Archive for January, 2009

Navigating the Salary History Question

So, while applying for jobs, I’ve noticed many job listings ask for a salary history. Rude much?

What does my prior salary have to do with what I can do for an entirely different company? Also, what if I was drastically underpaid at my previous position?

This isn’t just a rant.

I recently wrote a cover letter for a position listed on a job board. The listing said it required salary history and salary expectations, which I artfully dodged in my letter by writing that “I’d be more than happy to discuss salary information in-person with the hiring manager.”

But no dice. I later received an email asking for my current salary.

What to tell them? I had a few ways to answer the question truthfully—my old salary, my new hourly contract rate (for my former full-time company), or my freelance rate (which is the lowest but factors in a minimum number of guaranteed hours and complete scheduling flexibility)?

I decided to answer with my current hourly rate as a contractor. It’s probably the most honest and straight-forward answer, and it also seems impressive if you multiply my hourly rate x 40 hours per week x 50 weeks per year. Of course, I’m not getting near 40 hours a month from that employer, let alone 40 hours per week, but it stands to reason I would be making that much if I received enough billable hours. I also mentioned that it includes health insurance, which is true—but only for the rest of January.

So how should I answer this question if I get an interview and it comes up in person? What if they ask for more details?

Popularity: 26% [?]

Hello 2009, Goodbye Health Insurance

Since losing my job and becoming a contractor for my former full-time employer, life has been less chaotic than I predicted.

The former full-time company barely assigned me any contracting work in December… I earned less than half of my rent from them last month. When I went to the office for a meeting (and to rescue my office plants), the boss seemed angry at me for not making myself “available.”

Um, I’m sorry, didn’t he just let me go? Did he expect the same level of hand-holding and checking-in and bending-over-backwards now that I’m a lowly contractor? No, sir.

Then after getting reamed out for being a bad, mysterious contractor who doesn’t sign on IM for days at a time (email is obsolete, I guess), I was told my health insurance will end in January. (Only a few weeks ago, I learned that my boss forgot to pay the health insurance bill, so I was without coverage for November.)

Super.

But other than that, things have been pretty blah. I’ve been freelancing for a startup website with an environmental slant, and the founders (a married couple) have been really impressed with my work. I’ve gone from billing on a per-project basis, to 10 hours per week, to now virtually full-time, 9am-5pm. They keep telling me how much they want to hire me as soon as they secure another round of investors… but I’m not holding my breath. We’ll see what happens, it’s a harsh climate for startups.

I also have been sending out a few cover letters. People are definitely posting more now that the holidays are over, but I wouldn’t say there are a lot of high quality jobs out there. Most job postings in web development around here are for government contractors… boo.

Last night I sent a cover letter at 2am and received an email with a follow-up response within 15 minutes. So that’s good… Other than that, I went on one interview before Christmas that ended up not going anywhere.

Popularity: 24% [?]