How Does A Job Get Opened and Pay/Salary/Compensation Determined?
Kristen Fife she/her
?????Senior Recruiter (Startup->SMB->Enterprise Global F50->500 exp) - Career Strategist| Writer/Author (check out my articles!) Recruiting remote Solutions Engineers in N. America (US/Canada).
My friend Amy Miller inspired me to write this article after I saw her video for candidate advocacy. I adore Amy, she is a good friend (we actually had dinner together recently!) and I often will build upon her insights.
In my career, I have worked with small companies, Fortune 50 employers, staffing agencies, and midsize organizations. I have a COMPREHENSIVE article on salary negotiation for job seekers – check it out .
There have been a lot of recent legal changes in the last five years regarding pay transparency in multiple cities/states in the US that is driving changes in how recruiters approach compensation, and at the start of most of those changes is the fact that employers CANNOT ask someone about their past pay history. This is critical legislation that does two things: it levels the playing field in general for job seekers, but it also puts the onus of understanding personal compensation on the job seeker. That means that you – as the person looking for a job - needs to understand what you are worth, and you need to do your homework. It is also important to understand that you are free to SHARE your current/past compensation to use as a benchmark; in fact, that makes our job a LOT easier if you tell us “I was making $85K base in my last role with a 20% bonus target which I hit for the last 2 years. I am looking for a total comp at least 15% higher than that” or “I am looking for total take home cash of at least $102K at the end of year, and a base of no less than $94K”. If you are an hourly employee, you can say “I’m looking for at least $22/hour.”
So let’s talk about how a job offer actually gets approved, and I will give examples of different processes I have seen at various companies in the next segment. The process starts before a job is actually posted.
At the start of every fiscal year for an employer, HR, finance and compensation go through a process called “headcount forecasting” for new jobs to be created (or – whether a reduction in force is needed). It is based on several factors (and the larger the organization, the more complex the process).
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All of this happens before recruiting is actually brought into the picture. These bands are shared with hiring managers, recruiters, and HR. There is generally a built in attrition % (based on historical data) which can also impact an individual team’s hiring budget, but *usually not the overall salary bands.
As new roles are opened, and recruiters and hiring managers start moving forward with hiring, the salary bands become a guideline when it comes to actually making offers. I already have a fairly extensive article on the interview process (which overlaps this information).?
*National or global trends can effect this - such as "The Great Reshuffle", the war in Ukraine, global supply chain issues, political upheaval, etc.
higher education | financial aid | ????? | auDHD | legally lowercase
2 年thank you so much for this breakdown! i'm eagerly looking forward to your follow-up re: start-ups. i'm definitely looking for more opportunities to learn as a new TA associate.
Global Talent Leader | Chief Strategy Officer | MBA | Speaker on Building Teams & Authentic Leadership
2 年This breakdown is Gold for jobseekers! Commenting for reach. Great article Kristen!!!
President at Mollitiam
2 年This is an impressive breakdown for large internal recruitment processes with these resources. Many companies don't have this luxury and typically benchmark current staff or feel out what is in the industry. Many times, I get called with, "What does this type of person usually go for?" However, that is an example of niche recruitment for smaller companies in a particular field.
Ship stability/ Ocean Dynamics
2 年Commenting for reach! Thank you for another great article!