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HR is a funny one; if you know what you're talking about about and can speak to different audiences at their level it's not generally push back from a professional knowledge point--pushback for HR is usually "yeah but that is hard/not what I want" which is very different and totally fine.
Except fucking compensation. Glassdoor is the WebMD bane of comp conversations with employees. It's a selection-bias informed group of people who provide salaries when they think they're underpaid and need validation. While, for the most part we're all underpaid, just like WebMD, the dangerous oversimplification of very nuanced and complex data is nothing but a PITA to people trying to to fix or work in good systems.
"I saw my job is being hired for $xx,xxx I should be getting that". Location, industry, industry segment, education, KSA, org size, high variance in titles from one company to the next(manager here is VP there), every other pay/bonus/benefit/time off difference, internal pay equity considerations that are often statutory by state/feds--none is captured and people aren't taught that those are part of comp. Just this title is $xx,xxx. The worst part is that managers run to HR with often this info directly supplied by candidates or their own employees all worked up HR is fucking them by underpaying. I'm the first person to tell a manager their comp is fucked against a market if it is, which helps build trust but it's exhausting.
This plays out in every job offer, promotion, annual merit increase and any time you remind people they're not coming to work for free.
Again, almost never see this in other areas if you know what the hell you're doing in HR, but I guess the incentive and stakes are high enough in comp to make people just go off the deep end.
I have never experienced that world, and never heard what it's like from that side. Really appreciate your insight just because it's so different to all the "expert advice" that floats around on social media
If everyone got what their work was worth then the company couldn't make profit as each individual's contribution and pay would scale proportinally.
And since there are people who are overpaid (eg I) there will always be more underpaid people in total.
Just as body weight depends on calories in/out (work/pay) at the end, but what's inside the diet (compensation package) is still important. (even though you could lose weight while only eating junk food, you shouldn't)
I might just be the idiot here, but this is how it makes sense to me.
How much do you think C-suites are truly worth? If everyone's salary should scale up, does that mean they're currently underpaid?
Also, why do you think you're overpaid?
I can't give an exact figure for c-suits nor how you could arrive at one. But their contribution is not worth orders of magnitudes more, I'm certain of that. Even the smartest and most hardworking person can't do 1000x what an average worker does.
As for why I think I'm overpaid? I can currently save ~90% of my earnings, working just 6 hr a week. That's not typical. Don't get me wrong, I'm really glad to have this and I wish others could too.