Being paid less than what I was promised [closed]

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I gave an interview in a company and there they claimed that we would give you what you demand with 10% increment every 6 months. I agreed and joined the company as a tech lead. It has been 2 weeks now and I have been given a draft of a would be contract in which I am being paid 25% less with 10% increment per year.



The CEO iterated the salary as Base Gross Salary when I inquired about the salary which is clearly hocus pocus so what should I reply with?



Update 1



I am in Pakistan, here laws don't matter much. I have signed an offer letter which mentions everything correctly. I did an email to the CEO yesterday mentioning it and haven't heard from him since.



The probation period is 3 months so actually its far from. If I do resign, will there be a negative effect on my career or should I just hide this fact in other job interviews?



Update 2



Well the CEO agreed to better terms than previously agreed upon after an intense back and forth of emails and many misunderstandings. Well at the end, a face to face meeting was all that was necessary when I gave away a hint that I'll be quitting the same day if he didn't provide a plausible reason for this (Thanks Kilisi).







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closed as off-topic by Jim G., gnat, jimm101, Chris E, paparazzo Mar 24 '16 at 16:57


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking advice on company-specific regulations, agreements, or policies should be directed to your manager or HR department. Questions that address only a specific company or position are of limited use to future visitors. Questions seeking legal advice should be directed to legal professionals. For more information, click here." – Jim G., jimm101, Chris E
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 2




    @JaneS In my country, contracts are signed after probation period expires as a standard practice. Before that an offer letter is given and signed. Mine contained the values presented in the interview.
    – Umair Ahmed
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:30







  • 1




    Seems open ended. Where is this? Was 2 weeks the probationary period? Do you have anything from the interview period in writing that would indicate this pay scale? Sounds like you either got tricked or didn't read the fine print. Nevertheless, it's only been 2 weeks...and your pay scale is adjusting...is this an industry norm?
    – B1313
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:45






  • 1




    if you don't have a written contract signed by you and the employer representative, showing your gross or net salary per month or per year, you can do one of two things : 1. accept the status quo and keep working as usual; 2. Pack up and leave. You do not have any other leverage unfortunately.
    – MelBurslan
    Mar 24 '16 at 4:27






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How should I properly approach my boss if I'm feeling underpaid?
    – gnat
    Mar 24 '16 at 10:45






  • 1




    If you actually got 10% every 6 months, then they would be trying to get rid of you after a few years when they realised how expensive that became. 10% per 6 months compounded up represents a huge wage inflation - around 6.7x your starting salary after 10 years, 45x your starting salary after 20 years.
    – Simon B
    Mar 24 '16 at 13:50
















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I gave an interview in a company and there they claimed that we would give you what you demand with 10% increment every 6 months. I agreed and joined the company as a tech lead. It has been 2 weeks now and I have been given a draft of a would be contract in which I am being paid 25% less with 10% increment per year.



The CEO iterated the salary as Base Gross Salary when I inquired about the salary which is clearly hocus pocus so what should I reply with?



Update 1



I am in Pakistan, here laws don't matter much. I have signed an offer letter which mentions everything correctly. I did an email to the CEO yesterday mentioning it and haven't heard from him since.



The probation period is 3 months so actually its far from. If I do resign, will there be a negative effect on my career or should I just hide this fact in other job interviews?



Update 2



Well the CEO agreed to better terms than previously agreed upon after an intense back and forth of emails and many misunderstandings. Well at the end, a face to face meeting was all that was necessary when I gave away a hint that I'll be quitting the same day if he didn't provide a plausible reason for this (Thanks Kilisi).







share|improve this question













closed as off-topic by Jim G., gnat, jimm101, Chris E, paparazzo Mar 24 '16 at 16:57


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking advice on company-specific regulations, agreements, or policies should be directed to your manager or HR department. Questions that address only a specific company or position are of limited use to future visitors. Questions seeking legal advice should be directed to legal professionals. For more information, click here." – Jim G., jimm101, Chris E
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 2




    @JaneS In my country, contracts are signed after probation period expires as a standard practice. Before that an offer letter is given and signed. Mine contained the values presented in the interview.
    – Umair Ahmed
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:30







  • 1




    Seems open ended. Where is this? Was 2 weeks the probationary period? Do you have anything from the interview period in writing that would indicate this pay scale? Sounds like you either got tricked or didn't read the fine print. Nevertheless, it's only been 2 weeks...and your pay scale is adjusting...is this an industry norm?
    – B1313
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:45






  • 1




    if you don't have a written contract signed by you and the employer representative, showing your gross or net salary per month or per year, you can do one of two things : 1. accept the status quo and keep working as usual; 2. Pack up and leave. You do not have any other leverage unfortunately.
    – MelBurslan
    Mar 24 '16 at 4:27






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How should I properly approach my boss if I'm feeling underpaid?
    – gnat
    Mar 24 '16 at 10:45






  • 1




    If you actually got 10% every 6 months, then they would be trying to get rid of you after a few years when they realised how expensive that became. 10% per 6 months compounded up represents a huge wage inflation - around 6.7x your starting salary after 10 years, 45x your starting salary after 20 years.
    – Simon B
    Mar 24 '16 at 13:50












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I gave an interview in a company and there they claimed that we would give you what you demand with 10% increment every 6 months. I agreed and joined the company as a tech lead. It has been 2 weeks now and I have been given a draft of a would be contract in which I am being paid 25% less with 10% increment per year.



