- Nearly half of
workers who asked for a raise last year were successful, a FlexJobs survey says. - Respondents also said they felt more empowered in the last year to ask for more money.
Fortune does favor the bold — at least for half of working Americans.
That's according to FlexJobs' Work Insight 2022 survey, which found that 47% of 1,248 employed workers who negotiated for a
The culture around salary negotiation and
Nearly 47 million Americans quit their
"No matter what kind of raise, bonus, or other perks workers received last year, the
Workers have more negotiating power, and it might be helping women
Women may not be receiving
That's according to the Atlanta Federal Reserve's wage growth tracker, which showed this month that the rate of wage increases for women has been outpacing that of men for six consecutive months. Approximately 31% of women who switched jobs in the past two years received compensation packages, including salaries and bonuses, more than 30% that of their previous positions, the Conference Board, a private-research group, found in February.
Those findings represent a sharp departure from historical data about salary negotiations — according to a study of recent Carnegie Mellon University graduates, 57% of the men negotiated their salary, while only 7% of women did. The men had starting salaries 7.6% higher than their female counterparts. Two decades of research shows that men initiate salary negotiations much more than women, and when women do negotiate, they ask for less than their male counterparts.