this post was submitted on 28 Apr 2025
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[–] partial_accumen@lemmy.world 2 points 4 days ago

I’ve worked hard to gain salary only to find that it didn’t matter. Every review I’ve ever had was a lie. If I was given a good raise, I was told that it was my hard work. If it was a bad raise, they found one item to give me ‘satisfactory’. A bunch of us shared our salaries over drinks one evening and we all were about the same. That was a big surprise to me.

You're proving my original point. Staying at a single employer for years, and you'll get minuscule raises irrespective of the level of your efforts. Further, you get a sham of job security. When tough times come (as I've seen three cycles in IT), layoffs can come and take your job anyway. Without having built up a war chest of savings to live on, your living situation and that of your family is at risk.

Back to the point of the original article, employees talking is bad for employers. Unionization is one way to solve the collective agreement problem, but there are others. When employees (or any group for that matter) organize, they can make things happen.

You're trying to fix employers. You're welcome to go that route. In the original article Doctorow posited that "vocational awe" was the reason IT people put up with such conditions. Apparently that's true for some. However, I also know it was not true of others who preferred to make the money they needed to eventually stop working for someone else.