How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?
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You never now what something is actually worth until you try to sell it.
Brush up your resume, talk to recruiters and send it out. See what bites you get and what pay ranges are for those roles. You arent obligated to take any of them.
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@IRJ said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
You never now what something is actually worth until you try to sell it.
Brush up your resume, talk to recruiters and send it out. See what bites you get and what pay ranges are for those roles. You arent obligated to take any of them.
That sounds like a good idea.
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@Jimmy9008 said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
@IRJ said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
You never now what something is actually worth until you try to sell it.
Brush up your resume, talk to recruiters and send it out. See what bites you get and what pay ranges are for those roles. You arent obligated to take any of them.
That sounds like a good idea.
But you likely WILL want to take them. And why?
- They will likely pay better.
- They will pay better without making you "prove value" in a pointless way.
- It is your current employer forcing you to do this to prove your value to them because they don't value you themselves.
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@Jimmy9008 said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
Hi folks,
How do you decide what is a fair salary for an IT position?As a hiring manager It was:
Look at the skills, identify skills that align with the job (IE it's cool if you were an oracle RAC admin but If I didn't need that I didn't care). If I see a good alignment (Your skills mostly are skills I saw value in) I'd assign $$ modifiers to the skills (Say someone who can do BGP/MPLS work was worth an extra 20K over another admin who couldn't), sum them up and if the value > the cost to hire you and you had the best value of any candidates at the time you got hired!I am finding it to be quite difficult to get an idea as many job listings that require a similar skill set often say 'salary depending on experience'. So, you cannot really get any data.
Working for a large company there's stuff like GlassDoor to get an idea of what a company has previously paid a given title but even then that can get iffy, especially in consulting where everyone might get the same title but have wildly different skillsets and value. If it's a company who has H1B's you can look up the salary data on that (I think our average H1B makes 120K but you could align specific jobs to specific visa's and guess based on that). For software companies trying to figure out what the pay bands and level's corresponding between companies (Say for titles like MTS) https://www.levels.fyi/ isn't horrible. If you want to pseudo-anonymously ask people internally at a given company https://www.teamblind.com/articles/Topics works for larger companies.
There's also just go drinking with people and ask.Salary != Compensation. Say it with me...
. Once you add up, RSU's ESPP, weird 401K benefits (Post tax rollover maximums and supporting reverse rollovers), HSA pre-paid match, health benefits, unlimited vacation, variable bonus tied to my MBOs, training and T&E costs It could be argued I've had years where 50% (or more) of my compensation wasn't my base salary.https://thenicholson.com/thinking-taking-offer-need-know/
Plus, I have never quite trusted the data shown on sites like PayScale. Its probably quite skewed towards data being provided by those on lower salaries anyway.
It's just a data point. Just because you don't like that data point doesn't mean it's not data. it just might not be relevant data.
I also expect each area varies quite drastically in salary. It doesn't feel right to judge say a Sysadmin salary for somebody working from Kings Cross or Old Street to somebody in Greenwich...
Once you get above helpdesk fodder this shouldn't matter as work remote jobs (or jobs where you can office out of a remote office).
How do you begin to decide whats fair?
Who gives a @#%@ what's fair? It's about you trying to provide the most recognized value and extract the most value back in compensation as possible. Seriously, Rules of Acquisition should guide you in compensation negotiations.
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@scottalanmiller said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
Payscale is obviously BS. But even their show nearly 150K
https://www.payscale.com/research/UK/Job=Chief_Information_Officer_(CIO)/Salary
And that's all businesses, all of the UK.Sample compensation packages from some F500 CIO's.
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@scottalanmiller said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
I've been asked a few times to show evidence of why a salary should be given for a position. They often require similar job postings with the target salary in question... aka, if other companies are paying it, we should.
Most companies don't post the salary they are hiring at. The best jobs also don't go through recruiters (We don't pay/work with outside recruiters) so our payscales would be invisible in this case.
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@StorageNinja Really interesting points because I'm looking for a change too. Thanks for the info!
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@Jimmy9008 said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
Can... "Dave from the pub said..." really be evidence to justify the salary?
"I've spoken with colleagues with similar skill sets and the compensation benchmark I'm seeing is xxx"
It doesn't matter what the person your negotiating with thinks. If the benchmark TRUELY is xxx, you'll find someone else paying it and move on.In the SMB space it's all over the place with similar skills and job titles. I've seen someone functionally useless paid 80K and someone who's an awesome resource paid 40K.
It's worth noting that some of us use the Radford system for establishing bands and trying to standardize salary. This is common as it helps prevent liabilities from inconsistency popping up.
https://radford.aon.com/insights/articles/2015/radford-global-job-leveling -
@jmoore said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
@StorageNinja Really interesting points because I'm looking for a change too. Thanks for the info!
