‘A new hire earns double what I’m getting': CEO screenshare blunder reveals a long-standing employee is the lowest-paid worker in the department, so they negotiate a substantial raise

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  • Screenshare error

    My supervisor was sharing his screen during a meeting, he accidentally shared something but it was removed quickly. However, the meeting was recorded and I reviewed the
  • recording to find it was our team 2026 budget along with compensation of every employee. I discovered I am one of the lowest paid employees,
  • despite being one of the longest tenured and most experienced. One particular new hire from the last few months earns double what I'm getting, despite no prior knowledge of our company and its products.
  • Is it appropriate to discuss directly with the supervisor? Discuss with peers? HR?
  • Small_Fail_1... Don't mention that you saw the budget!! Just ask for a review, state your qualifications, and if they don't meet your requested pay, ask why
  • Whatever you do, do not mention that you know what anyone else is making. This is about you being qualified
  • DazzlingPoti... Ask for a raise and start looking now that you know what you're truly worth.
  • CornflakeBob1 Good advice on this thread. One other way to approach this is to get a job offer from another company, and then ask that they match the salary of your offer. You'd just have to be prepared to move on if they don't.
  • needy1infl⚫ A similar situation happened to me years ago. I confronted my boss that I found all the salary, increases for the year along with bonuses for the year. I saw in black and white
  • (paper report, not screen share) how low I was paid versus my colleagues and peers. I told him obviously I was low paid and unqualified to fill the position I held. That
  • I would continue in my capacity until he could fill that job and I would be seeking employment elsewhere. He asked me to wait a couple of days and let
  • him discuss this situation with upper management. I ended up getting a 40% increase immediately and put on a much better bonus incentive. While still not where the peers were, I stayed
  • CantaloupeComplet... The new hire is likely getting paid that because they took the risk of job hopping in one of the worst markets in history. S k it up.

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