Comment on Google is shaking up its compensation to incentivize higher performance
jungle@lemmy.world 2 days agothe ability to penetrate bands
That’s traditionally called “promotion”. So they’re not promoting employees anymore?
Comment on Google is shaking up its compensation to incentivize higher performance
jungle@lemmy.world 2 days agothe ability to penetrate bands
That’s traditionally called “promotion”. So they’re not promoting employees anymore?
criss_cross@lemmy.world 1 day ago
For engineers at least it’s always been a pain.
L4 (the starting point) -> L5 is expected within a few years. After that it’s a fucking crapshoot. You can be stuck in L5 the rest of your career.
jungle@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I should know, I’ve been a software engineer for over 20 years and an engineering manager for over 10. I’ve promoted many engineers.
I don’t know what L4 and L5 map to in your company, but usually the gap between levels widens the higher the level. It’s much easier to go from entry-level (recent graduate) to mid-level, than from senior to staff. The skills required to make that jump are much harder to acquire, there’s less opportunities to put them in practice and a lot more dependencies on external factors you don’t have control over.