The CEO iterated the salary as Base Gross Salary when I inquired about the salary which is clearly hocus pocus so what should I reply with?



Update 1



I am in Pakistan, here laws don't matter much. I have signed an offer letter which mentions everything correctly. I did an email to the CEO yesterday mentioning it and haven't heard from him since.



The probation period is 3 months so actually its far from. If I do resign, will there be a negative effect on my career or should I just hide this fact in other job interviews?



Update 2



Well the CEO agreed to better terms than previously agreed upon after an intense back and forth of emails and many misunderstandings. Well at the end, a face to face meeting was all that was necessary when I gave away a hint that I'll be quitting the same day if he didn't provide a plausible reason for this (Thanks Kilisi).







share|improve this question













I gave an interview in a company and there they claimed that we would give you what you demand with 10% increment every 6 months. I agreed and joined the company as a tech lead. It has been 2 weeks now and I have been given a draft of a would be contract in which I am being paid 25% less with 10% increment per year.



The CEO iterated the salary as Base Gross Salary when I inquired about the salary which is clearly hocus pocus so what should I reply with?



Update 1



I am in Pakistan, here laws don't matter much. I have signed an offer letter which mentions everything correctly. I did an email to the CEO yesterday mentioning it and haven't heard from him since.



The probation period is 3 months so actually its far from. If I do resign, will there be a negative effect on my career or should I just hide this fact in other job interviews?



Update 2



Well the CEO agreed to better terms than previously agreed upon after an intense back and forth of emails and many misunderstandings. Well at the end, a face to face meeting was all that was necessary when I gave away a hint that I'll be quitting the same day if he didn't provide a plausible reason for this (Thanks Kilisi).









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 27 '16 at 4:06
























asked Mar 24 '16 at 1:58









Umair Ahmed

1587




1587




closed as off-topic by Jim G., gnat, jimm101, Chris E, paparazzo Mar 24 '16 at 16:57


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking advice on company-specific regulations, agreements, or policies should be directed to your manager or HR department. Questions that address only a specific company or position are of limited use to future visitors. Questions seeking legal advice should be directed to legal professionals. For more information, click here." – Jim G., jimm101, Chris E
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Jim G., gnat, jimm101, Chris E, paparazzo Mar 24 '16 at 16:57


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking advice on company-specific regulations, agreements, or policies should be directed to your manager or HR department. Questions that address only a specific company or position are of limited use to future visitors. Questions seeking legal advice should be directed to legal professionals. For more information, click here." – Jim G., jimm101, Chris E
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 2




    @JaneS In my country, contracts are signed after probation period expires as a standard practice. Before that an offer letter is given and signed. Mine contained the values presented in the interview.
    – Umair Ahmed
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:30







  • 1




    Seems open ended. Where is this? Was 2 weeks the probationary period? Do you have anything from the interview period in writing that would indicate this pay scale? Sounds like you either got tricked or didn't read the fine print. Nevertheless, it's only been 2 weeks...and your pay scale is adjusting...is this an industry norm?
    – B1313
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:45






  • 1




    if you don't have a written contract signed by you and the employer representative, showing your gross or net salary per month or per year, you can do one of two things : 1. accept the status quo and keep working as usual; 2. Pack up and leave. You do not have any other leverage unfortunately.
    – MelBurslan
    Mar 24 '16 at 4:27






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How should I properly approach my boss if I'm feeling underpaid?
    – gnat
    Mar 24 '16 at 10:45






  • 1




    If you actually got 10% every 6 months, then they would be trying to get rid of you after a few years when they realised how expensive that became. 10% per 6 months compounded up represents a huge wage inflation - around 6.7x your starting salary after 10 years, 45x your starting salary after 20 years.
    – Simon B
    Mar 24 '16 at 13:50












  • 2




    @JaneS In my country, contracts are signed after probation period expires as a standard practice. Before that an offer letter is given and signed. Mine contained the values presented in the interview.
    – Umair Ahmed
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:30







  • 1




    Seems open ended. Where is this? Was 2 weeks the probationary period? Do you have anything from the interview period in writing that would indicate this pay scale? Sounds like you either got tricked or didn't read the fine print. Nevertheless, it's only been 2 weeks...and your pay scale is adjusting...is this an industry norm?
    – B1313
    Mar 24 '16 at 2:45






