The adage, “Loose lips sink ships,” kept people from spreading rumors or unhappy truths about things that could harm morale or jeopardize safety during World War II. In the decades since, the sentiment has taken hold in our workplace cultures, limiting transparency and, especially, making it taboo to share or discuss pay with anyone—at least until now. Although some in older generations are still uncomfortable talking about compensation, the trend is shifting strongly to cultures of transparency.
Rather than toe the line, today’s employees demand to know more about everything. They want to know details about their companies so they can understand the purpose, challenges, and successes as well as the whys and hows of decision-making. Employees want to feel connection, build relationships, and be considered trusted partners with leadership.
Pushed by employee demands, pressure from boards and shareholders, and by new state and local laws popping up throughout the country, companies are increasingly becoming more transparent, even about pay. And they’re benefiting greatly by loosening up.
Seventeen percent of companies are now disclosing pay range information, even in locations where it's not required by state or local laws, according to a new WTW survey. At least 62 percent of employers are planning to disclose or considering disclosing pay rate information in the future. Those that follow through will have a better chance of hiring the 60 percent of Americans who say they would consider switching to a company offering more pay transparency, according to Forbes.
Transparency is not simply about leaders being more forthcoming with company information. It’s more about willingly and purposefully communicating everything that interests, inspires, motivates, and supports everyone on your team. Effective leaders believe in transparency because it helps engage and align their people, promotes inclusivity, and supports autonomy in making decisions. Transparency creates openness between leaders and employees and among working groups and colleagues.
Transparency is a philosophy that embraces the free sharing of information, managing expectations, setting boundaries, and providing feedback. It is both internal and external, involving everyone in the organization as well as communications with candidates, customers, and the public. Building a transparent workplace environment takes consistent focus and ongoing intention.
Being transparent costs nothing and trickles through your organization to make you more successful by increasing productivity, which results in better overall performance. More specifically, transparency:
You gain additional benefits when transparency includes information about salaries and benefits. Openness about compensation:
Pay transparency is quickly becoming the norm. It flows naturally in cultures built around openness and trust. It can range from only publishing salary ranges internally to posting every individual employee’s compensation package publicly. Although some organizations fear that disclosing information about pay could harm their cultures, create hiring challenges, and unnecessarily increase staffing costs, these kinds of issues rarely occur when policies are well thought out.
Begin by asking employees how they feel about pay transparency. Then carefully define your philosophy and match your compensation disclosure policies to your cultural values and practices. Here are things to consider in the process:
A lack of overall transparency in a workplace culture, including openness around compensation, results in mistrust and dissatisfaction. People assume you must be hiding something. Here are things to build into your more transparent community:
As children, we’re taught that honesty is the best policy. We’re also taught that if you don’t have something nice to say, don’t say anything at all. Transparency is a complex concept for individuals and organizations. Companies that loosen lips in the right way learn the truth and benefit from the knowledge.