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Companies can no longer ask job applicants for their salary history, thanks to a bill that Governor J.B. Pritzker signed into law in July. The law goes into effect on September 29th, and many companies are going to be unprepared. While the law advances pay equity and could be life-changing for workers, it isn’t a blank check for every job seeker to get paid more just because they ask for more.
On the surface, asking for salary history doesn’t seem unfair. If a candidate is making X, the company can offer X + Y, and potentially the candidate would be happy with the increase.
The problem is: Who’s to say that X – what the candidate’s current company pays them – was fairly determined? Salary history questions are a major contributing factor in both racial and gender wage gaps.
Gender and race bias aside, two of the most common things we hear from job seekers is that they’re unfairly compensated and/or that their current company doesn’t value their skills enough. The new company may want to be fair, but if they’re basing a new salary on current salary, they’re inadvertently rolling any biases forward.
California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Puerto Rico.
Previously, there were five ways that companies would determine what to offer a job seeker. Here’s how we see those methods shaking out under the new law:
And now that it is illegal to ask about someone’s salary history, companies will have to get innovative and utilize the other four steps more effectively. That means better defining their interview process and making sure they are truly gauging the skills and experience of job seekers.
The takeaway here is trust. New legal standards are changing the steps involved in most of these negotiations, but regardless, this is the start of a new relationship that is hopefully long-term. Both sides need to be transparent about their intentions and build this new relationship in good faith.
Six years off. One massive comeback. Zero regrets.
In this episode of The Balancing Act, Sarah Sheridan sits down with Susan Scutt, private equity operator, single mom, and comeback queen.
She walked away from work to raise her daughters. Then walked back in and built a bigger, bolder career.
We get into:
It’s a no-fluff conversation about ambition, resilience, and letting go of guilt. Especially for women who’ve hit pause—and are ready to hit play again.
Episode 7