The 3% Raise Dilemma, or Would You Jump Off a Skyscraper If Everyone Else Did?


OK, the title of this post is the NYC version of the age-old question, and the one I’m most familiar with you may have heard (or used): “If all your friends jumped off a cliff, the bridge — or, for Indiana, into the quarry — would you, too?”
Do you remember being on the other end of this question? What had you been up to? What was the point of this parental rebuttal to your childish example of group think?
It was to get you to think. To believe in yourself strongly enough to ask the question, “Why?” when a group of people with whom you generally belonged felt pressured to act in unison before really thinking it through. To realize that you can and should have an opinion, too.
This brings me to our plans for next quarter and next year. Granted, 3 percent annual salary increase budgets are, “Deja vu all over again,” for us. What’s the big deal? We’ve dealt with it before and we can deal with it again.
The thing is, this 3 percent budget thing started back in the full blown Great Recession, when some of us were not getting any pay raises and others were looking at 1.5 percent bumps, if you can give any credence to that practice.
It was no fun, but it made sense given that many of our organizations were holding on for dear life. Our job was to make it work, and we did.
Fast forward to 2015/2016 — the world has changed. Our companies are profitable again, and the marketplace — while volatile and unpredictable — no longer seems out to get us. As leaders, isn’t it time for us to recognize this and adjust our thinking? Why aren’t there alternative courses of action opening up to us? It’s a question worth asking.
Please recognize that I am not damning the salary survey results. I am instead encouraging a diligent commitment to understanding what our companies mean when they settle on a 3 percent budget for increases this year.
If everything we do in compensation is communication — and it is — you, as your company’s compensation expert, and your executives should work through the answers to these questions. If you don’t, you might well deserve caustic comments from your managers and employees about the meaning of this year’s increase (compared to the meaning of the executives’ increase, as just one example).
This was originally published at the Compensation Café blog, where you can find a daily dose of caffeinated conversation on everything compensation.