T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
320.1 | Salary should not be a job-satisfaction issue | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Jun 01 1987 19:00 | 4 |
| I've been told in the past that you can be told the salary range for your
current position as well as the next higher position.
/john
|
320.2 | inappropriate for this conference | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Mon Jun 01 1987 19:51 | 8 |
| This policy is better discussed with personnel. In some countries,
this is a very sensitive issue. While other countries and companies
may be more open, I don't believe it is appropriate for this
conference.
Therefore, I have marked this topic /nowrite.
-- the moderator
|
320.3 | reopened for explanations, not debate | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Wed Jun 03 1987 00:04 | 23 |
| From: PRSIS4::BURESI "Marc BURESI, IS/ADG, DTN 858-5395, Paris" 2-JUN-1987 18:52
I've seen your replies to my notes # 320 and 321 in the DIGITAL conference.
I understand your concern about not using this conference to provoke people
into doing unconstructive comments.
My wish was to understand more the pros and cons of the policy I'm
mentioning, through the feedbacks of the DEC employees. I have a very good
communication with my managers and personnel reps, but they obviously only
can give me a partial viewpoint on the subject: the one of French
employees.
Maybe could you just unwrite-protect the note, with a warning that the
subject is sensitive, as you said it, and that you require people not to
flame, but rather to reply in a constructive way. Feel free then to set
hidden or delete any excessive reply, eventually to reset the note write
protected.
Also, those of the readers who'd see your reply might think that the policy
of hiding the salary is more of a problem than it is really. On another
hand, if people are allowed to reply, no doubt that many will give good
reasons why the policy exists (after all, if it exists, it must have more
good aspects than bad ones), and everybody will be happy :-)
|
320.4 | | ECC::JAERVINEN | Down with gravity! | Wed Jun 03 1987 04:28 | 15 |
| In Germany, every job has to be posted internally before external
applicants can be taken.
The internal postings contain both the job code & job level (and
the job title, of course). So if you go to the place where the internal
postings are, you can find out the job level of any open job (as
well as implicitely finding out what levels are attached to what
job codes/titles).
Obviously, the salary itself is kept secret after the job has been
filled.
You are also entitled to know the salary range attached to your
job level (as well as the next higher one I believe).
|
320.6 | [reposted by anonymous moderator] | HUMAN::MODERATOR | | Wed Jun 03 1987 07:39 | 8 |
| Note 322.0 an answer to 321 No replies
CHFV03::REDER "A bird in the hand is worth 2 in the " 4 lines 3-JUN-1987 01:05
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Your salary range and that of the next pay-grade is available without
question from your manager. I have asked for and received this
information from my manager.
|
320.7 | | CSSE::MARGE | Eat dessert first; life is uncertain. | Wed Jun 03 1987 08:22 | 6 |
| Job requisitions here in the U.S. do show the job code but not the
level. With the new "job family" facility in the online VTX Jobs
Book, you can look at all open positions within a given family or
specify a job code.
Marge
|
320.8 | Why not be open about salary ranges? | NEWVAX::FILER | | Wed Jun 03 1987 15:30 | 9 |
| I feel that pay scales for any position should be available
to any employee. What any one person makes within that range should
be between the individual and his/her manager. Knowing wage scales
would help people plan the careers in DEC.
Where I work in the field, the software people always say that
the hardware folks get all the money and the hardware engs. say
its software who takes home the big paychecks. Why not be open about
the wage scales. If the scales are setup properly I can see only
positave things coming from making the numbers available.
|
320.9 | | CSSE::MARGE | Eat dessert first;life is uncertain. | Wed Jun 03 1987 16:31 | 13 |
| The salary ranges are identical across a given level. So if you're
moving from Software Services to Field Service, etc., you simply
need to understand what code goes with what level. The big difference
is usually in incentives such as cars and relo allowances, etc.
There are some organizations which utilize only certain levels,
however. So if you're at a level 7 in one organization, you may
need to be a 6 or 8 when moving to another organization. There
is so much overlap between the ranges that this usually doesn't
mean a salary adjustment.
Marge
|
320.10 | Level? | DENTON::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Wed Jun 03 1987 20:19 | 3 |
| Could someone please post a definition of "level"? I'm getting some idea
of what its about, but I'd like to be more certain.
/AHM/THX
|
320.11 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jun 03 1987 20:24 | 9 |
| > Knowing wage scales would help people plan the careers in DEC.
I think DEC's philosophy is that salary should not be the motivating factor.
You should choose the job you do because you like doing it and you do it well,
not because you know that, for example, a salesman makes more money than a
software specialist.
