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George Pearkes @peark.es

They do retention bonuses, didn’t help. 401k matching up to 6%, less than 5% of the payroll actually took advantage of it. A/C’d assembly line and reliable consistent shift work. Now, I want to be clear, I don’t feel bad for this guy at all, and it sounds like the hourly wage is sub-market.

may 13, 2025, 4:45 pm • 137 3

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George Pearkes @peark.es

But I still think this is an interesting meditation on the US labor market and illustrates how hard it is to scale manufacturing domestically if it’s not very high productivity.

may 13, 2025, 4:45 pm • 139 3 • view
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msdobalina.bsky.social @msdobalina.bsky.social

I have less than zero interest in the complaints of employers about lack of employee loyalty. They wanted "hustle culture," they got it.

may 13, 2025, 5:23 pm • 1 0 • view
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JarekFA @jarekfa.bsky.social

"Wages are sticky downward". Just don't see how we get people to work for less in the T-shirt mills. The Carolinas have some history here but they outsource the labor to Bangladesh, Vietnam, China and India now.

may 13, 2025, 5:49 pm • 1 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

One other thing: he described employees who took the 401k match using the balance to borrow against and renovating their houses…idk if this was one instance or multiple but if I ever catch anyone reading this doing that I’m going to be EXTREMELY disappointed in y’all.

may 13, 2025, 4:45 pm • 182 1 • view
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Geek19 @geek19.bsky.social

That's why I took all my potential 401k money and sunk it into NFTs. My nephew Broxley told me its a great idea like... 3 Christmases ago

may 13, 2025, 5:25 pm • 7 0 • view
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kapiteindegu.bsky.social @kapiteindegu.bsky.social

borrowing from my 401k was the only way I could afford a competitive down payment. I wasn't penalized and my work structured it so I paid it back over several months

may 13, 2025, 5:55 pm • 5 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

Okay this is an interesting special case. But a down payment and the ability to pay it back relatively quickly is very different from a renovation.

may 13, 2025, 5:59 pm • 7 0 • view
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kapiteindegu.bsky.social @kapiteindegu.bsky.social

yeah, I agree. I just wanted to mention it here as not all 401k borrowing is bad (I was surprised to learn this, too)

may 13, 2025, 7:03 pm • 2 0 • view
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Kelly Cosgrove @kellycosgrove.bsky.social

I graduated grad school and went to work with a bunch of conservative (1980’s conservative) old curmudgeons who browbeat me into maxing out my 401k for the match at age 26. Borrowing against was not allowed. Not unrelatedly, I retired in my late 50’s and my hubby at 62.

may 13, 2025, 4:56 pm • 94 1 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

Massive dub for you IMHO Kelly.

may 13, 2025, 4:59 pm • 24 0 • view
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Kyle I, PhD 🕊️🇺🇦 @kyleiphd.bsky.social

So, 6% match on $20/h would be $1.20 extra, and presumably withheld from taxable income... honestly despite the hourly rate, that match is decent, and yet they're chasing an extra $0.50/h (fully taxable) 😔. I know I'm preaching to the choir here, but the lack of financial foresight pains me.

may 13, 2025, 5:16 pm • 10 0 • view
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Kelly Cosgrove @kellycosgrove.bsky.social

I wonder if the work environment is poor? That’s usually why people leave what looks like a good job.

may 13, 2025, 5:25 pm • 0 0 • view
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Tullibee @tullib.bsky.social

The problem is that it’s a match - if they can’t tolerate shaving 6% off the hourly wage to contribute they don’t get the match.

may 13, 2025, 6:00 pm • 0 0 • view
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Encelade Jamnut @encelade-jamnut.bsky.social

Sometimes you have short term problems that trick you into neglecting long term benefits When you need these $.5 to eat or to pay the rent, you just feel ashamed not to be able to get the 6% match. I work with some people in this situation. I stopped despisîng them when I got to know them

may 13, 2025, 5:28 pm • 10 0 • view
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Kelly Cosgrove @kellycosgrove.bsky.social

I don’t despise them: we had financial setbacks and it is very difficult. In our mid-30’s we stopped contributing for about 6 months. The nice thing about 401k is it doesn’t show up in your paycheck and you can kind of forget about it. And sincerely, we were lucky.

may 13, 2025, 5:35 pm • 8 0 • view
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Musings, Sometimes @musings-sometimes.bsky.social

Huge props to you. This country sucks at saving and when I hear success stories like this it makes me feel both happy and motivated. I just turned 40 and I'm in a similar boat. I'm hoping for early 60s because I want a _really_ comfortable retirement.

may 13, 2025, 5:17 pm • 8 0 • view
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Async @async.protogen.club

