Fortune | FORTUNE 10月06日
分享薪资历史令人不适,但透明化是趋势
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2022年,人力资源专家Nancy Romanyshyn勇敢地分享了自己的薪资历史,虽然这让她感到非常不适,但她希望通过此举鼓励同行面对薪资透明化的趋势。随着相关法律的实施和公司薪资范围的公开,薪资透明化正逐渐成为常态。研究表明,80%的Z世代员工会与同事讨论薪资,而婴儿潮一代和X世代的比例则低得多。尽管员工有权讨论薪资,但人力资源高管仍对此感到紧张,并可能面临薪资不平等的问题。专家建议公司建立透明的薪资框架,并与员工沟通相关政策,以应对薪资比较的必然性。薪资透明化不会制造差距,只会暴露它们。

🔍 Nancy Romanyshyn分享薪资历史,体现了对薪资透明化趋势的重视,尽管这让她感到非常不适,但目的是鼓励同行面对这一变革。

💬 薪资透明化正逐渐成为常态,相关法律和公司公开薪资范围的举措推动了这一进程,员工对此的讨论也日益增多。

📊 80%的Z世代员工会与同事讨论薪资,而婴儿潮一代和X世代的比例则低得多,这表明薪资透明化在不同代际间存在显著差异。

🤝 尽管员工有权讨论薪资,但人力资源高管仍对此感到紧张,并可能面临薪资不平等的问题,需要建立透明的薪资框架来应对。

💡 薪资透明化不会制造差距,只会暴露它们,因此公司需要与员工沟通相关政策,并准备好解释薪资差异的原因。

In 2022, Nancy Romanyshyn stood up in front of dozens of her fellow HR industry veterans, swallowed her pride, and did something that scared her: She shared her entire pay history. 

She, like others, was daunted by new laws around pay transparency and the start of salary ranges being posted for open jobs—mandates that, she said, made her nauseous at first. But since ignoring the changes was not an option, she wanted her peers in HR to buck the decades-old trend of silence around salaries and prepare for a time when it would  become part of business as usual.

“It was extremely uncomfortable, and, in fact, I was sharing it in front of former leaders I had worked for,” said Romanyshyn, who is now a senior director of Total Rewards Strategy and Solutions at the pay-equity software company Syndio. “But that was the point: I wanted everyone to understand just how uncomfortable this was going to be.”

The discomfort with discussing salaries may, in part, be generational, Romanyshyn said: More than 80% of Gen Z employees have discussed salaries with their coworkers, compared to 31% of Boomers and 41% of Gen X, according to a 2023 study done by management consulting firm Robert Half

Legally, employees have the right to talk about their salaries with coworkers, and many states (such as New York and California) require employers to disclose salary ranges for open positions. But that doesn’t stop HR executives from being nervous about the practiceand likely confronting pay inequities that might exist. Jessica Pillow, global head of total rewards at HR tech company Deel, advises leaders to get ahead of it: Build a transparent framework, communicate your approach, and give employees the context they deserve when comparisons inevitably happen.

“Let’s be honest, employees are talking about pay. Even if you discourage it, they’re comparing notes, Googling salaries, and asking ChatGPT,” she said. “Pay transparency amongst employees doesn’t create gaps, it exposes them.”

Romanyshyn encourages HR staff to lean in. If an employee comes to you asking why another employee is paid more or less, “make sure that you can authentically answer and get into the details that explain why you pay what you pay,” she said. It may include explaining that another part of the business has a bigger budget than one sector, or a worker may bring in a unique set of skills or experiences, Romanyshyn added. She recommends a mix of one-on-one outreach and bigger, town hall-style meetings describing company pay policies and structure.

And she encourages them to get over the feeling that discussing money is taboo or impolite. “I’ll be on Instagram and give you great detail about a health condition,” she said, “but God forbid I tell you about money.”

Kristin Stoller
Editorial Director, Fortune Live Media
kristin.stoller@fortune.com

Around the Table

A round-up of the most important HR headlines.

When company founders step down as CEO, they often appoint two people to take the top job. Wall Street Journal

Companies are finding alternative paths to hire overseas talent, to avoid the Trump administration’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee. Washington Post

Nearly two-thirds of U.S. workers say that they’ve experienced “ghost growth” in their careers—growth that doesn’t lead to raises or title changes. CNBC

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薪资透明化 人力资源 薪资差距 员工权利 公司政策
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