/john
|
320.12 | | CSSE::MARGE | Eat dessert first;life is uncertain. | Wed Jun 03 1987 21:39 | 15 |
| Alan, put simply, job levels increase as the level of responsibility
increases.
It's not based on an individual's performance but rather the type
of work which an individual in a given job code/title is expected
to perform. Everyone in that given job code is at the same level.
And across organizational boundaries, there is a corresponding job
code/title also at that level (perhaps several).
Your job level does not determine your salary but it does determine
the upper and lower limits of your salary range.
Marge
|
320.13 | Dream on! | XANADU::BANKS | David Banks -- KA1PZK | Thu Jun 04 1987 09:55 | 7 |
| Re: .11
> I think DEC's philosophy is that salary should not be the motivating factor.
A noble goal but hardly a reflection of reality :-)
- David
|
320.14 | | VCQUAL::THOMPSON | Noter at Large | Thu Jun 04 1987 10:09 | 29 |
| First off, I have to say that salary in not my prime motivating
factor. If it were I would have left years ago (in fact, having
left once I would not have come back). It's hard for me to fully
understand some peoples pre-occupation with knowing what others
make.
In the past, I've worked at other companies with different policies
regarding people knowing what others made. At the first place I
worked, all the individual contributors knew what the others made.
We told each other. No one ever seemed to get real upset about what
someone else made. Perhaps this was because since everyone knew
what the others made any unfairness would be reacted to quickly.
It was, after all, a very small company.
At another company, Fortune 500, I did not know what specific people
made but my boss did show me the salary ranges from my job up to
the VP level. This is a bit more then DEC lets you see but I really
don't see any advantage to knowing the range too high above ones
own.
It seems that secrecy of salaries is in the best interest of an
employer. This way he does not have to explain any apparent
unfairnesses. At the same time, if there is no unfairness in pay
then there is no advantage to the employee to know what others
make. For myself, I think I'm happier believing (true or not) that
DEC pays everyone fairly then I would be fighting for fairness.
Alfred
|
320.15 | dont be trapped by past conventions! | BISTRO::PATTERSON | of the French Foreign Services | Thu Jun 04 1987 11:19 | 8 |
| Post all salaries on the buletin board. Why not? We did in
the USAF! The salary of a 4 star general was on the same sheet
as mine...and I was a "2 striper". He didnt mind...and neither
did I! It caused no problems I remember. Also, was pro-pay, flight
pay, housing for people on "separate rats", etc. Yes, there would
be a flurry for a few weeks...and then what? Nothing.
Keith
|
320.16 | Salary Ranges? Let's Hear 'Em | DELNI::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Jun 04 1987 12:21 | 30 |
| I worked at a place where every employee was given a wallet-sized
card listing all the salary levels and their ranges. It was also
legitimate to know what a person's job title and level was. However,
there was plenty of room in each level, and overlap between levels,
so determining a person's actual salary was impossible from just
that information.
Based on my experience, employees should be told salary ranges,
and possibly what other members of their group are making, but NEVER
what individuals earn. (To clarify, it might be very interesting
to know that the salaries of the ten people in my group are $20.1K,
$20.3K, $25.0K, etc., but never that Joe Smith makes $20K and Mary
Doe makes $30K.)
A related issue is what happens when the system of job classes,
as opposed to job levels, becomes too complex. It can be misapplied,
or used to stratify workers. This is how a hardware engineer could
be paid more, on average, than a software engineer, or vice versa.
Trying to straighten out that morass can take years.
And, finally: A previous reply pointed out that Digital doesn't
consider salary to be the primary reward, or words to that effect.
Someone then replied, "Dream on!" I suggest that the notion of
working for Digital being it's own reward is narcissistic; that
strategy is a potential loser some time down the road. If we're
the best company, and we're the best workers, we should get the
best salary, or something near it, or we should be getting bonuses.
(I think the last would be fairest and probably the cheapest in
the long run.) It's a tough call, though; I'd prefer a more modest
but secure income. I've been laid off already, thank you!
|
320.17 | I work for money, too | DAMSEL::MOHN | blank space intentionally filled | Thu Jun 04 1987 12:59 | 4 |
| Re: Several
If salary is not seen as a motivator by the Company, then what happened
to "pay for performance"? There seems to be a conflict here.
|
320.18 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jun 04 1987 18:20 | 12 |
| > Post all salaries on the buletin board. Why not? We did in
> the USAF! The salary of a 4 star general was on the same sheet
> as mine...and I was a "2 striper".
