Thursday, December 12, 2019

Amazon will no longer ask job applicants for their salary history

Amazon will no longer ask job applicants for their salary historyAmazon will no longer ask job applicants for their salary historyIf you are one of the many prospective job seekers eagerly hoping for your city to be chosen as the location for Amazons HQ2, theres one more potential advantage that the e-commerce giant will offer its chosen employees - no more salary history questions about how much you earn or have earned.Amazon, which employs half a million people worldwide and promises to add more than 100,000 jobs in the U.S., announced that it is banning any salary history inquiries for prospective U.S. employees, according to an internal homilie posted Tuesday that wasobtained by BuzzFeed News andconfirmed by a company spokesperson.Amazon forbids salary history questionsIn its announcement, Amazon said that it wanted to take a proactive stance following new legislation at the local and state level to ban salary-history questions. The announcement to Amazon hiring managers says th at they can no longer directly or indirectly ask candidates about their current or prior base pay, bonus, equity compensation, variable pay, or benefits. The statement goes on to explain that, You will not be able to rely on current compensation to justify exceptional on-hire offers. You can continue to rely on factors such as salary expectations, competing offers, and other job and market-related factors.Under this new policy, Amazon hiring managers can still ask about a candidates salary expectations, but they cannot use a persons current or previous salary information as a determining factor in employment or compensation offers.The message states that it is treating the new salary ban as purposefully broad and will extend the ban to the sourcing stage of the recruiting process. The policy explicitly bans using Amazons recruiting systems or third-party databases such as LinkedIn Recruiter to search or estimate a candidates salary.The reasoning behind the banAmazon joins facebook i ncand Google as one of the few major technology companies to ban the salary history question in all of its nationwide offices. Amazons decision follows several local and states implementing salary history bans, including California, Massachusetts, Philadelphia, and New York City.Research has shown that salary history questions disproportionately affect women, who are likely to enter the job market being underpaid and have that disadvantage follow them throughout their careers.Millennial women at the beginning of their careers earnabout 90 cents on averagefor every millennial mans dollar. When a hiring manager knows how little you earned at your last job, they can know that you have weaker leverage to negotiate for more money, regardless of your qualifications.To break the cycle of unequal pay, advocates of salary-history bans seem them as critical to making sure every employee gets fairly compensated. Being underpaid once should not condemn one to a lifetime of inequity, New York Ci ty public advocate, Letitia James, said when the city passed its law.

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