When hippies run businesses
Remember the business owner who very publicly announced that he would increase all wages in his company to $70,000 to fight income inequality?
It's not going so well.
Ha! A few morons on FB are actually blaming the companies who took their business elsewhere because they felt it was either a political stunt or that Gravity's fees HAD to increase.
Edited By Leisher on 1438610980
It's not going so well.
Ha! A few morons on FB are actually blaming the companies who took their business elsewhere because they felt it was either a political stunt or that Gravity's fees HAD to increase.
Edited By Leisher on 1438610980
“Activism is a way for useless people to feel important, even if the consequences of their activism are counterproductive for those they claim to be helping and damaging to the fabric of society as a whole.” - Dr Thomas Sowell
I stand by my new thread. I searched for the company name and the guy who owns it and found nothing.
“Activism is a way for useless people to feel important, even if the consequences of their activism are counterproductive for those they claim to be helping and damaging to the fabric of society as a whole.” - Dr Thomas Sowell
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thibodeaux
- Posts: 8121
- Joined: Thu May 20, 2004 7:32 pm
who will keep a lot of the money within the American economy.
You've got no guarantee of that.
Additionally, the two dudes that quit both have legit points.
1) The dude there for two years get his pay bumped to $70K. So does the dude who's been there for two weeks. You aren't rewarding the long term guys for loyalty. In essence, he's said it means nothing with respect to reward.
2) If you're going to make your minimum salary X across the board affecting quite a bit of your work force, maybe you should look at it as giving your bottom rung employee a massive, massive raise even if they've done nothing to earn it. If the low man gets a huge bump for nothing and real producers don't see anywhere close to a proportional rise, you're also saying value of work means nothing with respect to reward.
I'm the only senior dev on my project at work. I've been on it longer than any other programmer. I've had the fun of being in the doghouse and being substitute lead this year. That said, I make more than the other devs because when the website breaks, I'm the sorry bastard that has to resuscitate it back to life. When the manager's gone, I'm the one doing prod builds and deploys. When our architecture blows and the architects are too far removed from the code to offer anything besides a meaningless, vague, high-level solution, I'm the one that has to deal with the devils that live in the details. If the company suddenly started paying the intern or new intro dude at my rate, they would have an ultimatum within the hour. If all the employees this dude has are genuinely doing $70K of work, then bravo. If he's inflating the value of some employees without upping their responsibilities, then all the hard working cats are going to figure out exactly how much they can suck and still keep their cash.
Edited By Malcolm on 1438723420
Diogenes of Sinope: "It is not that I am mad, it is only that my head is different from yours."
Arnold Judas Rimmer, BSC, SSC: "Better dead than smeg."
Arnold Judas Rimmer, BSC, SSC: "Better dead than smeg."
Malcolm wrote:who will keep a lot of the money within the American economy.
You've got no guarantee of that.
They'll spend a lot on food, and U.S. food imports totalled only 17% of consumption in 2009. People in office jobs are wont to eat out as well, which gives extra money to an American service worker.
Self-doubts have also crept into the employees who stayed, with some saying they felt the increased pressure at work as they questioned if they really deserved the raise.
From the ST article. It's as if paying people more means you can legitimately expect more from them and they know it.
We're Back: A Dinosaur's Story
It's as if paying people more means you can legitimately expect more from them and they know it.
I clean up the shitty designs of people who earn more than I do every day. I wonder if there are any employees thinking, "Hmm, how much can I pretend to be Peter Gibbons and still keep my $70K?" One of the DBAs we hired a couple years back had a serious drinking problem. Step back for a second and remember who's saying that. When I come back from lunch sweating, it's because we went to the Thai place and I asked for "real Thai heat." When he came back (in the dead of a Minnesota winter), it was because he'd finished off half a bottle of whiskey. He also earned more.
I assume they're aware he can still fire them for various reasons, including performance. But if your job doesn't have the potential to generate or save that biz at least $70K a year, it doesn't matter how well you do it, you aren't worth your salary. If the intern was worth more than $70K, he wouldn't be an intern, he'd be a higher level dev somewhere else. Or he's lazy like I am.
Edited By Malcolm on 1438725146
Diogenes of Sinope: "It is not that I am mad, it is only that my head is different from yours."
Arnold Judas Rimmer, BSC, SSC: "Better dead than smeg."
Arnold Judas Rimmer, BSC, SSC: "Better dead than smeg."
You're not really arguing against my point so much as bitching that your own company's implementation differs from what you'd like it to be. An attractive salary's a lure, not a filter -- it just brings more applicants to the table. It's the management's job to pick the corn from the shit.
We're Back: A Dinosaur's Story