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Why it's Easier to Get a Payrise by Switching Jobs

Its an empirical fact that its easier to get a payrise if youre negotiating a new job than if youre negotiating within your current job. When I look back over my own career, every time Ive worked somewhere longer term (over a year), payrises have been a hard struggle. But eventually Id leave for a new position, and my new pay made all payrises at the previous job irrelevant. These days I make job switching upfront and official: I run my own business and most of my money comes from short contracts. Getting rewarded for new skills or extra work is nowhere near as difficult as before.

I know Im not the only one to notice this effect, but Ive never heard anyone explain why things might be this way.

Before I give my explanation, let me make a couple of things clear from the start. Im not going to argue that everyone should quit their jobs. I dont know your situation, and maybe youre getting a good deal already. Also, I apply game theory here, but, no, I dont assume that humans are slaves to simplistic, mechanical laws of behaviour. However, just like music composition, even if humans are free, there are still patterns that matter. If you understand this stuff, youll have a career advantage.

But first, some background.

BATNA

Many geeks think negotiation is like a role-playing game: roll the die, add your charisma score, and if the result is high enough youre convincing. Geeks who think that way usually have low confidence in their “charisma score”, and they blame that for their struggle with things like asking for payrises.

Charisma isnt totally irrelevant, but the good news for geeks is that theres a nerdy thing thats much more important for negotiation: BATNA, or Best Alternative To Negotiated Agreement. Despite the jargony name, its a very simple idea: its about analysing the best outcome for both sides in a negotiation, assuming that at least one side says no to the other. Although most people dont know its called “BATNA”, its the core of how any agreement works (or doesnt work).

Its easy to explain with an example. Imagine you buy a couch for $500, but when you take it home, you discover that it doesnt fit the place you wanted to put it. A silly mistake, but thankfully the shop offers you a full refund if you return it. Just as youre taking it back to the shop, you meet a stranger who says they want a couch like that, and they offer to buy it. Whats the price? If you ask for $1000,000, the deal wont happen because their BATNA is that they go to the shop and buy one themselves for $500. If they offer $1 to buy, your BATNA is that you go to the shop and get the $500 refund. Youll only come to an agreement if the price is something like $500. If transporting the couch to the shop costs significant time and money, youll accept less than $500 because your BATNA is worth $500 minus the cost of transport. On the other hand, if the stranger needs to cover up a stained carpet before the landlord does an inspection in half an hour, theyll be willing to pay a heavy premium because their BATNA is so bad.

You cant expect a negotiation to go well unless youve considered the BATNA of both sides.

Employment and Self-Employment

Most people of a certain socioeconomic class believe that the ideal, “proper” career is salaried, full-time employment at someone elses business. Many people in this class never even imagine any other way to make a living, but there are alternatives. In Australia, like other countries, youre free to register your own business number and then do whatever it is that people will pay for. That includes sitting at a desk and working on software and computer systems, or other work thats more commonly done as an employee.

So why is salaried employment so popular? As someone whos done both kinds of employment, one answer is obvious: stability. You can be (mostly) sure about exactly how much money youll make in the next six months when you have a salary. The next obvious answer is simplicity: as long as you meet the minimum bar of “work” done (whatever “work” means), the company promises to look after you. You dont have to think about where your next dollar comes from, or about marketing, or insurances, or accounting, or even how to find people to socialise with.

That sums up the main reasons to like salaried employment (not that theyre bad reasons). I sometimes hear claims about other benefits of salaried employment, but theyre typically things that you can buy. If youre self-employed and your work isnt paying you enough to have the same lifestyle as you could under a salary (doing the same work) that means youre not billing high enough. A lot of people make that mistake when they quit a salaried job for self-employment, but its still just a mistake.