Just getting my career started and have been really lucky all things considered for my starting point financially - just a bit anxious about what the next 1-2 decades will look like 😅 Though that isn't stopping me from investing as much as I can while living life. Congratulations by the way!

may 13, 2025, 5:40 pm • 3 0 • view
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cheesycats.bsky.social @cheesycats.bsky.social

Similar story here. Not quite done yet but very close

may 13, 2025, 5:02 pm • 3 0 • view
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Kelly Cosgrove @kellycosgrove.bsky.social

We are so lucky. In 2008 I thought it was all a waste? But it bounced back.

may 13, 2025, 5:04 pm • 4 0 • view
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cheesycats.bsky.social @cheesycats.bsky.social

I've thought that repeatedly since the early 90s lol. Hope the luck holds

may 13, 2025, 5:50 pm • 2 0 • view
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lakes @somearelakes.bsky.social

they pulled the match out of their 401K?

may 13, 2025, 4:49 pm • 0 0 • view
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Jock Cartier @jockcartier.bsky.social

Nothing surprises me when it comes to that stuff. I oversaw the pension at a municipality, paid well above market, and did full matching and it was still like pulling teeth to get people to participate It was like Thaler said, you need to make things in peoples own interest automatic by default

may 13, 2025, 4:52 pm • 10 0 • view
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cuibonobaby.bsky.social @cuibonobaby.bsky.social

We need to get rid of 401ks and go back to defined benefits plans.

may 13, 2025, 8:20 pm • 1 0 • view
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Jock Cartier @jockcartier.bsky.social

Great for recipients… but as sn employers, or taxpayer, it’s not something I’d support taking on that risk The local union did try to negotiate going to one once, but when they found out how much they’d have to contribute to get onside initially they dropped the idea in a hurry.

may 13, 2025, 8:37 pm • 1 0 • view
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jacksonarkland.bsky.social @jacksonarkland.bsky.social

I’ve managed employees that financially struggled to contribute to their 401(k), even with a 6% match. If you get a 100% match it seems like if you have to withdraw money right away, getting the 100% match and paying the 10% penalty is still a better play than leaving the 6% on the table.

may 13, 2025, 5:55 pm • 2 0 • view
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adamrch.bsky.social @adamrch.bsky.social

this is 100% correct and I know people who got their match by contributing after tax (kinda like mega backdoor roth) did an in-service distribution (can continue to contribute) got their match and used their contribution to pay off their student loans.

may 13, 2025, 9:40 pm • 2 0 • view
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jacksonarkland.bsky.social @jacksonarkland.bsky.social

To be fair, I never gave that advice and always just emphasized how great a benefit the match was and encouraged people to contribute whatever they could.

may 13, 2025, 5:57 pm • 1 0 • view
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macaroni654.bsky.social @macaroni654.bsky.social

This is not unusual and substantially cheaper than a home equity loan. A 30% turnover rate sounds like a management problem given ave rate in Sptnbrg.

may 13, 2025, 7:32 pm • 3 1 • view
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cracraft @cracraft.bsky.social

why is this bad

may 13, 2025, 4:46 pm • 1 0 • view
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Doctor Memory @blank.org

You're turning a source of income via compounding interest into a loan where you pay interest to someone else, and you're doing it at the worst possible time for the money to grow (20-30 years before retirement).

may 13, 2025, 4:50 pm • 5 0 • view
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Tyler Britten @tyler.britten.us

This is not correct- if you borrow from your 401k, you miss out on gains, but you pay the interest to yourself. The big problem is if you change/lose your job you have the pay the balance immediately or you're subject to early withdrawal penalties and taxes

may 13, 2025, 4:52 pm • 8 0 • view
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Doctor Memory @blank.org

D'oh, fair cop -- it'd been so long since I looked up the loan terms on my 401k that I'd genuinely forgotten that the servicer didn't keep the interest. Still a terrible idea!

may 13, 2025, 5:38 pm • 2 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

Yeah sorry I should have been more specific. You’re still paying interest but it’s opportunity cost not actual $.

may 13, 2025, 4:53 pm • 9 0 • view
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Tyler Britten @tyler.britten.us

Yeah its good most plans cap loans at 50% of the balance too

may 13, 2025, 5:01 pm • 2 0 • view
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ErikT @erik45824291.bsky.social

Depends on the 401k plan, mine at work gives you a year to replay any loan if you leave the company.

may 13, 2025, 5:01 pm • 1 0 • view
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Chief of Staff of the Joshua Chamberlain Clone Army @stevenlandgraf.com

It's as if you owned a company where you got impatient waiting for your best salesmen (stocks) to close some big deals (earn a long-term return), so you instead... re-assigned them to renovate your bathroom now.