There's a bit of a difference. Military pay is not based on performance
reviews; it's based on grade and time of service. It's voted on by Congress
and available in the Federal Register as well as most general purpose almanacs.
People in public service are employees of the general public and their salaries
should be public knowledge. The same is not true in private industry.
/john
|
320.19 | career planning? | BUFFER::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Thu Jun 04 1987 18:49 | 16 |
| re: 320.14
> It's hard for me to fully
> understand some peoples pre-occupation with knowing what others
> make.
I didn't think that this was what was being asked for.
For the purposes of your own career planning, wouldn't you be interested in
what Digital was willing to pay for different jobs?
If I were equally interested in, say, designing power supplies and doing
financial modeling, it would be useful to me to know how much I could
expect to make at each before I chose one path to follow.
Ray
|
320.20 | REAL PERFORMANCE!!! | BISTRO::PATTERSON | of the French Foreign Services | Fri Jun 05 1987 04:18 | 17 |
| RE: .18
I beg your pardon! Salary in the USAF, at least when I was
in, was based a heck of lot MORE on performance than I've seen in
the last 10 years with DEC. I'm not saying that's wrong...but in
DEC salary is based a lot on COOPERATION! In the service I could
take a test or go to a special school and it didnt make a darn
difference what my boss thought of me...I could get a promotion!
Now, that's based on performance, dont you think. As soon as you
have a local mgr involved in your "rating" you've lost most of your
possibilities of raise or promotion...unless he likes you.
I dont think #.18 has ever been in a "performance" situation.
KMP
|
320.21 | Let's hear from the "O-" grades! | YUPPIE::COLE | I survived B$ST, I think..... | Fri Jun 05 1987 08:59 | 13 |
| Speaking from the officer-experience side of the USAF, John is
basically right. Keith is right about the enlisted. The officers career is
dependent on WHO they know, and WHEN they know them. Some maxed performance
reports signed by a full bird or brig will carry a lot of weight in a promotion
board.
Otherwise, you just sit in grade, pick up the "fogies", and hope you
don't get rif'ed.
As for John's "performance", I've known him for over 10 years, even
back so far as when was clean-shaven, reasonably well trimmed on the noggin,
and even wore a coat and tie (with SHOES!) to work. I'd want John on any team
I was fielding!
|
320.22 | Along with their assigned parkign space, by batch number :-) | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Fri Jun 05 1987 10:19 | 1 |
| .15> Post all salaries on the buletin board.
|
320.23 | Only one shock at a time though.... | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! in Littleton Hills Mangler | Fri Jun 05 1987 10:41 | 8 |
| RE: John being "clean-shaven, reasonably well trimmed on the noggin,
and even wore a coat and tie (with SHOES!) to work"
That I would have to see to believe..
:-)
mike
|
320.24 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jun 05 1987 12:53 | 11 |
| In the U.S. military, PROMOTIONS are based on performance. But SALARY is
is purely a function of current rank (which everyone can see) and years of
service (which is not hard to find out).
At DEC, two Senior Market Analysis Implementors, who have both been with
DEC for 7 years, could be paid quite differently. As it should be, if
their performance is different. But not everyone might agree about which
one is the better performer. Posting salaries on the board could cause
needless hassle.
/john
|
320.25 | Is THIS a Summary ? | PARSEC::THOMPSON | Steven Dana | Fri Jun 05 1987 13:24 | 8 |
| ! So it seems that DEC wins by not posting salaries because
there is less bickering about the "fairness" of unequal pay !
? And the employee wins because his/her "right to privacy"
concerning matters of money is preserved by the company ?
| and career planners who wish financial information as a guide
in decisions where their interest level is equal ask personnel. |
|
320.26 | It can never be fair.... | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Fri Jun 05 1987 17:11 | 20 |
| I think DEC puts a fair amount of effort into trying to make things
equitable but it's impossible due mainly to two things:
1) There is a shortage of skilled labor. Thus we tend to hire
according to qualifications - if a warm body who can do the job
comes along, we only look very grossly at the salary requested,
adjusting it only if it's severely out of line. Therefore people
doing the same job start with skewed salaries before they ever get reviewed.
2) The review system is extremely subjective. (You wouldn't want
a gov't type GS42=28,326.41 per annum compartmentized system).
Thus things get even more skewed over time. Plus people move around
a lot, so there is very little change for anything to reach some
kind of equilibrium.
