Recent court decisions have ruled that certain race-based college admissions programs violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. While these decisions do not apply directly to private employers, some observers expect them nevertheless to encourage more scrutiny of affirmative action policies or practices in the private sector. READ MORE
Beyond the paycheck: The key to building a thriving workplace goes beyond salaries
Today’s news is filled with stories highlighting salary figures, from sky-high CEO compensation packages to boards trying to hide CEO pay increases during periods of austerity, to governments interfering with collective bargaining over wage increases and unions securing pay hikes.
Some provinces, including Ontario, Alberta and Nova Scotia, are also mandated to release annual sunshine lists of public sector workers who earn above $100,000 — all of which might suggest that higher pay equates to more productive, healthy and safe workplaces. But is this a correct assumption? What if the opposite is true? READ MORE
Massachusetts Pay Transparency Moves a Step Closer
Massachusetts is poised to follow California and Illinois and become the third state to require pay data reporting. It would also be the eleventh to require pay transparency in job listings. On October 4, Massachusetts House of Representatives voted 148-8 in favor of the legislation. READ MORE
This is How Much Less Remote Employees are Willing to Accept in Salary
As much as companies are trying to get employees back into offices, those who had a taste of remote work during the pandemic are increasingly resistant to the idea. So much so that workers are willing to take a pay cut to work from home.
This is according to Stanford University economist Nicholas Bloom; a leading voice in remote-work research. Bloom told USA Today that the average prospective employee is willing give up about 8 percent in annual salary for a job that is partly or fully remote; or about $4,600 per year based on a median U.S. salary of $57,200 for full-time workers. READ MORE
Is The Big Law Salary Bonus Worth The Hours?
Big law firms are known for their high salaries and generous bonuses, making them an attractive option for many law school graduates.
But bonus payments by big law firms are changing as they pay special bonuses, during COVID, and ‘extra’ payments, while boutique law firms are sometimes outpacing big law firms in their bonus payments. But some firms are also using bonuses as a ‘stick’ to get associates back to the office. READ MORE
9 High-Paying Jobs in Science and Tech
Amidst escalating living costs, the challenges of climate change and emerging viruses, careers in technology and science offer not only stability and rewarding pay but also the chance to positively shape our future.
If you’re in the market for a job that will help jumpstart your wealth, take a look at these high-paying careers. READ MORE
Leaked Microsoft pay guidelines show salary ranges as top employees get millions
Leaked pay guidelines reveal that Microsoft employees can be awarded over $1million as a hiring bonus, $1million in stock, in addition to over $300,000 as a base salary.
The banding system sees new hires receiving different levels of pay ranges for base pay, hiring bonuses, and annual stock awards. According to Business Insider, the guidelines were published earlier this year and are used by hiring managers to decide how much to offer new hires, according to a person with direct knowledge of the process. READ MORE
UAW focuses on soaring CEO pay in strike for better wages at the Detroit Three
The United Auto Workers union’s strike against the Detroit Three for higher wages, more paid time off, and the elimination of tiered workers, which is in its fourth week, has drawn attention to the vast differences in pay between autoworkers and executives at auto manufacturers.
The union has frequently spoken out about the gulf between CEO pay and worker pay to argue that the auto manufacturers can afford to increase wages for autoworkers. READ MORE
Employers anticipate less money for raises and fewer promotions in 2024
US employers are planning to budget less for raises next year, according to recent data from consulting firm Mercer.
The August survey, which draws upon responses from more than 900 organizations, found employers are planning to allocate 3.5% of their compensation budgets to performance-based merit raises in 2024. That’s down from 3.8% for 2023. READ MORE
CFOs, treasurers earn top corporate accounting salaries
The jobs market has chugged along, confounding many executives who have been bracing for a recession for some time. On Friday the Labor Department said hiring soared last month, far exceeding predictions, with payrolls swelling in September more than during any month since January, CFO Dive previously reported. READ MORE
Fatherhood premium, motherhood penalty? What Nobel Prize economics winner's research shows
Sapna Arvind had always dreamed of having a big career in finance.
“My dad, when I was a child, would say, ‘I wanna see you on CNBC,’ "she says. “So I did my undergrad in finance at New York University with those words ringing in my ears.”
Arvind embarked on a career in asset management in New York City after getting an MBA in finance from MIT Sloan School of Management in Cambridge, Massachusetts. By her mid-30s, she was also a mother of two children under the age of 10. READ MORE
Consider Incenting Sales Reps for Customer Success, Service and Satisfaction
In today’s services economy, buyer experience is a key sales differentiator and a driver to future sales. That fact is all-important to customer success, but how can your organization best influence the key factors – consumer confidence and customer satisfaction -- that power it? One beneficial strategy is to consider making customer success metrics a component of the sales incentive compensation plan. READ MORE
How DEI Will Shape Executive Compensation in Changing Legal Climate
Diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs are successful when they are incentivized, as seen by the significant leapOpen in a new tab in hiring people of color at S&P 100 companies in 2021.
But following the Supreme Court's June ruling against affirmative actionOpen in a new tab, businesses are taking another look at their DEI programs and questioning if similar legal action may be taken against employers. One area being examined is tying DEI benchmarks to executive compensation. READ MORE
Gender pay gap report earns Nobel Prize
Apart from being the kind of feat that catches the attention of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the win signals once more that pay equity is a hot topic.
At the top of the year, experts predicted pay would be a trending DEI hot topic for 2023. Since the beginning of the pandemic — and subsequent erasure of the boundaries between work and home — the gendered burden of child care on working women has been increasingly top of mind for the HR industry. READ MORE
Top in-demand jobs and salaries
U.S. employers are on a hiring spree based on the jobs report for the month of September which showed the creation of 336,000 workers well above estimates. READ MORE
Hottest Job of 2023 with 2Cr Salary — AI Prompt Engineering
Are AI tools like ChatGPT & GPT-4 threatening your job security? Don’t worry you’re not alone in this black hole because, in the coming years, a report by Goldman Sach predicted that 300 million jobs will be diminished because of Artificial Intelligence taking over human jobs. And this is actually something to worry about. But we’ve also found the solution to get an upper hand on AI by learning how to talk to ChatGPT before it starts controlling us. In this blog, we’ll dive into how to secure a 2cr salary by doing AI prompt engineering — the hottest job of 2023. READ MORE
Follow these tips when negotiating salary for a pay raise
Here's a quick tip to negotiate your salary.
If you've been waiting for your next pay raise, you're not alone. According to a survey from OnePoll, the average American employee hasn't received a raise at their current job in the last three years.
But experts at Shapiro Negotiations Institute say getting that salary increase isn't impossible. READ MORE
The Million-Dollar Question: Why Do CEOs Earn So Much?
Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, believes that CEO salaries are too high and should be no more than 20 times the salary of the average worker. But why do CEOs earn so much money? Let’s explore the complex factors that influence CEO compensation and why it is such a controversial topic. READ MORE
Issues and Considerations Involving the Recovery of Executive Officer Compensation
At the recent meeting of the Employee Benefits and Executive Compensation Subcommittee at the ABA’s Business Law Fall meeting, moderators identified several hot topics stemming from the new compensation recovery (clawback) policies required to be adopted by listed companies by December 1, 2023. READ MORE
Latinas lose $1.2 million over their careers as wage gap persists
Latina women working full time, year-round earn 57 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men, according to a data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Latina Equal Pay Day, which in 2023 falls on Oct. 5, marks the additional days into the new year that Latinas must work to earn as much as the typical annual salary of white, non-Hispanic male workers. READ MORE