Tigranes
Arcane
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2009
- Messages
- 10,350
I even heard horror stories about universities, where administrators would only give you a pay raise if you show them a job offer from a different university with higher pay on it (in the US, naturally. Euro unis mostly have fixed payscales and thank god for that).Unfortunately, that Blizzard advancement quote is true of a number of companies, and it's also true of salaries (it's an unfortunate fact that, in some companies, if an employee leaves for a higher-paying similar position at another company, then return to the same company, they'll often be hired back on at a payscale that would never be what they got had they remained at the company - this happened at Obsidian). This is also the easiest way to get promoted - again, you can get a more senior role easier by leaving a company and coming back, which is bizarre, but true.
From what I've heard from my friends that culture is quite common even in the Finnish gaming/IT industry, but then again some of those companies here are US based. After certain amount of years and shipped titles, you should switch to a different company to get a bigger paycheck.
Not quite. US professors will typically get cost of living increases + landmark pay rises upon being tenured. But for any meaningful negotiation over pay, you need a competing offer, otherwise you will just be on that very mild incline.
It's not necessarily better to have fixed payscale for them, either; e.g. UK positions will typically advertise a set pay range from the start, and it is far, far lower than what you could get in a good US position even without competing offers.
Anyway, switching companies to get raises and more responsibilities is a bit silly but it's a very normal part of the economy these days.