may 13, 2025, 4:55 pm • 2 0 • view
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CALLSIGN: SCUTTLEBUTT @fack.bsky.social

borrowing against your 401k to renovate your house while housing is at ATHs?

may 13, 2025, 4:51 pm • 1 0 • view
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CALLSIGN: SCUTTLEBUTT @fack.bsky.social

it's a lose-lose if you intend to use either of those assets to fund your retirement lol.

may 13, 2025, 4:52 pm • 1 0 • view
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Paul "Hot City Summer” Fisher @paulfish.bsky.social

Using the money that is meant to fund retirement for current house is like not saving for retirement at all. Its pre-2008 cash out refinance behavior.

may 13, 2025, 4:49 pm • 5 0 • view
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Bote Man @boteball.bsky.social

The "save until it hurts" philosophy sounds good until it isn't. If that future never comes (e.g. you die) or gets destroyed by a reckless Federal gummint, you get the hurting without the expected payoff down the road.

may 13, 2025, 5:36 pm • 0 0 • view
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Paul "Hot City Summer” Fisher @paulfish.bsky.social

While over-saving is possible, we know people tend to error in the other direction. Someone borrowing against a 401k for home renovation is very likely setting themselves out for years of poverty or relying on the charity of others. Not prudently balancing lifetime expenses.

may 13, 2025, 5:56 pm • 2 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

Borrowing from your 401k is swapping the biggest advantage individual investors have (steady compounding over long time horizons) for interest payments. It’s incredibly costly to long-term net worth and can be very costly from a tax perspective.

may 13, 2025, 4:49 pm • 17 0 • view
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PPP Grifter @pppgrifter.bsky.social

Hold on George, if I renovate my house then it’s worth more and I can then leverage my home equity to pay off my credit cards. Win win baby

may 13, 2025, 5:02 pm • 8 0 • view
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Muggsy Pogues @circusmaximus.bsky.social

No snark, but most 401k plans have hardship provisions and that typically does not include home renos and car buying. Even under a hardship provision (health, for example), you have to pay back the amount borrowed before you can resume participation. I'm sure it's plan specific, but this is wild.

may 13, 2025, 5:32 pm • 4 0 • view
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Pete Sastone @kbuts.bsky.social

I'm sure some of verb's employees have borrowed against their 401k to buy a car though

may 13, 2025, 5:34 pm • 3 0 • view
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Muggsy Pogues @circusmaximus.bsky.social

Or a forklift for home use.

may 13, 2025, 5:38 pm • 2 0 • view
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Davis X. Machina @ogdavisxmachina.bsky.social

The forklift is to use as a lift to work on the side-by-side.

may 13, 2025, 5:59 pm • 2 0 • view
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WndlB @wndlb.bsky.social

Aren't you describing withdrawals rather than borrowing against the balance?

may 13, 2025, 6:51 pm • 1 0 • view
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Muggsy Pogues @circusmaximus.bsky.social

I am, but our provisions limit borrowing against the 401k as well...it doesn't allow for non-recourse financing. Should have made that distinction.

may 13, 2025, 7:29 pm • 1 0 • view
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Osobamask @wjtarter.bsky.social

I think this is distressingly common, I know multiple people that do/have done this

may 13, 2025, 4:48 pm • 1 0 • view
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garyndunbar.bsky.social @garyndunbar.bsky.social

'No one takes our 401k match and the people who do borrow against it.' This guy sounds like he just doesn't like his employees.

may 13, 2025, 6:45 pm • 2 0 • view
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ErikT @erik45824291.bsky.social

Surprised the match doesn’t have a vesting period before you can use it for a loan.

may 13, 2025, 4:50 pm • 5 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

I’m not an expert on the details of 401k plans but many don’t have long vesting for non-executive compensation tiers.

may 13, 2025, 4:52 pm • 4 0 • view
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Muggsy Pogues @circusmaximus.bsky.social

We have a fairly boilerplate plan with Principal, you are 100% vested on day one for your elective deferral. Matching funds are fully vested at 6 years or early/full retirement age attainment.

may 13, 2025, 5:37 pm • 3 0 • view
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Lukas Neville @lukasneville.com

dudes will just loudly shout stuff at an airport that they'd normally require a data room with nuclear NDAs for

may 13, 2025, 4:50 pm • 2 0 • view
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Pamela Porter @pamelaporter.bsky.social

If only 5% took advantage of a 6% match I'm guessing they're paid so little they can't afford to save anything even with the match incentive. People leaving his company for .50 more screams "I barely pay enough to cover the rent," and a labor force driving vehicles patched together with duct tape.

may 13, 2025, 5:03 pm • 3 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

Disagree knowing what I do about Spartanburg. bsky.app/profile/pear...

may 13, 2025, 5:07 pm • 4 0 • view
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Pamela Porter @pamelaporter.bsky.social

