| Except that it'll become the same as any other public indicator of performance if public - you don't make X because you perform, you clearly must perform because you make X. Transparent compensation inherently ranks performance, what's valued by the company, etc. "Secret" compensation allows the thinking of "I am equal to my coworker" to arise in the first place. So when a discrepancy in that ranking suddenly appears, there's significant cognitive dissonance, and a desire to re-establish equality (or rise above it). Transparency means from day one, you know who are the movers and shakers, and how much you need to step out up in the eyes of management. This whole argument is sort of silly, as we already have a less specific public designation of performance in job titles, and that hasn't stopped the world. Should we get rid of job titles so that employee A doesn't actually know they are junior to employee B? That's dumb - the job title hierarchy informs the junior employee they aren't as valuable or experienced, and as they improve, it's extremely likely that title will change over time (and in a not so well kept secret, their compensation as well). We can all cite one off examples where there was drama associated with job titles, but in general, having them provides more benefit to both the organization and the employees than the outliers where it's an issue. Transparent compensation would likely be no different. |