Move to raise employees’ minimum salary to US$70,000 reportedly backfires on US company
SEATTLE – Things are not looking quite so rosy at US company Gravity Payments, less than four months after it made the news for a groundbreaking move to erase income inequality.
In April, the Seattle-based credit card payment firm announced it would be raising its employees’ pay to a minimum of US$70,000 (S$96,028) across the board, earning praise from its 120 workers.
CEO Dan Price, who took a US$930,000 paycut to sanction the move, had said then: “Everyone started screaming and cheering and just going crazy.”
But The New York Times, which first broke the story, is now reporting that Price’s decision has generated internal strife within the company.
Maisey McMaster, who joined the company five years ago and became a financial manager, said she was initially “swept up in the excitement” but soon began to have doubts. Despite the overwhelming publicity generated – it has been besieged by job seekers and new clients – two of Gravity Payment’s “most valued” employees have quit over what they viewed as an unfair practice to bump up new employees’ salaries to a similar level as its longest-serving staff.
“He gave raises to people who have the least skills and are the least equipped to do the job, and the ones who were taking on the most didn’t get much of a bump,” said the 26-year-old, who helped Price do the sums on whether Gravity Payments could afford the move in the first place.
Article continues after this advertisementMcMaster, who felt it would have been fairer to give smaller increments pegged to the employee’s experience, has since quit, citing “burnout” from working long hours.
Article continues after this advertisementAnother skeptical employee who left was web developer Grant Moran.
While the 29-year-old’s salary was increased to US$50,000 from $41,000 (first stage of the raise), he found the policy “disconcerting.”
“The people who were just clocking in and out were making the same as me,” he told the paper. “It shackles high performers to less motivated team members.”
Self-doubts have also crept into the employees who stayed, with some saying they felt the increased pressure at work as they questioned if they really deserved the raise.
To add to Gravity Payments’ problems, Price’s older brother and the company’s co-founder, Lucas, has also filed a lawsuit over the pair’s “longstanding differences.” KS