My personal attitude toward this is that a salary is a private deal
between employer and employee (relatively) unrelated to the private
deals between the employer and the other 99999 employees. If someone
can get more than I can for doing the same work, then good for him/her.
|
320.27 | Salary Psychology | DEMOAX::HAYES | | Mon Jun 08 1987 12:53 | 70 |
| The Psychology of Salary
One of the things that has been somewhat overlooked is how the company
attempts to combine the psychic and monetary compensations of the
job into a total package. This insight came to me when I, as a SW
Specialist out in the field, wondered why in the world sales reps
are routinely paid more that SWS people. We could outprogram,
outpresent, and generally outqualify those folks any day.
The answers as I saw it were twofold. Firstly, sales reps' performance
is easily measureable on a continuous basis. Either they make budget
or they don't. Every quarter or whatever. Not only that, but some
of them seem to ask for and make bigger budgets that others. Now
of course it's not that straightforward, as an add-on sales rep
has a generally harder row to hoe than a General Motors Ntl Accnt
Mngr, but the concept is there. As a SWS person, do I finish my
projects faster because I work faster or because I get easier projects
than the other guy? All SWS people have a pretty good idea of the
relative merits of the others, but a real "Specialists Contest"
ala the 4H'ers and FFAs in Agriculture USA is never really done.
Field Service is in somewhat the same boat, but less so as systems
tend to fail in similar patterns and the mean time to fix these
patterns of failure can be determined. So some differences in
performance levels can be evidenced over time, even though FS folks
have to fix power problems masquerading as bus problems as an irate
customer can't get his payroll out.
The second issue has to do with the psychological factors involved
in the job types. To once again catagorize rashly, sales reps are
movtivated my money and SWS and FS types by technology and solving
problems. A joke - If you gave out $50.00 for every soda can collected,
sales reps would be scouring the landscape for them whilst Services
types would drink soda out of bottles as a symbolic protest for
the perceived dumbness of the task. But those kinds of folks make
sales, and since they're turned on by money they get compensated
in that way. Because if you don't pay them what they want, they'll
go out there and sell real estate or pet rocks or something that
makes *lots* of money.
This I think explains why the different job scales of different
jobs should be public knowledge. They are different, and people
should think about the reasons for those differences. One of the
reasons that we're not the East Bloc is that if you decide that
you and your six kids need a bigger house, you can turn into a sales
rep and make it happen. If you really like making stuff, go into
Engineering and make less. If you like making stuff and hate working
in the same place every day, go into Field Service and make less
but get a car and some degree of freedom. But learn about the jobs
and make a choice.
One final comment. I belive, after a lot of thought about it, that
one of the real reasons that DEC as a company generally makes better
equipment than IBM is that IBM tends to get and promote people who
know how to meet time and money budgets and satisfy customers'
immediate needs. In other words, a sales rep mentality. DEC tends
to get people who tend to give you the proper engineering solution
to a problem and think rather strategically. As I read about IBM
major product's histories, I was shocked to see that they all seemed
to begin a short-term solutions to some major customer's problem,
and then they grew into spaces they were not meant to occupy. DEC's
products traditionally solve no exact problem real well, but the
solution space that they can be adapted to is immense. As DEC moves
to sell to traditional IBM customers, it will be interesting to
see if we can merge these two corporate philsophies into a coherent
whole.
Have Fun,
BLH
|
320.28 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Fri Jun 12 1987 22:13 | 32 |
| Is a level consistent across geographical areas? Based on hearsay,
it seems that people in New England and California make more money
to do the same job than people in Colorado do, for example. This
is due to the astronomical cost of living, especially housing, I
would imagine. And people in the US appear to make more than their
UK counterparts doing the same job, I hear.
How do they work the levels when different regions and different
countries have salaries somewhat adjusted for the cost of living.
-------------
It bothers me that I cannot officially find out what the pay scales
are for jobs beyond the next level. I have found out what the level
16, 12, 9, 6 and 3 pay scales are because people in those job levels have
told me what they are. And what they make. Getting this information
is a function of one's informal network. Therefore the information
is more accessible to those higher up in the system, with managers
and supervisors (and conversely, secretaries) having access to the whole
salary scale document.
I would rather not see people making career planning decisions on
the basis of hearsay and rumor, but that is the only choice we have
if salary is a factor we want to consider.
IN the womannotes file, someone recently said that she pushed on
a manager to give her at a better raise than originally offered
by pointing out that co-worker A and co-worker B were making N-thousand
dollars a year, and that she was doing similar work. The manager
agreed to this. It's a great technique, but getting that kind of
information is also a function of one's informal network and one's
ability to gather that type of information. I would love to have access
to that type of information!
|
320.29 | | CSSE::MARGE | Eat dessert first;life is uncertain. | Sun Jun 14 1987 13:21 | 11 |
| There is no salary range difference between states for a given
job level...they are identical. The question you might ask is whether
there is a geographical tendency toward placing people into lower
or higher job levels. And if so, whether the re-evaluation that
is currently happening will address this.
