> But cutting pay for existing employees who opt to work from home is a terrible idea and it shows a complete lack of emotional intelligence.
What in the world does this mean?
Cutting pay for temporary telework is stupid, but cutting it for long term agreements that are willfully made by the employee makes total sense.
It seems ludicrous to me to pay Silicon Valley rates to someone living in Montana. The pay is based on cost of living and labor supply constraints. And both of those are eased by people working remotely in low cost of living areas.
If they don’t do this then they’ll end up paying the high water mark everywhere in the world for fairness purposes and that will make it harder to compete. Imagine living in Lagos or somewhere and because you’re locally employed and always lived in Lagos you get Lagos wages. But someone who was hired in San Francisco and moved to Lagos gets San Francisco wages. How emotionally intelligent is that?
It means people can feel unappreciated and offended and that could cost Google much more than 10% in the long run. Basically, you sometimes need to stop counting beans and start considering people's emotions. It's not always logical but you must still consider it.
I know a top engineer & manager who left a major company because someone decided his nice parking space that he had for 10 years should be given to someone more important.
At the risk of this discussion devolving into a flamewar, I would just encourage you to do your own research about this situation.
Regardless of all other arguments about location-based pay, Google et al have been paying their temporarily-remote employees 100% of their salary up until now.
These companies would need to spend lots of resources to legally navigate pay cuts to already-agreed-upon contracts.
And they would also have to weigh the risk of those employees leaving for better pay elsewhere.
It’s also confusing. Does that mean they think I didn’t do research? My basic operating model is that we’re all doing our own research all the time and using it to form opinions.
I wasn’t sure if GP was saying they disagree with me, think I didn’t research, think I was relying on someone else’s research, didn’t feel like doing their research, or something else.
I’m not sure your intent, but yes, I’ve done my own research on this. And I did it before my comment and I think my comment stands given my research.
Im not sure what contracts Google has. My contacts there don’t have any contracts guaranteeing pay or term, just stock awards. So it’s not a contract issue to raise (or lower) pay. I think it’s more an issue of whether employees will quit and whether they can continue attracting new employees.
> These companies would need to spend lots of resources to legally navigate pay cuts to already-agreed-upon contracts.
My pay went down by like 40,000 when I moved to fully remote. Whatever cost was involved in setting up a new contract for me is surely quite a bit lower than that.
> And they would also have to weigh the risk of those employees leaving for better pay elsewhere.
The industry hasn't settled on a standard, but the number of companies that offer permanent remote work at SF pay scales and also pay the same as Google is pretty low. Attrition for pay is real, but it isn't like Facebook doesn't do the same cuts.
Are the cuts proposed base salary or also equity grants? (I would imagine these might be pegged to your salary level so one impacts the others, the bonuses im sure work that way)
If the COLA adjustments are granular enough (e.g. zip code), I could see this as a civil rights violation. They'd be punishing employees who live in black and latin communities.
> A Google employee interviewed by Reuters commutes two hours each way to the company's Seattle office. That employee was considering switching to remote work permanently when the company reopens its offices in October. But then the employee looked at the location-based pay calculator and realized the switch to full-time remote work would mean a 10 percent pay cut--in effect, rescinding the raise that came with this person's most recent promotion. "I didn't do all that hard work to get promoted to then take a pay cut," the employee told Reuters.
This is absolutely insane. A 10% pay cut is absolutely worth 4 hours of your day back everyday and this person is completely irrational.
I mean, it depends on your pay I guess. But 4 hours commute, just no, why do people do that? I most probably is worth 10%
But I am of the opinion that if google thinks the job is worth what they are currently paying, then that's what it's worth, but the arguments used here are terrible?
I don't think any company pays commute time, and not doing 4hours commute doesn't mean google should get an extra 4 hours work a day out of the employee
They would only need to go in three days a week on hybrid, so the math is a bit harder than if it was five days a week.
I’m working remote from Seattle so my salary didn’t change at all, but if it were three days a week and a salary change was involved, I would have to think about it.
Gonna be real with you - the worker probably has nothing going for them outside of work and is fine with the 4 hours of commuting because it fills time that they would otherwise feel hopeless over.
I think they’re also just attention seeking and trying to talk to a paper for 30 minutes to get some free negotiating power. If they succeed, it only took 30 minutes to retain their 10%.
+1. And a 4 hr round trip is a lot of petrol and depreciation cost because you couldn't do that daily with an old car. Unless maybe Google gives free charge for EVs?
ITT: People using their subjective remote-work opinions in defending Google's desire to increase their profits by sacrificing their own employees' well-being.
