Leaked Microsoft pay guidelines reveal salary, hiring bonus, and stock award ranges by level::The guidelines viewed by Insider show ranges for base pay, hiring bonuses, and annual stock awards but vary by role and location.

  • SamuelRJankis@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Microsoft’s pay guidelines for job offers:

    Level 70:

    Base pay: $231,700 to $361,500

    On-hire stock awards: $310,000 default to $1.2 million with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $945,000

    Level 69:

    Base pay: $202,400 to $316,000

    On-hire stock awards: $235,000 default to $1.1 million with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $750,000

    Level 68:

    Base pay: $186,200 to $291,000

    On-hire stock awards: $177,000 default to $1 million with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $490,600

    Level 67:

    Base pay: $171,600 to $258,200

    On-hire stock awards: $168,000 default to $700,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $336,000

    Level 66:

    Base pay: $157,300 to $236,300

    On-hire stock awards: $75,000 default to $600,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $160,000

    Level 65:

    Base pay: $144,600 to $216,600

    On-hire stock awards: $36,000 default to $300,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $90,000

    Level 64:

    Base pay: $125,000 to $187,700

    On-hire stock awards: $24,000 default to $250,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $60,000

    Level 63:

    Base pay: $113,900 to $171,500

    On-hire stock awards: $17,000 default to $200,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $44,000

    Level 62:

    Base pay: $103,700 to $156,400

    On-hire stock awards: $11,000 default to $125,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $32,000

    Level 61:

    Base pay: $92,600 to $138,100

    On-hire stock awards: $6,500 default to $75,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $24,000

    Level 60:

    Base pay: $83,500 to $125,000

    On-hire stock awards: $4,500 default to $50,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $16,000

    Level 59:

    Base pay: $74,400 to $110,800

    On-hire stock awards: $3,000 default to $30,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: $0 to $12,000

    Level 58:

    Base pay: $70,300 to $92,600

    On-hire stock awards: $2,500 default to $20,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

    Level 57:

    Base pay: $63,800 to $83,000

    On-hire stock awards: $1,500 default to $10,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

    Level 56:

    Base pay: $60,700 to $77,900

    On-hire stock awards: $1,500 default to $10,000 with approval

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

    Level 55:

    Base pay: $55,200 to $71,300

    On-hire stock awards: N/A

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

    Level 54:

    Base pay: $51,600 to $67,000

    On-hire stock awards: N/A

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

    Level 53:

    Base pay: $46,600 to $59,700

    On-hire stock awards: N/A

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

    Level 52:

    Base pay: $42,500 to $54,600

    On-hire stock awards: N/A

    Annual stock award range: “By career stage”

  • MrFlamey@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    so you get hired at level 70 and get 310k of stock? Is this normal for large tech companies? Do you have to sign some kind of blood oath to Bill Gates current CEO Satya Nadella to say you will remain there for n years? Presumably you can’t just get the stock and fuck off? Also, why is stock based compensation (potentially) so huge compared to base pay? Is this to make sure employees work extra super duper hard, or some way to reduce taxes?

    • erwan@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Level 70 corresponds to distinguished engineers, very few engineers have that level at MS (and Google etc). You don’t get hired at that level unless you’re already a computer science celebrity.

      And yes you have to stick around because the 310k of stock will likely come with a vesting schedule, usually 4 years, i.e. you get 1/4 after one year and the rest gradually over the course of the 3 remaining years.

      It’s bigger than the base pay because stocks is basically the company printing money. Also it’s only an initial grant, while the salary has to be paid every years until the contract is terminated.