It is my understanding that the entire job code/range situation
changes when you cross country borders (as well as the benefits
package).
Marge
|
320.30 | it's a nation-wide job market, they say | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jun 15 1987 15:25 | 7 |
| DEC has repeatedly said that the salary ranges are across the industry,
not geographical, for salaried jobs; the theory is supposed to be
that the people being hired for these jobs come from all over the
country so that it is a US-wide (anyways) job market. As someone
who lives and works in EXPENSIVE Massachusetts, I think it would
be nice if I were paid more to reflect the higher cost of living
where I work...I can see their point, though.
|
320.31 | state tax difference also. | CAADC::MANGU | | Mon Jun 15 1987 15:53 | 9 |
|
I found that cost of living makes quite a bit of difference. Last
year I transferred from Mass to Ill. Besides the cost of living
being cheaper in Ill. the difference between the state tax rate.
The difference was considerably enough that it was almost like getting
a mini-raise. Although my salary was the same my take-home increased.
|
320.32 | | LESLIE::ANDY | CSSE ME for VOTS/OSAK/X.400 `{o}^{o}'" | Mon Jun 15 1987 19:02 | 2 |
| Salary ranges differ across geographies. UK salaries are about 2/3
US salaries.
|
320.33 | | CSSE::MARGE | Eat dessert first;life is uncertain. | Tue Jun 16 1987 08:02 | 4 |
| Now, Andy, if you could only have our salarys and we could have
your bennies... :^)
Grins
|
320.34 | Effect of cost of living on salaries | ANGORA::MORRISON | Bob M. LMO2/P41 296-5357 | Tue Jun 16 1987 14:14 | 9 |
| I think salaries for the same job within the U.S. should be vari-
able from one region to another to allow for differences in the
cost of living, including taxes. The argument that we are in a
"national job market" doesn't make sense. DEC facilities in high-
cost states such as Mass. are at a disadvantage in recruiting people
from inside and outside. They can try to lure people by offering
considerations other than salary such as a better work environ-
ment, in-house exercise rooms, etc. but a regional salary differ-
ential would be more effective.
|
320.35 | I tend to agree | OASS::M_HYDE | Who is John Galt? | Tue Jun 16 1987 14:19 | 11 |
| I have looked several times at attractive opportunities in
the 'greater Maynard area', but the next step is to look
at the cost of living (housing especially!) and there is
just no way I can transplant the family at that cost.
I'm probably one of the few 'southerners' that would love
to move north and work in the Digital heartland - I just
can't afford it.
from the sunny (and cheap) South,
mark
|
320.36 | Same problem in Britain | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - NAC Europe - REO2-G/K3 | Tue Jun 16 1987 14:21 | 7 |
| Re: .-1
The same problem exists in Britain. Here the cost of some things - such as
houses - varies massively. If you work in London you do get a supplement,
but I don't think it really covers the additional costs of living there.
jb
|
320.37 | Regional subsidies? | TIPPLE::KOCH | Any relation?... | Tue Jun 16 1987 17:27 | 22 |
| It seems that all previous arguments are going for a region by
region subsidy to allow greater intra-company mobility.
Why can't Digital compute the base level for a position in
a specific area and then compare all other areas against it?
Specific example. Let's say our base was Kansas City, Kansas and
its cost of living index was 0. Then compute all area such as
MA, NJ, NY, CA against it. As the cost of living changed, the
index would change. This index would not be the CPI, but could
contain items which compose the CPI.
This money would not be salary, but simply a cost of living
differential. If you moved from a high to low cost area the
subsidy would be reduced to that area's subsidy. The key is
to differentiate between salary/subsidy.
In this way, the company can move talent wherever necessary
without the stigma of the cost of living. If I was to move
to an area with a lower cost of living, I would receive an
instant raise since it would cost less to live. Not very fair
to the other employees who worked in that office for years?
|
320.38 | a 9 isn't always a 9, tho | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | All Hail Marx and Lennon ... (Bros.&John) | Tue Jun 16 1987 18:01 | 9 |
| Minor point on levels:
While a job level has the same salary range across the country,
different job tracks may have different level equivalences.
