My boss agreed to give me a raise and never did. Lied for 6 months about being in the process of, "working on the raise." Then when I addressed him about it he flat out said it won't happen and get over it. Worked there two years, was one of the top employees, and was super passionate about my job. Unfortunately, the lying over the raise was just a tactic to keep me hanging on. Now I'm learning from this experience and won't allow myself to be taken advantage of in the future. I plan on sticking rigidly to job duties. Nothing more and nothing less.
@@soniabiswas8025 Honestly plan your exit. It only gets worse. People will do what you allow. By staying you are showing you will tolerate mistreatment. A company that lies and takes advantage of an employee will never respect that employee. They never did. Leave before you get anymore emotionally, mentally, and physically drained. It's hard to get back on track once those three things have been compromised.
Kara, if you received a great offer from another company, what would you do? Would you leverage your offer by seeing if they match or ask for a raise using the tips you mentioned?
And above all, you should approach the conversations with confidence as if you ask for more salary, you’re going to be taken more seriously. So valuable content, thank you
Another point that my supperiors have never had a good answer to is to link your performance ratings to your compa ratio. If your performance is consistantly rated as top or above averge but your compa ratio is below 1.0 (average) that doesnt make sense and just means that for your performance you are being paid below average for you job grade and role. Also, know the financial statements and performance of your company. Like i am in the situation i just mentioned and the first thing my managers say is there is no budget for further salary increases, but my conoany publishes a consisten $1bn dollar net proffit... so no budget is bullshit for the employees who perform, as evidenced by ratings, and help deliver that net proffit.
Ok very nice to her what you’ve said, but! What is your advice for a middle class people? Or lower class workers? When they do shity job and making 15$/hrs and they want at least 1$ raise!?
I need an advice please! It's been 5 months since i joined my company as a fresh graduate electrical engineer. Now, they promoted me to a team leader. My team is made of 3 freshers that i should train. My team is involved in the top1 project of the company Oil&Gas? I have always the same salary and want a raise! Is is a good decision?? Should I go ahead!?
Since you now have different responsibilities and duties, your pay should reflect that. You're currently a team leader but have the salary of entry level. This isn't right. Watch the videos on my channel about asking for a payrise to do it right
I received an annual increase Dec. Today April I submitted a resignation letter. I received a counter offer. Would it be okay to say: I don’t want to accept the counter offer however i rather receive a raise instead of a counter offer ? I’m on a project at property have been able to increase our monthly revenue, minimize the property’s violation count. I always go above n beyond, I work late when needed with no pay bc I’m salary.
Dont tell people to practice asking for a raise w co worker ...thats a really bad idea. The people at work are NOT your friends. Remember that at all times !!!!
I am not sure I understand the message, feels like there is justification of the fact that HR and managers know that this employee matches all expectations, is paid lower than average and did not have salary review more than a year (HR and managers are paid for this , they know real salaries, no?) and.... they are waiting when this employee will come and will explain them things they already know... in other words "if employee is not asking this is very good for us (cost cutting, etc..), if he/she is asking, let the employee prove he/she deserves". As a result employee... leaves. Leaves not because of possibility of rejection, it is just ridiculous, can you imagine how much cool things could have been done instead of these useless talks?
My boss agreed to give me a raise and never did. Lied for 6 months about being in the process of, "working on the raise." Then when I addressed him about it he flat out said it won't happen and get over it. Worked there two years, was one of the top employees, and was super passionate about my job. Unfortunately, the lying over the raise was just a tactic to keep me hanging on. Now I'm learning from this experience and won't allow myself to be taken advantage of in the future. I plan on sticking rigidly to job duties. Nothing more and nothing less.
It's a shame you've had the experience. I think it's on the rare side so don't completely lose trust in your other employers.
Learned this lesson long time ago.So I never ever go beyond and above and when shift is over I leave. Not a minute extra.
M in the same boat.Waited for n year now.Mentally stuck..n confused over what shud b my next step.
@@soniabiswas8025 Honestly plan your exit. It only gets worse. People will do what you allow. By staying you are showing you will tolerate mistreatment. A company that lies and takes advantage of an employee will never respect that employee. They never did. Leave before you get anymore emotionally, mentally, and physically drained. It's hard to get back on track once those three things have been compromised.
Kara, if you received a great offer from another company, what would you do? Would you leverage your offer by seeing if they match or ask for a raise using the tips you mentioned?
And above all, you should approach the conversations with confidence as if you ask for more salary, you’re going to be taken more seriously. So valuable content, thank you
I'm glad you liked it. Thank you!
This is the best video I found about asking a raise! Thank you so much
I like the way you hold the engagement by pointing to the next interesting voice 11:46
Another point that my supperiors have never had a good answer to is to link your performance ratings to your compa ratio. If your performance is consistantly rated as top or above averge but your compa ratio is below 1.0 (average) that doesnt make sense and just means that for your performance you are being paid below average for you job grade and role.
Also, know the financial statements and performance of your company. Like i am in the situation i just mentioned and the first thing my managers say is there is no budget for further salary increases, but my conoany publishes a consisten $1bn dollar net proffit... so no budget is bullshit for the employees who perform, as evidenced by ratings, and help deliver that net proffit.
Ok very nice to her what you’ve said, but! What is your advice for a middle class people? Or lower class workers? When they do shity job and making 15$/hrs and they want at least 1$ raise!?
Does pay raise happens besides annual increase?
Can this be through email or through physical talk
I need an advice please!
It's been 5 months since i joined my company as a fresh graduate electrical engineer. Now, they promoted me to a team leader. My team is made of 3 freshers that i should train. My team is involved in the top1 project of the company Oil&Gas?
I have always the same salary and want a raise!
Is is a good decision??
Should I go ahead!?
Since you now have different responsibilities and duties, your pay should reflect that. You're currently a team leader but have the salary of entry level. This isn't right. Watch the videos on my channel about asking for a payrise to do it right
@@kararonin I'll do it thank you so much!
Excellent content. Thank you!
Thank you.
I received an annual increase Dec. Today April I submitted a resignation letter. I received a counter offer. Would it be okay to say: I don’t want to accept the counter offer however i rather receive a raise instead of a counter offer ?
I’m on a project at property have been able to increase our monthly revenue, minimize the property’s violation count. I always go above n beyond, I work late when needed with no pay bc I’m salary.
Dont tell people to practice asking for a raise w co worker ...thats a really bad idea. The people at work are NOT your friends. Remember that at all times !!!!
I just ask for a raise and said because I like money and got one. I work blue collar tho
Haha! That's a great reason to get a raise. I'm glad that you got your raise by being direct and straight to the point.
I am not sure I understand the message, feels like there is justification of the fact that HR and managers know that this employee matches all expectations, is paid lower than average and did not have salary review more than a year (HR and managers are paid for this , they know real salaries, no?) and.... they are waiting when this employee will come and will explain them things they already know... in other words "if employee is not asking this is very good for us (cost cutting, etc..), if he/she is asking, let the employee prove he/she deserves". As a result employee... leaves. Leaves not because of possibility of rejection, it is just ridiculous, can you imagine how much cool things could have been done instead of these useless talks?
Or just goer a new job