Eh I think the adjustment is fair. It’s kind of a pay loophole to negotiate a salary based on one market, then move to a different one. It’s reasonable that companies pay market salaries, rather than having this weird thing where the Googler who moves to Montana makes double what the new hire from Montana is offered.
It's not location-based pay, right? It's market-function based pay. A radiologist can usually give you a report based on your scans from anywhere. However, my cousin (a well-paid radiologist in the NHS) simply cannot give me a report that I can use here in the US. So I must pay above global market value since the market function constrains participants.
So it isn't location-based. It's just market-based. It makes sense that big companies would do this, since labour is usually fungible there. They can then treat the labour market as a highly-liquid market of equivalent units. This standardization of things leading to liquid markets is quite common: options contracts, the TEU shipping container, the ERC-721 standard.
I run engineering at a trading company and I don't do this, but that's because labour is not fungible at my scale. So I don't have a liquid market: each time I buy labour, it is not usually substitutable with another guy.
“Market rate” is just that: a market rate. In regards to pay, it’s all about finding the salary that’ll get someone to say “yes”, and trying not to go too much above that.
Pre-pandemic, living in the Bay Area, you were commuting to the office, and you were exclusively competing with the people also living in the Bay Area, meaning your labor was scarce. Companies paid more not because of CoL but because the market mandated a certain salary, otherwise you’d just say “no” and work somewhere else. Remote was much rarer, and if you lived in (say) Montana, Google could offer you less money because you’re way more likely to accept a lower salary if you have fewer options and if that salary satisfies you.
With this odd moment we have people who negotiated salaries in the Bay market now moving elsewhere to work remote.
Where have the people against this policy been prior to 2020? Google (and a gazillion other companies) have paid differently based on region forever. The folks in London getting paid far less than their SF peers seem to find it weird that this has only become a source of complaints once it has affected Americans.
Perhaps I'm in the minority here given the comments thus far, but I've always been of the opinion that equivalent work should be compensated equivalently and commensurate with the value of output generated for the company.
I am a little sceptical. So you pay the same at all equivalent restaurants, the same for all cars, etc.? So if you were going to buy a thing at price $x, and someone were to tell you "Hey, here's a discount available if you use this coupon!" then (since you were going to buy it at $x it provided commensurate value) so you don't use the discount to bring it down to $(x-d)? I don't think that sounds right.
There is some value in the firm having a culture of unity, etc. but bigger companies are going to just negotiate with individuals as buyers in a labour market similar to you buying a car warranty contract.
Those examples seem somewhat contrived. The exchange is not that of physical depreciating assets or even consumable goods. A worker is not giving a coupon to a company for a one time purchase but forming an ongoing contract for knowledge services which can be performed from anywhere to (arguably) similar levels of proficiency.
Whether you believe WFH is equal in value to on-site is another matter. Google apparently does not hold this view.
Regardless, in those cases I’d still expect a competitive market to reach some price convergence, holding all other factors constant — especially when the seller knows that a buyers willingness to pay == $x and != $x-d for the same utility (say, from already getting paid $x repeatedly for the same work). If I am mistaken I’d definitely welcome the chance to adjust those expectations.
> Regardless, in those cases I’d still expect a competitive market to reach some price convergence, holding all other factors constant...
This is the crux of the problem, of course. There is no convergence because the only factor isn't that the SF engineer is competing against engineers worldwide. The price you have to pay is the minimum to prevent someone from doing the other thing. And so, even if Google is the only one in the Bay to offer higher to work there, you need to pay as much (in some terms, not just monetarily) as Google to get an SF engineer.
That makes sense to me. Local large employers can have an effect on local hiring costs, even for employers not stationed there.
It's not Baumol's Cost Disease, but there is an analogous mechanism there.
I'm currently working remotely for an NYC-based company and I think I'm making 20-30% less than than if I was living in NYC.
However, it's still about triple anything I could make in the local market, on top of the facts that the work is actually fun (unlike anything in said local market) and there is no commute.
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[ 2.2 ms ] story [ 87.1 ms ] threadWhat in the world does this mean?
Cutting pay for temporary telework is stupid, but cutting it for long term agreements that are willfully made by the employee makes total sense.
It seems ludicrous to me to pay Silicon Valley rates to someone living in Montana. The pay is based on cost of living and labor supply constraints. And both of those are eased by people working remotely in low cost of living areas.
If they don’t do this then they’ll end up paying the high water mark everywhere in the world for fairness purposes and that will make it harder to compete. Imagine living in Lagos or somewhere and because you’re locally employed and always lived in Lagos you get Lagos wages. But someone who was hired in San Francisco and moved to Lagos gets San Francisco wages. How emotionally intelligent is that?