For example, a Level 12 in engineering is roughly the same range
(give or take 1) of a Level 10 in sales. (Sales in particular is
above the rest. It lets them go higher on top with the no-commission
structure, where we've got to keep top salesmen somehow.)
|
320.39 | I thought job level == salary range | SMAUG::GARROD | Reagan shipped his brain to Iran | Tue Jun 16 1987 19:08 | 28 |
| Re .-1
> For example, a Level 12 in engineering is roughly the same range
> (give or take 1) of a Level 10 in sales. (Sales in particular is
> above the rest. It lets them go higher on top with the no-commission
> structure, where we've got to keep top salesmen somehow.)
Is that really true. Can anybody verify that? It was my impression that
the salary range for a job level n was the same whether you were
an engineer, marketeer, salesman or janitor (although I doubt that
there is a janators code that is job level 10).
I know that similar sounding job titles don't have the same levels
eg a
Principal Software Engineer
does not have the same job level as a Principal Hardware Engineer.
A Principal Software Engineer is a job level 10.
Before anybody jumps on me, I feel quite OK in saying that a Principal
Software Engineer is a job level 10 because I am one and if anybody
asked me I would feel free to tell them. But since if I went down
to personel and asked what level a Principal Hardware Engineer
is they wouldn't tell me I don't feel free to 'guess' here or pass
on what one has told me.
Dave
|
320.40 | Principal or principle ? | WELSWS::MEACOCK | Alan Meacock @WLO | Wed Jun 17 1987 10:28 | 3 |
| Principal Software Specialist in the UK = level 8 !!
|
320.41 | do Principle Engineers take degrees in Applied Philosophy? | COLORS::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Jun 17 1987 13:04 | 4 |
| Principal Engineer (hw or sw) is a 10
Principal SWS (US or UK) is an 8
=maggie
|
320.42 | | ALBANY::KOZAKIEWICZ | You can call me Al... | Wed Jun 17 1987 14:45 | 17 |
| Hmmm, this is interesting. I am not sure what harm there is in knowing
salary ranges. I suppose most managers would show you the charts if
asked. Given the fact that the ranges seem to vary 50% over the base salary,
it is possible (perhaps not likely) for a level 10 to make less than a level
6. If the intent is to discern the salary "pecking order" within an
organization, knowing the range of a level does not facilitate this. I
would hope that this is NOT the motive, however.
In response to Mr. Covert's statement about salaries, he is partially
correct - if you are compensation oriented, DEC is not the place for you.
But while compensation should not be the *ONLY* job satisfaction criteria, it
most certainly is *A* satisfaction criteria. Knowing the range of levels
above you is certainly going to be a factor in determining basic career
goals.
In General Electric, for example, the salary ranges of all exempt levels is
public knowledge.
|
320.43 | Simplify, Simplify! | DELNI::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Jun 18 1987 12:30 | 19 |
| I hope that Digital is moving towards an ever-simpler set of job
levels. For example, at Apollo Computer (once upon a time), hardware
engineers, software engineers, and technical writers all had the
same job titles, levels and salary ranges, though individual salaries
of course varied. At Honeywell, after years of bitter struggle,
the technical writers' job levels were made equal to the engineers';
that is, a senior writer was paid within the same salary range as
a senior engineer, and a principal writer on the same scale as a
principal engineer. This is fair, and easier to administrate too.
The alternative, many job levels, invites inequity and discontent.
You know, when the nurses find out their pay scales are lower than
the janitors' -- that sort of thing. (And let's all give a big
raspberry to the person who replies to this note with, "Surely you
don't think job A is as important as job B!" Better yet, let's
all send the person nasty mail.)
Footnote: I am a (principal) technical writer, aware of our long
struggle for professional equality. Your interest may vary.
|
320.44 | ranges have tops and bottoms | CHFV03::REDER | A bird in the hand is worth 2 in the catalog | Fri Jun 19 1987 02:27 | 7 |
| I think what everyone is missing when they talk about variable
'ranges' for different geographical areas is that where a person
falls within the salary range can vary. Therefore someone in level
7 in California would be boosted to the high end of the range while
a person in an area with lower Cost of Living would be at a lower
percentile of the salary range.
|
320.45 | | CSSE::MARGE | Think in the customer's terms... | Fri Jun 19 1987 08:15 | 12 |
| re -.1:
Cost of Living differentials are not accounted for in salary
planning. So I disagree with your point that someone in a high-expense
geography "would be boosted to the high end of the range". Simply
not true. Not a factor.
Performance and "time-in-grade" are what boost you within a range.
Any other factors are an anomaly.
Marge
|
320.46 | | ALBANY::KOZAKIEWICZ | You can call me Al... | Mon Jun 22 1987 13:49 | 5 |
| -1 is correct. Your performance evaluation yields a number which indicates
a range of percentiles where your salary should fall within a given level.
