Totally agree and the feature is coming! For the MVP we focused on bare essentials and look: no mater how great a job is, you won't take it if it doesn't pay the rent.
Bonuses, equity and other package elements are coming.
Your point in your other comment about overwhelmed with InMail totally resonates with me. Many low-quality offers out there, offering below-market wages. The signal-to-noise ratio is low, and it's an unfortunate part of the job seeking process.
I've tried a platform similar to this. Indeed has a product called Seen. I'm going to share my experience with Seen to provide insight.
Seen emails me saying employers want to talk, and included salary range in the e-mail body. Unbeknownst to me, the salary range was based on what I self-reported (many months prior), but based on the job title, it seemed too go to be true. Support had confirmed that the employer never saw my information, even though they sent me an e-mail saying the opposite.
Given the types of companies it tells me about, it's clear the product targets mid-market talent and not the top quintile. Which probably makes sense, since there are less people there. But it ended up having the same problem as InMail: an undesired signal-to-noise ratio. Sample size of 1, take my experience with a grain of salt.
Well, I have many more examples similar to yours... Our CTO actually interviewed with Facebook over 8 rounds (!) only to find out at the end that they won't offer him the salary he was expecting and asking since the very beginning. But they dragged him along because for HR it's just a normal work day, but for him it was a gigantic waste of time.
That's a common negotiation strategy. They just drag it along and hope you're tired enough to accept whatever you get. Most companies don't do this (because their time is worth something too), but FAANG gets so many applicants they wouldn't really care.
I'm glad there are sites like this to make it salaries more transparent.
I've tried a platform similar to this. Indeed has a product called Seen. I'm going to share my experience with Seen to provide insight.
Seen emails me saying employers want to talk, and included salary range in the e-mail body. Unbeknownst to me, the salary range was based on what I self-reported (many months prior), but based on the job title, it seemed too go to be true. Support had confirmed that the employer never saw my information, even though they sent me an e-mail saying the opposite.
Given the types of companies it tells me about, it's clear the product targets mid-market talent and not the top quintile. Which probably makes sense, since there are less people there. But it ended up having the same problem as InMail: an undesired signal-to-noise ratio. Sample size of 1, take my experience with a grain of salt.