I know a top engineer & manager who left a major company because someone decided his nice parking space that he had for 10 years should be given to someone more important.
Lots of anecdotes about people who quit over reasons. But there’s many more examples of people who didn’t quit despite all sorts of weird stuff.
Regardless of all other arguments about location-based pay, Google et al have been paying their temporarily-remote employees 100% of their salary up until now.
These companies would need to spend lots of resources to legally navigate pay cuts to already-agreed-upon contracts.
And they would also have to weigh the risk of those employees leaving for better pay elsewhere.
I wasn’t sure if GP was saying they disagree with me, think I didn’t research, think I was relying on someone else’s research, didn’t feel like doing their research, or something else.
Im not sure what contracts Google has. My contacts there don’t have any contracts guaranteeing pay or term, just stock awards. So it’s not a contract issue to raise (or lower) pay. I think it’s more an issue of whether employees will quit and whether they can continue attracting new employees.
My pay went down by like 40,000 when I moved to fully remote. Whatever cost was involved in setting up a new contract for me is surely quite a bit lower than that.
> And they would also have to weigh the risk of those employees leaving for better pay elsewhere.
The industry hasn't settled on a standard, but the number of companies that offer permanent remote work at SF pay scales and also pay the same as Google is pretty low. Attrition for pay is real, but it isn't like Facebook doesn't do the same cuts.
why?
Just basic, hundreds of years old thinking from Smith’s Law of Supply and Demand [0].
There’s likely lots of specific reasons but they all boil down to some form of supply and demand.
[0] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/l/law-of-supply-demand.as...
This is absolutely insane. A 10% pay cut is absolutely worth 4 hours of your day back everyday and this person is completely irrational.
But I am of the opinion that if google thinks the job is worth what they are currently paying, then that's what it's worth, but the arguments used here are terrible?
I don't think any company pays commute time, and not doing 4hours commute doesn't mean google should get an extra 4 hours work a day out of the employee
I’m working remote from Seattle so my salary didn’t change at all, but if it were three days a week and a salary change was involved, I would have to think about it.
I think they’re also just attention seeking and trying to talk to a paper for 30 minutes to get some free negotiating power. If they succeed, it only took 30 minutes to retain their 10%.
So it isn't location-based. It's just market-based. It makes sense that big companies would do this, since labour is usually fungible there. They can then treat the labour market as a highly-liquid market of equivalent units. This standardization of things leading to liquid markets is quite common: options contracts, the TEU shipping container, the ERC-721 standard.
I run engineering at a trading company and I don't do this, but that's because labour is not fungible at my scale. So I don't have a liquid market: each time I buy labour, it is not usually substitutable with another guy.
Pre-pandemic, living in the Bay Area, you were commuting to the office, and you were exclusively competing with the people also living in the Bay Area, meaning your labor was scarce. Companies paid more not because of CoL but because the market mandated a certain salary, otherwise you’d just say “no” and work somewhere else. Remote was much rarer, and if you lived in (say) Montana, Google could offer you less money because you’re way more likely to accept a lower salary if you have fewer options and if that salary satisfies you.
With this odd moment we have people who negotiated salaries in the Bay market now moving elsewhere to work remote.
There is some value in the firm having a culture of unity, etc. but bigger companies are going to just negotiate with individuals as buyers in a labour market similar to you buying a car warranty contract.
Whether you believe WFH is equal in value to on-site is another matter. Google apparently does not hold this view.
Regardless, in those cases I’d still expect a competitive market to reach some price convergence, holding all other factors constant — especially when the seller knows that a buyers willingness to pay == $x and != $x-d for the same utility (say, from already getting paid $x repeatedly for the same work). If I am mistaken I’d definitely welcome the chance to adjust those expectations.
This is the crux of the problem, of course. There is no convergence because the only factor isn't that the SF engineer is competing against engineers worldwide. The price you have to pay is the minimum to prevent someone from doing the other thing. And so, even if Google is the only one in the Bay to offer higher to work there, you need to pay as much (in some terms, not just monetarily) as Google to get an SF engineer.
That makes sense to me. Local large employers can have an effect on local hiring costs, even for employers not stationed there.
It's not Baumol's Cost Disease, but there is an analogous mechanism there.
I'm currently working remotely for an NYC-based company and I think I'm making 20-30% less than than if I was living in NYC.
However, it's still about triple anything I could make in the local market, on top of the facts that the work is actually fun (unlike anything in said local market) and there is no commute.
Seems like a pretty good deal to me tbh.