Salary Survey: Nearing the Boiling Point
IT workers simmer over third year of lackluster raises, but they're not
ready to blow -- yet.

News Story by Stacy Collett

OCTOBER 25, 2004 (COMPUTERWORLD) -  After working at a large Midwestern
manufacturing company for 22 years, a senior IT design analyst
understood that times were tough for her firm, so she didn't complain
about the 2% raise she got in 2003. But this year her empathy turned to
irritation when her performance improved but her salary didn't.
"When you consider that I get an above-average review and get just a 3%
raise [this year] -- it doesn't make up for the crappy year before
that," she says. "They are assuming that I'm going to keep working hard
anyway. But there's no carrot. The carrot's gone."

She's not alone. For the third year in a row, IT workers across the
board received only modest raises -- their pay increased by an average
of just 3% in 2004, according to Computerworld's 18th Annual Salary
Survey, which studied the compensation and bonuses of 9,854 IT workers.

Although the average IT pay raise is slightly higher than last year's
figure of 2.8%, it's still lower than the national average of 4% that
the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports for all U.S. workers. While the
majority of respondents (65%) said their 2004 base salary increased from
one year ago, 35% experienced either no change in salary or had their
pay cut. Meanwhile bonuses are back -- but up only 1% on average. Most
IT workers (70%) said they expect no change in their 2004 bonus
compensation from one year ago.

What's more, on-the-job stress is at an all-time high, according to the
survey. Some 88% of respondents reported feeling stress because of
budget cuts and increased workloads, up from 82% last year. One quarter
of IT workers surveyed said they're dissatisfied with their pay when
considering all their job responsibilities, while another 24% reported
that they're neither satisfied nor dissatisfied with their pay.

Have IT employees reached the boiling point when it comes to pay? Not
yet, survey takers said, but they're getting close.

full:
<http://www.computerworld.com/careertopics/careers/story/0,,96850,00.html>

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