BooleanCheese

Mar 4, 2022 16:17
This is a very common problem and the sad truth is that most companies will avoid promoting you if possible because it doesn't benefit them to do so. It likely means they have to pay you more and it makes you more attractive to other companies if you plan on leaving. It's important to understand this and that promotions based on your work ethic alone are very rare. These are the rules set by upper management, isolated from any insight on the actual work being done.
 
Dec 23, 2019 16:31
@H.Idden reCaptcha only makes you do that stuff when it's not convinced you're a person (i.e. if you're using incognito and so you don't have your google cookie).
 
Dec 6, 2018 07:56
And the average market rate is an average after all. There will be companies paying both below and above that rate. Companies paying below the rate often hire straight out of college with little experience because that's what the budget dictates. They'd love to bring in more experienced developers and have less turnover, but it's all about how much they're willing to budget and you've got to be willing to leave the company if you aren't okay with that. It's why the industry has such a high turnover rate.
Dec 6, 2018 07:56
Based on a previous company I worked and conversations I had after leaving: It doesn't matter if your research is correct. It's in the companies interest to pretend your numbers are unheard of and that they're paying you market rate. If you approach them with research that says they're paying you X amount below market, it reflects poorly on the company for the HR person to respond "yeah, you're being payed below market". It's in the script for them to ignore your numbers and often times the budget dictates that they're only paying people below the average market rate.
 
Nov 9, 2017 11:26
@wizzwizz4 my point is that the benefit cannot be considered "partially" negated because the benefit of multiple cores is that it literally divides the amount of work a core has to do. To say the benefit is negated is just bad math.
Nov 9, 2017 11:26
@wizzwizz4 If you had a single core than that core would have to switch between and work on all 96 threads at once. with multiple cores, divided evenly each core only has to run 24 threads. Further more, your OS can manage threads so that more important/demanding threads don't have to share as much cpu time on a core with so many other threads and less important/demanding threads can all be shared on a single core.
 
Jun 16, 2017 11:45
@ConorMancone Asking an employee for Salary expectations and expecting them to lowball themselves is ridiculous because they're practically guaranteed to not receive an offer higher than they're asking. For that reason, many job seekers will give a higher number than they're willing to work for, with the expectation that the company will give a counter offer.
 
Apr 27, 2016 19:42
Well, there's still the "cipher" tag on the post. meaning this is probably a cipher
Apr 27, 2016 19:39
Yeah, but I'm pretty sure 122 was in G/S/C, and in those games you can travel between kanto and johto?
Apr 27, 2016 18:31
Just a note: OP has the question tagged as "cipher"
Apr 27, 2016 18:14
Wigglytuff and Jigglypuff where both in gen 1