news

The Interview Question That Employers Should Stop Asking- Valutrics

Apply now to be an Entrepreneur 360™ company. Let us tell the world your success story.
Get Started »

During the interview process, the conversation of salary is unavoidable. But is it invasive for employers to ask candidates what their current salary is? Most Americans think so.

In a recent survey Related: 11 Interview Questions That Trip Everyone Up

While it’s been a mission for many today to fix the gender pay gap, it still has ways to go. Overall, more women (60 percent) than men (48 percent) believe that the question about current and past salaries should not be asked because they think it will determine starting pay salaries. And according to Glassdoor Economic Research, on average women in the U.S. earn 76 cents for every $1 that American men make. On top of the pay gap, women also do not negotiate pay as often as their male counterparts — in fact, 68 percent of women do not negotiate pay compared to 52 percent of men.

“Asking prior salary history questions can trigger unintended consequences and introduce bias into the hiring process that disadvantages women from day one,” Dawn Lyon, Glassdoor’s SVP of global corporate affairs, said in a press release.

Related: 3 Important Tactics for Job Interviews

However, the study goes beyond gender pay gap, further uncovering the preferences of job applicants when it comes to the onboarding process. Almost every person surveyed (98 percent) agreed that it would be helpful to see actual pay ranges in job listings. Because when it comes to jobs, a major part is about the money — in fact, a majority of survey takers (55 percent) would be willing to work for a company with a subpar reputation if it paid more than one with a good reputation.

Rose Leadem

Rose Leadem

Rose Leadem is an online editorial assistant at Entrepreneur Media Inc. 

Read more