This translates to about 35% of the range. Once the performance number is
known, arriving at a salary is fairly mechanical. There is not an enormous
amount of room for discretion on the part of your manager.
|
320.47 | % raise more than actual salary | VIDEO::GOODRICH | Gerry Goodrich | Tue Jun 23 1987 12:35 | 8 |
| I think (I is a manager and hav dun revews) that a review
rating is much more likely to effect the percentage of a
raise than it is actual salary.
Eventually this tends to position folks in ranges, but it
takes years.
- gerry
|
320.48 | | CSSE::MARGE | Notes: The great leveler... | Tue Jun 23 1987 13:23 | 3 |
| re -1:
yes, the terminology used frequently is "over time"...
|
320.49 | | ECC::JAERVINEN | Down with gravity! | Thu Jun 25 1987 08:09 | 14 |
| I don't see any reason why the levels as such should be secret.
They aren't here, anyway, as I stated previously. I juest went to
the pinboard (it happens to be just a few yards from my office)
where the internal postings are; every single one has the job level
on it. e.g.
Associate SW specialist 3
SW specialist 5
Senior SW specialist 7
Principal SW specialist 8
SW consultant 9
E.g. a senior product manager seems to be at 12, etc.
|
320.50 | Public levels, ranges and codes | ECC::JAERVINEN | Down with gravity! | Tue Jun 30 1987 11:22 | 59 |
| The latest issue of 'Betriebsrat informiert', the publication of the
Works Council of Digital Germany, includes a rather comprehensive
description of job codes, job levels and associated salary ranges.
I do not type all of it into this note, because it is pretty long.
Also, I do not know whether and how it applies in other countries.
However, this is a publication that gets mailed to all DEC Germany
employees and is at least potentially available to any DEC employee
worldwide.
The table below includes the job level, associated range (for DEC
Germany, in kDM) and some examples of job codes/titles associated.
The middle number in the range is the midpoint (arithmetic average of
the low and hig end) of the range.
level range associated job codes
----- ----- --------------------
14 160-200-240 F80 Snr marketing Mgr, S20 Sales exec III
13 136-170-204 S10 sales exec II, R04A distrct SW mgr
12 124-155-186 F15 marketing consultant, S11 Sales executive I,
R12 SW Consultant III
11 107-134-161 S12 Senior Sales rep, R4A SW Consultant IIA
10 97-122-146 TF3 FS Mgr IIA, R04 Snr SW Consultant
9 88-110-132 F04 Marketing Mgr I, R07 SW Consultant
8 80-100-120 T8K Cust Support Systems Engineer, RA1 Princ SW Spec
7 79- 90-108 S16 Sales Rep I, R10 Snr SW Spec
6 64- 80- 96 S14 Assoc sales rep, T7S Support Engineer II
5 57- 72- 86 R11 SW Spec, G59 Senior Exec secretary
4 52- 65- 78 G58 Exec secretary
F3 48- 60- 72 S30 Sales trainee, R13 Assoc SW Specialist
E2 42- 53- 64 R1B SW Trainee
D1 37- 47- 56 G55 secretary
C 34- 43- 52 DA52 Computer operator II
B 31- 39- 47 G54 Junior secretary
A 28- 36- 42 DA40 Terminal operator
A1 26- 33- 39 G49 Office Junior
I have made every attempt to reproduce the information accurately, but
cannot guarantee that I haven't made any typos. The levels and ranges
should be correct, though.
The current exchange rate is around DM 1,80 for 1 US$.
|
320.51 | | ALIEN::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jul 17 1987 19:24 | 25 |
| This table contains some extracts for Source Engineering's 1987 Metropolitan
Engineering Salary Survey. Keep in mind that these numbers are salaries earned
by individuals who, for whatever reason, have contacted Source for help in
locating a new job. I don't have any answers to the questions this data raises.
Design and Development Boston New Hamp Wash DC Chicago San Fran
Associate Engineer
1-2 years 27.5 26.5 30.2 29.5 29.5
2-4 years 31.2 29.0 30.7 30.0 33.5
Engineer/Senior Engineer
1-2 years 30.0 30.5 35.0 32.0 35.0
2-4 years 32.6 34.0 35.5 37.0 38.0
4-6 years 37.6 37.5 38.0 38.0 39.0
Over 6 years 45.0 43.0 45.0 41.2 46.0
Principal Engineer 42.7 45.0 50.8 42.5 55.0
Group Leader 54.5 60.0 53.5 52.0 59.0
Engineering Manager 60.0 62.7 65.0 60.0 66.5
Director of Engineering/VP 74.0 71.7 74.0 72.6 85.0
Sales/Marketing
Applications Engineer 34.5 38.2 46.9 34.0 39.2
Product Manager 51.0 45.0 40.0 46.0 50.0
Sales Engineer 36.5 45.0 47.8 40.5 48.0
Sales/Marketing Manager 62.0 57.0 55.1 65.0 71.0
Sales Director/Marketing VP 70.0 74.0 80.0 81.2 75.0
|
320.52 | Yes, correct, annual salaries. --jrc | ECC::JAERVINEN | Down with gravity! | Mon Jul 20 1987 08:44 | 2 |
| I assume these are annual salaries, in US$?