Asking for that Payrise

Lets say youve been working as a salaried employee at a company for a while. As a curious, self-motivated person who regularly reads essays by nerds on the internet, youve learned a lot in that time. Youve applied your new skills to your work, and proven yourself to be a much more valuable employee than when you were first hired. Is it time to ask for a payrise? You practise your most charismatic phrasing, and approach your manager with your d20 in hand. The response is that youre doing great, and theyd love to give you a payrise, but the rules say

  1. You cant get a payrise unless youve been working for more than N years
  2. You cant get more than one payrise in N years
  3. That inflation adjustment on your salary counted as a payrise, so you cant ask for a payrise now
  4. You cant be paid more than Peter
  5. We need more time to see if youre ready, so keep up the great work for another year or so and well consider it then

The thing to realise is that all these rules are completely arbitrary. If the company had a genuine motivation to give you a payrise, the rules would vanish. To see that, try replacing “payrise” with “workload increase”. Software projects are extremely expensive, require skill, and have a high failure rate. Software work therefore carries a non-trivial amount of responsibility, so you might argue that employers should be very conservative about increasing how much involvement someone has in a project. But Ive never heard an employer say anything like, “Great job on getting that last task completed ahead of schedule, but we need more time to see if youre ready to increase your workload. Just take a break until the next scheduled task, and if you do well at that one, too, maybe we can start giving you more work to do.”

If youre hearing feedback that youre doing well, but there are various arbitrary reasons you cant get rewarded for it, thats a strong sign youre being paid below market rates. Now, the term “market rates” gets used pretty loosely, so let me be super clear: that means someone else would agree to pay you more if you asked.

Note that Im not claiming that your manager is evil. At most larger companies, your manager really cant do much against the company rules. Im not writing this to call companies evil, either, because that wont help you or me to get any payrises. What will help is understanding why companies can afford to make payrises difficult.

Getting that Payrise

Youve probably seen this coming: its all about BATNA, and how you cant expect your employer to agree to something thats worse than their BATNA. So, whats their BATNA? What happens if you ask for a payrise, and they say no?

Sometimes you see a story online about someone who was burning themselves out working super hard as an obviously vital member of a team. This person asks for a small payrise and gets rejected for some silly reason. Shortly after that, they tell their employer that they have a much bigger offer from another company. Suddenly the reason for rejecting the payrise evaporates, and the employer comes up with a counteroffer, but its too late: the worker leaves for a better job. The original employer is left wailing and gnashing their teeth. If only companies appreciated their employees more!

These stories are like hero stories in the movies. They tickle our sense of justice, but arent exactly representative of normal life. The reality is that most employees would just go back to their desks if theyre told, “No.” Sure, theyll grumble, and theyll upvote the next “Tech workers are underappreciated!” post on Reddit, but to many companies this is a completely acceptable BATNA.

In short, the main bargaining chip a salaried employee has is quitting, but that negates the reasons to be a salaried employee in the first place.

When youre negotiating a contract with a new potential employer, however, the situation is totally different. Whatever conditions you ask for will be compared against the BATNA of searching for someone else who has your skills. Any reasonable request has a much higher chance of being accepted.

The Job Security Tax

Now, something might be bothering you: despite what Ive said, people do get payrises. But all Ive argued is that companies can make payrises difficult, not impossible. Sure, salaried employees might not quit when theyre a little underpaid. (They might not even realise theyre underpaid.) But if the underpayment gets big and obvious enough, maybe they will, so employers have to give out payrises eventually. Occasional payrises also make a good carrot for encouraging employees to keep working harder.

At the scale of a large company, its just a matter of tuning. Payrises can be delayed a little here, and made a bit smaller there, and the company saves money. Go too far, and the employee attrition rate goes up, which is a sign to back off and start paying more again.

Sure, the employees salary will tend to grow as their skills grow, but that growth will be slowed down. How much it is slowed down will depend (long term) on how strongly the employee values job security. Its a job security tax.

What Should You Do?

As I said before, Im not going to tell you to quit (or not quit) without knowing what your situation is.

Perhaps you read this thinking that it sounds nothing like your workplace. If so, youre lucky to be in one of the better places. You now have solid reasons to appreciate your employer as much as they appreciate you.

For the rest of you, I guess there are two broad options. Obviously, theres the one Im taking: not being a salaried employee. The other option is to understand the job security tax and try to optimise it. If youre young and single, maybe you dont need job security so much (at least for now). Even if you have good reasons to want job security (and there are plenty), maybe you can reduce your dependence on it by saving money in an emergency fund, and making sure your friendship group includes people who arent your current colleagues. Thats a good idea even if you arent planning to quit today — you never know what the future will be like.


via: https://theartofmachinery.com/2018/10/07/payrise_by_switching_jobs.html

作者:Simon Arneaud 选题:lujun9972 译者:译者ID 校对:校对者ID

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