Underpaid master's graduate resigns after being forced to absorb multiple coworkers' responsibilities, then discovers her "temporary" workload was actually 3 separate jobs: 'Why not just pay me more?'

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Overworked employee struggles to keep up with growing responsibilities after taking on multiple workplace roles.
Freshgrad with a master's degree and 1 YoE.
Started working in a small company a few months ago as a project coordinator for 36k/year (for reference, average salary in my country is 63k/year, median is 58k/year, all converted to USD). I agreed to the salary because I knew experience is valued a lot and that the job market is tough.
A month later my coworker quit, they gave me his job in addition to mine, initially they said it was temporary but after 2 weeks they told me it was permanent and changed my title to his with no pay increase despite me asking for a slight increase.
I was told I've only been there for a few months and I need to "prove" myself despite them saying how satisfied they are with my job constantly, never got any complaints and was even introduced during a client meeting as one of their highest performers, when the client asked what my job is my manager explained "she kind of does everything.".
Last week our sales guy quit and they asked me to do sales in addition to my work, I asked if I will be getting commission and they said no. Our sales guy was getting $85 per sale he managed to close (the deals would range from $350 to $3,500).
I asked why I can't get commission if I'll be doing the same job as him and my boss said that it doesn't state commission in my contract, I told him it also doesn't state that I am supposed to do sales to which he responded "You need to do it temporarily until we see if there is a need to rehire".
I emailed him and HR a resignation letter within 5 minutes of that conversation. Today I saw they posted 3 separate positions on LinkedIn: project coordinator, operations coordinator, and sales.
Why are companies so greedy? is it really better to pay 3 separate people a full salary than to increase mine or allow commissions? now they wont stop calling my phone asking how to run and manage things.
TXtogo I think you might have been paid what they thought you were worth
Exhausted worker faces burnout after managing an overwhelming workload and long hours on the job.
86Pickle Rick1986 You've only been there a couple months. I agree with company. Your degree means little. Experience matters. If you had years of experience I would back you.
2ndcupofcoffee Accepting the low pay told them you really needed the job; all downhill from there.
bloo_monkey If they're calling for info charge them. If you don't want to help them then block their number.
Just_Bz77 The funny thing is that they pushed you too far hoping to save a few bucks, and end up having to spend more money to hire for a third position.
samspopguy They aren't going to hire 3 people they are just going to get one person from the three applicants pool
Visible_Pizza_3865 In this job market companies do every shady thing they can pull off.
Young professional experiences workplace stress while balancing increasing expectations and limited support.
justcrazytalk One should never quit without having another job lined up.
WolfCut909 One person doing 3 jobs. They were overly you over. There's a reason the other 2 coworker left. You made a good decision by leaving too
kkktookmybabyaway4 Sounds like you just got yourself a sweet consulting gig.... make sure to charge at least 10x your previous salary.

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