  • 1




    if you don't have a written contract signed by you and the employer representative, showing your gross or net salary per month or per year, you can do one of two things : 1. accept the status quo and keep working as usual; 2. Pack up and leave. You do not have any other leverage unfortunately.
    – MelBurslan
    Mar 24 '16 at 4:27






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How should I properly approach my boss if I'm feeling underpaid?
    – gnat
    Mar 24 '16 at 10:45






  • 1




    If you actually got 10% every 6 months, then they would be trying to get rid of you after a few years when they realised how expensive that became. 10% per 6 months compounded up represents a huge wage inflation - around 6.7x your starting salary after 10 years, 45x your starting salary after 20 years.
    – Simon B
    Mar 24 '16 at 13:50







2




2




@JaneS In my country, contracts are signed after probation period expires as a standard practice. Before that an offer letter is given and signed. Mine contained the values presented in the interview.
– Umair Ahmed
Mar 24 '16 at 2:30





@JaneS In my country, contracts are signed after probation period expires as a standard practice. Before that an offer letter is given and signed. Mine contained the values presented in the interview.
– Umair Ahmed
Mar 24 '16 at 2:30





1




1




Seems open ended. Where is this? Was 2 weeks the probationary period? Do you have anything from the interview period in writing that would indicate this pay scale? Sounds like you either got tricked or didn't read the fine print. Nevertheless, it's only been 2 weeks...and your pay scale is adjusting...is this an industry norm?
– B1313
Mar 24 '16 at 2:45




Seems open ended. Where is this? Was 2 weeks the probationary period? Do you have anything from the interview period in writing that would indicate this pay scale? Sounds like you either got tricked or didn't read the fine print. Nevertheless, it's only been 2 weeks...and your pay scale is adjusting...is this an industry norm?
– B1313
Mar 24 '16 at 2:45




1




1




if you don't have a written contract signed by you and the employer representative, showing your gross or net salary per month or per year, you can do one of two things : 1. accept the status quo and keep working as usual; 2. Pack up and leave. You do not have any other leverage unfortunately.
– MelBurslan
Mar 24 '16 at 4:27




if you don't have a written contract signed by you and the employer representative, showing your gross or net salary per month or per year, you can do one of two things : 1. accept the status quo and keep working as usual; 2. Pack up and leave. You do not have any other leverage unfortunately.
– MelBurslan
Mar 24 '16 at 4:27




1




1




Possible duplicate of How should I properly approach my boss if I'm feeling underpaid?
– gnat
Mar 24 '16 at 10:45




Possible duplicate of How should I properly approach my boss if I'm feeling underpaid?
– gnat
Mar 24 '16 at 10:45




1




1




If you actually got 10% every 6 months, then they would be trying to get rid of you after a few years when they realised how expensive that became. 10% per 6 months compounded up represents a huge wage inflation - around 6.7x your starting salary after 10 years, 45x your starting salary after 20 years.
– Simon B
Mar 24 '16 at 13:50




If you actually got 10% every 6 months, then they would be trying to get rid of you after a few years when they realised how expensive that became. 10% per 6 months compounded up represents a huge wage inflation - around 6.7x your starting salary after 10 years, 45x your starting salary after 20 years.
– Simon B
Mar 24 '16 at 13:50










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
8
down vote



accepted










I think you should get out while you can, you don't seem to have any leverage to force the employer.



One thing about countries where you have little power in employment, is that this sort of issue doesn't usually impact on other job prospects. In any case you should seriously think about cutting your losses now. At the very least a resignation will either lead to a better resolution, or get you out where you can look for a better employer.






share|improve this answer




























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    8
    down vote



    accepted










    I think you should get out while you can, you don't seem to have any leverage to force the employer.



    One thing about countries where you have little power in employment, is that this sort of issue doesn't usually impact on other job prospects. In any case you should seriously think about cutting your losses now. At the very least a resignation will either lead to a better resolution, or get you out where you can look for a better employer.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      8
      down vote



      accepted










      I think you should get out while you can, you don't seem to have any leverage to force the employer.



      One thing about countries where you have little power in employment, is that this sort of issue doesn't usually impact on other job prospects. In any case you should seriously think about cutting your losses now. At the very least a resignation will either lead to a better resolution, or get you out where you can look for a better employer.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        8
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        8
        down vote



        accepted






        I think you should get out while you can, you don't seem to have any leverage to force the employer.



        One thing about countries where you have little power in employment, is that this sort of issue doesn't usually impact on other job prospects. In any case you should seriously think about cutting your losses now. At the very least a resignation will either lead to a better resolution, or get you out where you can look for a better employer.






        share|improve this answer













        I think you should get out while you can, you don't seem to have any leverage to force the employer.



        One thing about countries where you have little power in employment, is that this sort of issue doesn't usually impact on other job prospects. In any case you should seriously think about cutting your losses now. At the very least a resignation will either lead to a better resolution, or get you out where you can look for a better employer.







        share|improve this answer













        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer











        answered Mar 24 '16 at 9:32









        Kilisi

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        94.5k50216376












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