How Much Does Your Salary Matter?
In?Part 1?of this series, we talked about using power to serve others – not yourself. In?Part 2?we covered position and authority – and how it matters in the use of your labor. Now, let’s talk about money and salary.
All of energy and details of getting into a higher position has a cousin called money. Jeff and I often get asked the “what salary should they pay me” question. And it immediately puts me into a conversation about the role of money in the work of mid, major, and planned gifts.
In Part 1 of this series, I told you that I got caught stealing money when I was in 7th?grade. Now I want to tell you why I did it and how it influenced my relationship to money.
My parents did not have much money. I didn’t notice it until they sent me to a boarding school for first grade. The school had a mixture of kids from very wealthy families as well as kids like me at the bottom of the economic ladder. It didn’t take long for me to notice the difference.
I didn’t know it at the time, but the act of sending me off to a boarding school in another country started me down an emotional and psychological track of self-doubt and loathing. I felt horrible about myself and I was anxious all the time. And I desperately was seeking to discover my value in the kids around me.
While my story is way more complicated than I have time to develop here, the bottom line was that the confluence of low self-image and rich kids flaunting their money and things caused me a great deal of inner turmoil. And so, I decided to buy my way into love and acceptance. I started stealing money from the student council store. I did two things with the money: I used it for myself, and I gave large sums of it away to a group of friends I was “buying.”
This continued for some time until I got caught and got kicked out of school. This event started me on an interesting and dramatic journey with money that taught me several lessons:
Now, I’m not sharing this either to puff myself up or show what a wonderful person I am. I’m simply saying that when you approach a job with a motive to secure an opportunity and provide service, versus chasing after an increase in your salary, something very magical happens in your heart and your employer’s head. And financial rewards come to you in unexpected and generous ways.
Why? Because a good and smart employer will see that they have an employee who is making things happen, who is focused on getting things done, and who puts the organization and team ahead of personal interest. This is very powerful. And in my case, the compensation trend line was up over the years to greater and greater financial rewards with some small little “pauses” in salary increases when I changed jobs.
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I know, you may have been burned on the compensation thing, and now you are cynical and careful. You may feel something along the lines of: “If I don’t take care of me, no one will!”
I know. But this “me first” attitude, if not controlled and managed, has a way of putting negative energy in the relationship between you and your employer. Believe me, I know this from being an employer myself and having been an avid student of this topic over the last 45 years.
The second way I learned this lesson is in my work with clients over the years. While it’s often said that profits come from providing a great product and service, very few people put this principle into action. Instead, they are obsessed with grabbing the money. The result? They set a tone in their organization that is self-interested rather than others-oriented. This is a dreadful mistake and one that leads to failure.
When you lead an organization that is providing services to customers and you honestly believe you can take short cuts, put yourself before them, manipulate and lie to get what you want, you will fail. It is just that simple, and it’s just a matter of time before reality will catch up with you.
Conversely, if you serve your employees and your customers exceptionally, with a heart and mind toward their interests, the financial rewards will follow. I have experienced this principle in the organizations I have owned and led in my career. And it works. It really does.
So, what does all this mean to you in your current mid, major, or planned gifts job and/or your search for a new job? How should you think about money and compensation in your work?
Here’s what I think:
What this entire series on power, position, and money nets down to is this. It’s better to have a focus on giving?of?yourself rather than trying to get ahead for your personal gain.
If you can shift your thinking into how you can serve others through your career choices, it will bring you real happiness.
Richard
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