Oh, my bad. I was just reliving/conflating an unfortunate past employment experience. True story, a past boss of mine inherited the family business. A common remark he made to the laborers was "If you don't like it here, inherit your own company."

may 13, 2025, 5:55 pm • 3 0 • view
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George Pearkes @peark.es

Jfc

may 13, 2025, 6:05 pm • 4 0 • view
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new bluesky user @foreverwario.bsky.social

I'm very skeptical of the "We need financial literacy classes" thing, but,

may 13, 2025, 8:22 pm • 0 0 • view
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expedition 60 prospect @swolecialism.bsky.social

yeah, 30% turnover means wage is too low

may 13, 2025, 5:44 pm • 40 1 • view
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Jerry-ATX @jda5id.com

"We've tried everything for retention*" Willing to bet that if this dude looked at the fully loaded cost of his high turnover it would be far higher than the aggregate wage increase it would take to drop the quits significantly.

may 13, 2025, 5:47 pm • 3 0 • view
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Flying Mezerkis @bananapantz.bsky.social

“I can’t get good help” Uh huh

may 13, 2025, 5:46 pm • 2 0 • view
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proud rebel scum ⚛️ @proudrebelscum.bsky.social

☝️yup☝️

may 13, 2025, 5:45 pm • 0 0 • view
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Dag. @3fecta.bsky.social

50 cents an hour or $1,000 a year is not going to move somebody making $21-25 an hour if it's a good employer especially.

may 13, 2025, 5:46 pm • 4 0 • view
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🌻aksfjh👖 @db-user.bsky.social

sounds to me, based on this anecdote as well, that he's primarily employing lower end workers, incl. many that just need some extra cash for living standards or big expenses nobody that plans to be at that job in 3 years, if not 1

may 13, 2025, 5:49 pm • 4 0 • view
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Richard J @preachypreach.bsky.social

This is remarkably like the conversation I had in my brief experience of South Asian SSCs behind the scenes a decade or so ago -staff turnover there was immense for precisely this reason.

may 13, 2025, 5:46 pm • 0 0 • view
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expedition 60 prospect @swolecialism.bsky.social

it might legit be as much as he can pay and maintain profitability, but that just means he needs to go looking for more efficiencies. but the wage is just too low. he's wasting a lot of time and money on training and onboarding!

may 13, 2025, 5:46 pm • 24 0 • view
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Lazear @lazear.bsky.social

The .50 cent an hour thing is the big warning sign there. Making an extra $4 a shift really shouldn't be enough to pull someone away.

may 13, 2025, 5:49 pm • 25 0 • view
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The Next Day @incompetusrex.bsky.social

But I’m told by the Secretary of Commerce that people yearn for the assembly line.

may 13, 2025, 6:00 pm • 3 0 • view
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Lazear @lazear.bsky.social

The children, they yearn for an OSHAless world.

may 13, 2025, 6:06 pm • 3 0 • view
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expedition 60 prospect @swolecialism.bsky.social

yeah, if $4/shift is enough, you're not paying for retention. and in manufacturing paying for retention is smart. you eat a lot of training overhead and your rework and accident rate is much higher if you're constantly churning

may 13, 2025, 5:51 pm • 23 0 • view
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David Lovett @davidevanlovett.bsky.social

hell I'd argue paying for retention is extremely undervalued in most businesses; even swapping SWEs has massive spin up time that's essentially lighting money on fire and that's a very minimal hardware training task, pure process

may 13, 2025, 5:56 pm • 7 0 • view
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The Birds The Turtles and The Bees @turtlebee.bsky.social

I'd say swapping SWEs is one of the more expensive job transfers. Can't think of many jobs that is going to require more incredibly domain specific knowledge.

may 13, 2025, 6:45 pm • 1 0 • view
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Lazear @lazear.bsky.social

Most businesses have too much MBA brain, and the idea of paying a little more upfront but saving a fortune on the backend confuses them (said as a UX designer whose work could save companies millions but is usually brought in to fix already built products costing triple the original budget).

may 13, 2025, 6:08 pm • 8 0 • view
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Lazear @lazear.bsky.social

It might be a warning sign the work environment is toxic because even a minor pay raise is worth getting away from that type of environment, but if that's the case he's got bigger issues than just being a cheapskate.

may 13, 2025, 5:54 pm • 10 0 • view
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mutantmell @mutantmell.net

I’d keep an eye out for other warning signs, like taking an airplane conversation as an opportunity to complain about their workforce to a random stranger.

may 13, 2025, 5:56 pm • 5 0 • view
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expedition 60 prospect @swolecialism.bsky.social

that said, it takes a pretty substantial wage premium to retain in factory work in america.

may 13, 2025, 5:53 pm • 10 0 • view