving) upon changing job on average.

- if you are staying in the same company for more than 3 years without having your salary increase by at least 10% and getting a promotion of some sort, something is wrong and you seriously need to start thinking about moving on for the sake of your career.

- if you have steady promotions throughout your career and steady salary increases in line with your promotions/years of experience you should "peak" anywhere from 20-25 years (dependant on industry) of experience on the job. At that point, the rules above no longer apply and you will most likely reach a point where your salary has plateaued and that there is nowhere for you to get promoted to. At this point your only options to continue increasing your salary will most likely be one of the following: become an independent consultant/ join a boutique/ or set up your own company in your area of expertise.

Job hopping too much can set off alarm bells however and my rule of thumb is that you should wait until you have served at least 1 and a half years before starting to look for pastures greener. That way by the time your job hunt is completed and your notice period is served you will have been at your company for roughly 2 years.

One thing I've always wondered about modern-day headhunters: where do the majority of your leads come from?
 
I've managed to receive significant promotions and raises to the point that I'm making almost double what I made when I started at my company five years ago. I enjoy the work and people quite a bit, so that definitely helps, but it would have been hard to not look around at other opportunities without such rapid advancement. Seems like a 3% or so yearly raise is typical for most positions.

I'd be interested in reading about what percent of the workforce could even job hop. The general consensus here that job hopping is the key to attaining a high salary seems like it's only applicable to specialists who have in-demand experience in very specific fields.

Well, yeah... that kind of goes without saying. You need to have some sort of desirable skill to make yourself... desirable.
 
My previous job when I outlined my salary expectation and the offer came back much less than the figure at the lowest end of my range. It was still almost double what I was taking home from the current job so I accepted.

When I left that for my current role I put on a huge amount for my salary expectation thinking they would undercut that based on what happened on my last job placement. Except they gave me more than I asked for to start and then after a probation period I got even more!

I tripled my salary in 2 job changes over 2 years, that was never going to happen if I stayed loyal. Internal promotional pay you shit AND they still want you to do tasks relevant to your previous role.
 
I used to be loyal to my employer. It got me nothing. No raise in pay for 4 years, while prices of everyday living surged. So I started looking around, found a nice startup venture that offered a 33% raise of my then salary, plus a guaranteed raise of 2% plus inflation correction yearly, plus a company car.

I dropped the news at my employer, gave them my two months notice. They asked if they could match the offer, plus some more, make me stay. I told them that they couldn't afford to give me a 3% raise where the hell are they going to get the means to match this offer, and even if they could, I wasn't keen on working at a place that doesn't care for it's employees.

On the plus side, it made things better for my now ex coworkers.

Point is, future employers are keen to reel you in. A bigger paycheck is part of the bait.
 
As much bullshit as there is being a teacher, I'm glad I'm doing it and hopefully I can get set up and locked into something long term and get some tenure going.

The business world you all describe sounds fucking awful. Change jobs every two years? Good lord. As soon as you get to know the place and the people you're on the road.

Then again everyone here is rolling in 20-60k pay increases so I guess maybe I'm the sucker.
 
I certainly subscribe to the loyalty no longer being the currency of the realm theory, I've moved jobs 3 times in the last 4 years, each time because I found better opportunities with better benefits.

If you have a skill set, any skill set, as long as you know what you have then you can play your cards at either your place of work or at a new company and be rewarded with larger raises and title hops. It's all about knowing your particular skills, and knowing where and how they are needed.

Basically, don't be afraid to look outside your current industry. There are other companies in totally different industries in need of the same set of skills, and they are willing to pay more for them.
 
As much bullshit as there is being a teacher, I'm glad I'm doing it and hopefully I can get set up and locked into something long term and get some tenure going.

The business world you all describe sounds fucking awful. Change jobs every two years? Good lord. As soon as you get to know the place and the people you're on the road.

Then again everyone here is rolling in 20-60k pay increases so I guess maybe I'm the sucker.

Again, you're the perfect employee to be exploited. Turn up every day in a comfortable rut, reliable and unambitious. To be fair businesses need people like that to do the back end stuff like admin and customer service, but it will be hard to make any progression internally from there.
 
One thing I've always wondered about modern-day headhunters: where do the majority of your leads come from?

Leads? Don't really need them. I know who needs what in my market so it's pretty simple.

I operate in a market where there is a skills shortage and always have done. I also only operate at the senior end of the market (circa 10+ years experience). If I find someone who has the right skill sets and is willing to move to the Middle East then the majority of my clients will be interested. Other than that my clients sometimes will pay me up front to discreetly find them someone very specific.

The main difficulty is finding those people... That's the blood sweat and tears part of the job.
 
It won't be in your background check. They can only get it from a reference(if you gave the reference permission to reveal salary info), HR at your current workplace(unless you tell the HR to not reveal salary information), or pay stubs.
Wrong. Well, wrong depending on which country you're in. In the US, employers can absolutely validate your title, employment dates, and salary. My new employer is doing that right now to me. You have to sign a release saying it's ok for them to check that stuff as part of the offer acceptance phase.
 
Wrong. Well, wrong depending on which country you're in. In the US, employers can absolutely validate your title, employment dates, and salary. My new employer is doing that right now to me. You have to sign a release saying it's ok for them to check that stuff as part of the offer acceptance phase.

In the UK they only validate title and dates. Where I work they only validate dates. No bad references are allowed. The company where you used to work has nothing to gain and everything to lose if sued over error etc. the idea they would reveal your salary is laughable.
 
I work in a big company, manage a bunch of people, in what is a guns-for-hire type of business.

When we get a gap (maybe because someone quit, could be to a competitor, could be for lifestyle reasons), I have to fill it right now or revenue is going missing.

Getting someone good, talented, and with growth potential out of a competitor firm almost always means paying them a premium, general rule of thumb is 20%. Because if someone offered you a job at a new firm on the same pay, you're taking a risk. You won't have an internal support network or contacts at the new place, you don't know your new boss, etc etc.

Short version: employees that move jobs are taking a risk and need to be compensated for it with a premium, highly-skilled vacancies need filling fast and companies will pay up to do it.

I also care about keeping my existing employees, but that's a separate discussion from whether incoming employees deserve a bid premium.
 
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