Best free salary benchmarking data source?
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Best free salary benchmarking data source?
I’ve been in meetings where leadership said they wanted honest employee feedback, then became visibly uncomfortable when they actually received it. HR often encourages openness while quietly managing reactions behind the scenes. Do organizations really want honest feedback, or just positive feedback?
I once watched an employee get labeled “negative” simply because they consistently raised difficult but valid concerns. It made me realize how easily honesty can be mistaken for resistance in some workplaces. How do you separate constructive criticism from negativity?
These "graduations" are getting out of hand. Over the past few weeks, I've had to rework shifts for dozens of employees because their kids had midday prek, kindergarten, 5th grade, 8th grade, etc., graduations. Are all of these necessary?
"Wow us in 150 characters or less" I filled out the application, attached a resume and cover letter. At the end, of the process there was a box that asked me to WOW them in 150 characters or less. Did your company do something like this? What kind of responses were you looking for? I thought it was a little weird.
I just watched a coworker/recruiter be terminated during a meeting and they disc her on the call and logged her out of all the systems. I gently commented i didnt think they could do that as she has to be able to access her timesheets. I was told California is an at will state 🤔 and that we shouldn’t communicate with her any longer. Can they terminate someone that way?
Not sure if it is the best, but levels.fyi provides salary data.
Hands down it’s salary.com. They purchase data from reputable survey companies like Culpepper unlike others who just use what employees claim they make…
Thank you for the response. Salary.com is paid only though, right? Our non-profit won't budget for data. It must be free.
In that case, levels.fyi is your best bet to compare to larger companies. If you are a nonprofit, I’d assume you wouldn’t come close to some of the ranges you see on there, which tend to be in the 75+ percentile.