Fewer Women Than Men Asked For Raises During COVID-19, Especially in Marketing [New Research]

June 08, 2021

By [email protected] (Pamela Bump)

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Asking for a raise or promotion can be scary, especially when your company is going through shifts related to world events.

In early 2021, Fishbowl conducted a survey that shed some light on the gender wage gap, which continued if not grew in 2020.

The survey of nearly 17,000 professionals revealed that 63% of respondents have avoided asking for a raise following “changes related to the pandemic.”

When splitting the whopping number of respondents by gender, 42.4% of them were women, while just 31.79% were men.

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When diving into the industries that saw the least raise or promotion requests, marketing was at the top of the list. About 54.5% of marketing professionals did not ask for a raise or promotion in the last year due to the pandemic.

While some might be shocked by this data, many aren’t. After all, marketing departments have been known to get the least budget, smaller headcounts, and less overall investments.

Meanwhile, women have been seen to negotiate less and apply for lower-level roles than men with the same experience. In a recent LinkedIn post, Femme Pallette CEO Lucy Nuemanova shed more light on why women generally don’t negotiate as often as men.

“Many women avoid having these conversations because they don’t want to be perceived as ungrateful, or greedy, or needy by management, and therefore many times women tend to wait to be rewarded,” Nuemanova explained.

If you’re a woman in the marketing world — or any industry for that matter, this data and insight from other female professionals might have you wondering, “When is it appropriate to ask for a raise or promotion?”

Below, I’ve listed a few times people commonly ask for or consider asking for a raise or promotion.

When You Should Ask for a Raise or Promotion

1. When the scope of your role grows or shifts.

In the early days of holding a role, your work might closely mirror the tasks listed on the job posting you applied to. But, as you gain credibility and visibility at your company, you might also gain more responsibilities that greatly expand on your original day-to-day role.

“Many people are wearing more hats now and having to learn new skills. All of these are valid grounds for asking for a raise and should form the basis of your argument when you make your pitch,” career advisor Gaurav Sharma said in a recent interview.

For example, while being asked to report on your marketing projects might be a natural progression of your role and not worthy of asking for a raise, taking on direct reports when your original role didn’t involve management, or being asked to run a new, time-consuming marketing initiative for your company could signify a significant shift in your duties and work-life that merits a change in title or compensation.

2. When you spend a lot more time at work than …read more

Source:: HubSpot Blog

      

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