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It's so annoying when jobs that advertise, "Entry-level" position, "we train you", etc. then when you get phone interview they ask for previous experience/jobs and how this position related to that and bla bla
Seriously, it says you will train us and it's a training program or entry-level position, why care about previous work experience?! I have many years of retail sales experience, I guess not enough!
I also noticed more and more full-time jobs are paid hourly; so annoying! Hourly paid sounds like for minimum wage/no degree jobs!
They care because it gives an idea of how steep the learning and training curve will be, rather astonishing that you don't recognize that.
Also, you can blame wage/hour lawsuits for the proliferation of hourly pay positions instead of salary. Much easier to consider almost every position non-exempt and treat accordingly than be dragged into court over misclassification or wage lawsuits.
They care because it gives an idea of how steep the learning and training curve will be, rather astonishing that you don't recognize that.
Also, you can blame wage/hour lawsuits for the proliferation of hourly pay positions instead of salary. Much easier to consider almost every position non-exempt and treat accordingly than be dragged into court over misclassification or wage lawsuits.
Really? Blame W&H because companies could not abide by rather simple rules? Blame W&H because companies were trying to pull one over on their employees playing the exempt/non-exempt game?
Also, you can blame wage/hour lawsuits for the proliferation of hourly pay positions instead of salary. Much easier to consider almost every position non-exempt and treat accordingly than be dragged into court over misclassification or wage lawsuits.
People only file lawsuits when the accused party, based on their understanding, isn't abiding by the law.
Folks shouldn't be blamed or castrated because they're using the judicial system for the purpose it serves (ensuring that law & order is maintained).
Really? Blame W&H because companies could not abide by rather simple rules? Blame W&H because companies were trying to pull one over on their employees playing the exempt/non-exempt game?
That wasn't the OP's complaint. Please read it again - they were complaining that they felt that hourly is for minimum wage/no degree jobs. California was one of the first states that started reinterpreting the rules and has put much more pressure on employers to reclassify to stay in compliance.
So, yes, blame the lawsuits relative to the OP's complaint. I those lawsuits weren't commonplace, you'd still have "salary" jobs paying below minimum wage or in roles that should be non-exempt. You simply read something into my post - unless you can find and point out where I said W&H lawsuits were a bad thing?
That wasn't the OP's complaint. Please read it again - they were complaining that they felt that hourly is for minimum wage/no degree jobs. California was one of the first states that started reinterpreting the rules and has put much more pressure on employers to reclassify to stay in compliance.
So, yes, blame the lawsuits relative to the OP's complaint. I those lawsuits weren't commonplace, you'd still have "salary" jobs paying below minimum wage or in roles that should be non-exempt. You simply read something into my post - unless you can find and point out where I said W&H lawsuits were a bad thing?
Ok, my bad, I was reading too much into your post. My apologies. As the poster above stated, it just read like you were blaming the people who were filing the suits.
It's so annoying when jobs that advertise, "Entry-level" position, "we train you", etc. then when you get phone interview they ask for previous experience/jobs and how this position related to that and bla bla
Seriously, it says you will train us and it's a training program or entry-level position, why care about previous work experience?! I have many years of retail sales experience, I guess not enough!
I also noticed more and more full-time jobs are paid hourly; so annoying! Hourly paid sounds like for minimum wage/no degree jobs!
I disagree about hourly pay. When you get paid by the hour, you qualify for OT. My wife just took a full time IT position that was originally advertised as salaried. By the time she accepted the position the parent company changed it to an hourly job. They just took the yearly salary and converted it to an hourly rate. Now she gets OT so actually she will be earning more.
Want some real advice? Learn the skills needed, create a job on your resume, and then apply. It's only lying when you can't back up the skills you listed. If you wont, someone else will.
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