|
320.53 | 1988 Average starting Salary Offers, Industry Wide | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Most of an angel is in the inside | Mon Nov 07 1988 09:37 | 68 |
| I was reading The College Edition of the National Business Employment
Weekly this weekend, which had the following chart that I thought
others might enjoy looking at... This edition is put out by the
Wall Street Journal...
Average Starting Salary Offers (Source: College Placement Council September
1988 Salary Survey Report)
BACHELOR'S DEGREE CANDIDATES
Occupational Title Starting Salary Offer % Change from 7/87
Administrative and Management
Accountants/Auditor $23,952 +10.0
Business Administrators 20,376 +2.8
Consultants 26,988 +4.3
Financial Analysts 25,368 -4.6
Human Resources 20,076 +7.6
Management Trainees 20,892 +4.5
Computer and Mathematical
Computer Programmers 26,892 +4.3
Systems Analysts 27,540 +2.3
Mathematicians/Statisticians 26,988 +4.5
Marketing and Sales
Advertising/Marketing 21,948 +1.2
Retail/wholesale sales 21,600 +6.0
Technical Sales 24,312 +5.4
Other Occupations
Communications 20,256 +11.7
Engineers 29,244 +3.1
Health Related 28,392 +17.6
Insurance 21,612 +2.2
Real Estate 22,692 +2.1
MASTER'S DEGREE CANDIDATES
Business
Accounting 27,468 +5.8
MBA - Nontechnical (By years of experience)
Less than one year 33,468 +5.0
From one to two years 40,632 +13.6
From two to four years 41,952 +5.4
More than four years 43,128 +11.4
MBA - Technical (By years of experience)
Less than one year 38,388 +12.1
From one to two years 43,152 +15.0
From two to four years 44,028 +5.1
More than four years 45,456 +10.4
MS - Business 31,596 +10.4
Engineering
Chemical 34,256 +1.6
Civil 30,396 +5.0
Electrical 36,132 +1.8
Industrial 33,756 +9.6
Mechanical 34,116 +0.3
Metallurgical 34,080 +5.1
Nuclear 32,856 +0.3
Sciences
Chemistry 31,572 +12.8
Computer Science 34,560 +2.3
Geology 29,808 +12.9
Mathematics 29,640 +6.1
|
320.54 | Inflation makes for gloomy statistics! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Nov 07 1988 09:41 | 3 |
| Gee, that list really shows inflation at its finest - entry-level
salaries have more than tripled in this field since I got my BS degree
in 1974. Maybe we should just revalue the dollar and be done with it?
|
320.55 | Wasn't inflation about 5% during that period?
| PRAVDA::JACKSON | In the kitchen at parties | Tue Nov 08 1988 11:35 | 11 |
| Gee, they didn't go up that much since I got my degree in
1981 (EE, University of Pittsburgh)
My starting Salary was $23K in my first job. The chart shows
the salaries for EEs are now at $36K, a 50% increase in 7 years
(which is probably about a 5-6% increase per year, compounded
over 7 years)
-bill
|
320.56 | Note that the $36k in for EE *MASTERS* | ATLAST::LAMPSON | The ugly baby goes international | Tue Nov 08 1988 15:58 | 0 |
320.57 | Poor DEC customers! | BPSOF::GYONGYOSI | HA5CW (CW-blind) @BPS JN97MM | Tue Aug 29 1995 10:21 | 4 |
| This topic beats any of the DEC jokes, clearly indicating, how
"effectively" we work.
One has to dig across 49 uninteresting replies since .50 is the
very first adequate reply for the question of .0!
|
320.58 | | WRKSYS::DUTTON | There once was a note, pure and easy... | Tue Aug 29 1995 11:28 | 3 |
| You dredge for information in a note that's 7 years old,
and complain that people worked "ineffectively" then?
Take a look in the mirror...
|
320.59 | :^] | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Texas twang, caribbean soul | Tue Aug 29 1995 12:15 | 1 |
|
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