“At Will Employment” & “Market Value”
by
Demosthenes2
05/16/2008, 9:40 AM #
The cold hard realities of the market place (and seriously—you’d better get used to them—this isn’t class where we have to prove the evaluation standards are all equal) is that jobs are at will employment. That means people reserve the right to hire and fire you at will and you reserve the right take and leave a job at will. At will. As in I owe you nothing.
Employers hire people ‘at will’ based upon market value. My company doesn’t need to pay those at equivalent positions the same as they pay me. They just don’t.
When I want more money (like now) I have to make a valid business argument for it. A valid business argument for more money is rooted in the market, my market value, the options I have to procure that fair market value and the company’s options and costs of replacing me in that same market.
Here’s what a market based argument looks like: “I have skill sets that I and you have invested in and that have demonstrable results that are replicable and translatable to other areas to mutual benefit. Given those facts it makes sense to leverage our mutual investments in ways that capitalize on that—here are some ways we can do that and the impact on scope of responsibilities, compensation and the projected ROI.” Feel free to throw in a smidgeon of basic fairness issues once you’ve outlined the BUSINESS CASE. In short—I get paid based on what I can demonstrate I’m worth to the company and by convincing them of that, and if not them, than by convincing somebody else to pay that to me. If I can’t, guess what—that’s my market worth. Market worth is the maximum you can convince someone to pay for your services.
Here’s what a market based argument doesn’t look like: “He makes more than me. I really need to make more money to pay my bills! It’s not fair! I’m getting married. I’m having a kid. I’m buying a house. I need surgery or am sick. The cost of everything is going up and I need more money. They’re going to foreclose on my house/I’ll lose my apartment. I can’t pay my tuition. I have loans to payback” Pick your personal event that is really none of your employers concern or business.
Hint; in the business world nobody really cares if you make more or less than someone else—that’s not a reason to change anything (and out of curiosity what would you do if they cut your colleague’s pay to shut you up and told him why?) Nobody needs to ensure you keep your job or get paid or keep you on board—especially if they decide they don’t want to deal with the hassle and it’s easier to just eliminate the position and then reinstitute it later.
Guess what; the cost of replacing you is negligible—your market value is almost nil. Interns are a dime a dozen and most are glad to have any kind of a job. The market equation to your employer looks like this; intern does unskilled labor. Requisition and budget for position is X. Fill position and move on. Intern complains of compensation in comparison to peer. Terminate at will employment (eliminate the position for budget reasons). Replace position with new requisition based upon budgeted project if more unskilled labor is desirable, move on.
Bottom line—you have no market based argument here until you can demonstrate a value worth more than what you’re making (not in comparison to what someone else is making) and the rational could have been as simple as this is what we had in the budget for the first and second positions.
You can complain. It could well cost you your internship (which the employer sees as more of a benefit to you than they do to them).
That could well be the first and most important business lesson of your career.
I would urge you to lay out a market based argument on what you do that is worth more and why, what the ROI is on that, why it’s better to pay you more to do that (understanding of processes, training, demonstrated skills, etc.) rather than replace you with cheaper labor.
That too will be a useful and educational experience for you on an internship.