The funniest conversation was one shop that only offered 1 week of vacation max. They also wanted staff working on-call and after late calls still coming in at 8 AM. Had to explain to the VP that either that policy needed to go, or he needed to hand out 30% raises across the board to stop his attrition problem. In places where IT staff engaged in criminal behavior (Deleted data when being fired, running rogue servers at work, planting listneing devices in the board meeting) it was ALWAYS in a place where they were "getting a hell of a deal" on the skills of the staff they had. Discount IT staff are... expensive. Between that and staff who were honest but just wayyy underskilled (and projects took months instead of hours or days). arguing about paying an extra 15 or 20K just isn't worth it in most larger shops to get the right people.
Why should you listen to the Ninja?
I was a hiring manager for an MSP/IT consultancy. Note, because of my role I also was privileged to what a lot of my customer's IT staff were making (They'd either tell me, or it would come up in discussions with management if they were getting good value from their staff). I now work in a global role for a major technology company and fly around and talk to IT admins and archiects all over the world. -
@StorageNinja Attrition is a huge problem where i work, a little north of Waco at a 2 year college. Every department has a high changeover. The IT department has lost 6 people in last 2 years. There are no positions to move into(like a junior admin) and I'm not given opportunities to learn anything beyond my current role.
Btw I followed you on twitter and added your rss feed to my Slack.
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@jmoore said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
Attrition is a huge problem where i work, a little north of Waco at a 2 year college. Every department has a high changeover. The IT department has lost 6 people in last 2 years. There are no positions to move into(like a junior admin) and I'm not given opportunities to learn anything beyond my current role.
Clearly by design. Why the school wants to make working the undesirable is anyone's guess, but clearly it is intentional. They make it pretty much a forced situation and don't seen interested in change. This is common in certain kinds of organizations, typically those with something to hide (often simply that the people at the "top" aren't capable and don't want experienced people sticking around long enough to prove it.)
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@scottalanmiller Yeah for whatever the reason I'm ready to move on. I'm sure your right though. It's really irritating. I heard my VP talking about "operational efficiency" to our president and how she got things done with as little salaries as possible; I admit it disgusted me. I never expected instant rewards or instant salary increases which is why I stayed there for 5 years. I want to learn and move up somewhere and I'm willing to work for it.
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I'll see what they come up with and take it from there.
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@jmoore said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
I heard my VP talking about "operational efficiency" to our president and how she got things done with as little salaries as possible; I admit it disgusted me.
Notice that she didn't say that the department did the most work for the lowest cost, or was the most efficient... because those things can't be done on low salaries. She isolated the salaries to hide likely high departmental cost and inefficiency.
What's worse is that a college president would fall for an obvious business mistake and blatant marketing ploy.
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@scottalanmiller Well thats the way it is here. Most in management positions don't seem to have the qualifications for their positions. I'm friends with the Welding coordinator(position below director here) and he put in for the technical director of Welding and HVAC and hes been here many years. A woman got it who was an english instructor that never had any technical or welding or hvac experience. Never had any management experience either. She's like 28-29 I think. My vp if IT only IT experience was in labs(doing desktop support). This is from her own mouth in a conversation we had a long time ago. Not all, but many of our management positions are similar cases.
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@scottalanmiller said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
@jmoore said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
I heard my VP talking about "operational efficiency" to our president and how she got things done with as little salaries as possible; I admit it disgusted me.
Notice that she didn't say that the department did the most work for the lowest cost, or was the most efficient... because those things can't be done on low salaries. She isolated the salaries to hide likely high departmental cost and inefficiency.
What's worse is that a college president would fall for an obvious business mistake and blatant marketing ploy.
Yes that is why I was insulted. Everyone should try to get as much done efficiently as possible and I understand that. Its why I love using and learning more about automation technologies myself too. However, the way she was phrasing it to the president really got to me.
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if you ask me sometimes nothing is fair, but it is your current of view in life, for example some people would be happier working relative easy job and doesnt pay alot and having good friends in that job better than high paying one, but they doesnt know that untill they its too late
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@jmoore said in How do you know what a fair salary is for the area you work?:
Most in management positions don't seem to have the qualifications for their positions.
In healthy companies they do. But "most" companies are not healthy and are failing. But failing companies don't pay well, or for a long time. The goal is to look for healthy companies where doing a good job gets rewarded.
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@scottalanmiller ehhh, this isn’t a university It’s a trade school (oddly one that certified people in CCNA, helicopter repair etc). It’s a decent trade school but I suspect like a lot of universities an schools in rural areas they count of low job competition for non-remote entry level work. For what it’s worth a large 4 year university on the Brazos was paying only 40K for The head of ResNet department.
Universities priorities are strange. From a compensation plan free student tuition, and free masters often mean they can treat a lot of salary positions line work study jobs from a comp basis.
For what it’s worth I’ll likely be (jetlagged) but back in Waco for the OU game (or any games after it). I’ve made it to only one game this season sadly.
I have friends who still live in Waco but they all work remote. There’s a decent work from home Wordpress community there. The job market isn’t great for IT infrastructure unless you have clearance but even then [Redacted] IT is so frustrating wild horses couldn’t drag me back into one of their offices.
Just move to Houston or Dallas or another market until you can skill up enough to work remote.