Back in the 90’s when I entered the workforce it was frowned upon to talk about your pay. Compensation was a private matter, and very little was shared about the practices in place. Figuring out how your pay level was determined was like doing a puzzle wearing smudged glasses.
According to a 2022 survey from workplace analytics software company Visier, 79% of employees want some form of salary transparency, and 68% would switch to an employer with better transparency, even if their own salary didn’t change.
Salary transparency, also known as pay transparency, refers to the practice of openly sharing information about compensation with employees and job candidates. The question is: Just how openly do you share?
To help identify where organizations are at regarding transparency, PayScale created a model that includes five levels of salary transparency as illustrated below.
Regardless of which level your company is at, it’s important to realize where you are on this spectrum and what message it sends to employees.
In my experience, greater salary transparency leads to greater trust and engagement. It wipes the smudges off those glasses and shows how all the puzzle pieces fit together, creating clarity about pay.