Opinion

Increasingly more organizations are compensating job candidates for interviews, yay!

Written by Vu Le

Hi everyone, remember a few years ago when most organizations didn’t list salary numbers in job postings, often instead putting meaningless stuff like “competitive salary,” and many of us fought against it? Our rabble-rousing worked, and now, I’m surprised when I see any job posting that DOESN’T disclose the salary, and ones that require salary history are very rare (and thoroughly embarrassing). Let’s all pat ourselves on the back and take a short nap to celebrate.

When you get up, let’s tackle another equity practice that should become standard in hiring: Paying job candidates for the time they spend interviewing and doing special assignments. I wrote about this earlier: “It’s time we pay interview-stage job applicants for their time.”

Paying job candidates when they reach the interview stage is equitable for several reasons, including:

·       There are tons of costs that job candidates must absorb, including taking time off from work and paying for childcare, transportation, professional clothing, hair care, and other expenses.

·       People who are doing the hiring work are compensated, while job candidates are expected to provide free labor

·       Like everything else, the issue disproportionately negatively affects people of color, women, disabled people, and other people from marginalized communities.

It’s been five years since I wrote that article, and, prompted by a friend who’s been trying to convince a board to pay job candidates for interviews, I asked colleagues for updates on who has been adopting this practice. The responses gave me hope. Lots of organizations are doing this! Here’s a sample of things colleagues said: 

·       “My organization, Grow Food Northampton, pays candidates for their time interviewing (second interview after a brief screening interview)”

·       “Funders for LGBTQ Issues paid me (fairly, even generously!) for my 3rd interview work assignment/presentation several years ago.”

Read full article here

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About the author

Vu Le

Vu Le (“voo lay”) is a writer, speaker, vegan, Pisces, and the former Executive Director of RVC, a nonprofit in Seattle that promotes social justice by developing leaders of color, strengthening organizations led by communities of color, and fostering collaboration between diverse communities.

Vu’s passion to make the world better, combined with a low score on the Law School Admission Test, drove him into the field of nonprofit work, where he learned that we should take the work seriously, but not ourselves. There’s tons of humor in the nonprofit world, and someone needs to document it. He is going to do that, with the hope that one day, a TV producer will see how cool and interesting our field is and make a show about nonprofit work, featuring attractive actors attending strategic planning meetings and filing 990 tax forms.

Known for his no-BS approach, irreverent sense of humor, and love of unicorns, Vu has been featured in dozens, if not hundreds, of his own blog posts at NonprofitAF.com.