So, the salary survey asked about salary, but neglected to ask about total compensation. This is an oversight, because there will be a mix of compensation packages, including options, bonuses, reserved stock units, etc. If those aren't taken into account, the results will be severely skewed. By severely, let me give you an example: my total comp package - after vesting and including bonus - is easily 3x my base salary. This will not be represented, as you didn't ask.
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33My compensation is incomplete, too - it's missing around $10k/year! (Seriously though, yeah this makes sense)– PekkaCommented Jan 9, 2018 at 18:31
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If I have 10k as official salary, but in fact receive 30k because of compensations, will I answer on question about my salary: "10k" ?– SinatrCommented Jan 10, 2018 at 14:46
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@Pekka웃 IMO it's exactly the opposite.. :-)– SkipperCommented Jan 10, 2018 at 14:51
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Could you post an example of how a total comp package can be "3x [your] base salary"? I believe you, I just want to learn some details -- an example, not personal details.– user201891Commented Jan 11, 2018 at 23:31
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130% bonus + ~1 year's annual salary's worth of options vesting + ~1 year's annual salary's worth of RSUs, would be one way of putting it. But then throw in a 100% company's paying any deductible for healthcare, plus truly good healthcare.– David T. MacknetCommented Jan 12, 2018 at 4:26
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1 Answer
This is a tough issue we've gone back and forth with over the years on the survey, whether to try to ask developers to estimate the value of options or exercising them, to try to add this in or ask separately, etc. We decided this year to phrase the question as:
What is your current gross salary (before taxes and deductions)?
The motivation to choose this wording was to have the most respondents understand this the most clearly. We specifically chose not to say "base salary" here so that developers whose compensation is complicated (for example, with bonuses) could respond with overall totals.
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16Might have been better worded as gross compensation, which includes bonuses and perks– Rob ModCommented Jan 10, 2018 at 23:46
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3That is a great suggestion and I am adding it to our notes for next year. We'll need to run it by non-native English speakers to understand its level of clarity.– Julia Silge StaffCommented Jan 10, 2018 at 23:49
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9Just FYI, if you said "gross compensation" I would have no idea what that meant. Honestly I'm still not sure what a compensation package is. I get paid a salary and that's it (which seems pretty normal to me).– ClonkexCommented Jan 11, 2018 at 4:08
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4Problem with this: I know my base salary. It's one clear number on my paycheck. However, I don't know the sum of everything I get from the company. Especially the pension stuff is split into three parts and pretty complicated. I just take what I get and then I'll maybe see later, maybe only when I actually retire. Commented Jan 11, 2018 at 11:23
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You could ask it as 2 or 3 questions: gross salary, bonus target %, options, reserved stock units. Last two could be yes/no questions, I suppose, or free text. You'd have to interpret the answers, but might be interesting. Commented Jan 11, 2018 at 14:17
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1The other thing: benefits are a major thing to have. Health benefits alone easily bump up the package by 30k for a really good package. Commented Jan 11, 2018 at 14:19