Financial Feminist - 165. Am I Being Underpaid? with Hannah Williams (Salary Transparent Street)
Episode Date: June 25, 2024Have you ever wondered if you’re being paid what you're truly worth? Well today’s guest is trying to help you uncover just that by removing the secrecy and stigma around sharing salaries. Hannah W...illiams is the creator of Salary Transparent Street. You might have seen her videos where she asks strangers about their salaries, and in this episode, we're talking all about her work to close wage gaps and make sure everyone is paid fairly. We'll hear Hannah's story of going from being underpaid to becoming a successful content creator. We'll cover salary transparency, laws aimed at ensuring fair pay, and practical tips for negotiating better salaries. We'll also talk about the challenges of being in the public eye, the importance of emergency funds, and dealing with online criticism. This episode is full of inspiring stories and helpful advice for anyone who cares about financial empowerment. Tune in and learn how you can advocate for your worth in the job market. Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/165-am-i-being-underpaid-with-hannah-williams-salary-transparent-street/. Find Hannah on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/salarytransparentstreet/ Add your salary anonymously to the Salary Transparent Street database: https://www.salarytransparentstreet.com/ Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz. Special thanks to our sponsors: Thrive Causemetics Get an exclusive 10% off your first order at thrivecausemetics.com/FFPOD Masterclass Get an extra 15% off any annual membership at masterclass.com/FFPOD Squarespace Go to www.squarespace.com/FFPOD to save 10% off your first website or domain purchase. Hill House Visit hillhousehome.com and use the discount code TORI at check out for 15% off. Bossbabe Subscribe to The Bossbabe Podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform to level up your business this year. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
There's a reason that especially women of color miss out on millions of dollars over
their lifetime and it's because of things like this where that $10,000 maybe it doesn't
sound like a lot right now but over your lifetime it adds up and $10,000 is money that should
be in your pocket.
Probably a little less after taxes but shoot $2,000 I don't know anybody that couldn't
make something good happen with $2,000. I don't know anybody that couldn't make something good
happen with $2,000, whether it's paying down debt, building your emergency fund, paying
off credit cards. It goes a long way.
Hi, Financial Feminists. Welcome to the show. Every time we do one of these, I don't know
how to start it, but this is how we're starting it today. You know the drill. You can subscribe.
You can go back to our over 150 episode back catalog and listen to more.
You can also buy my book Financial Feminist if you want step by step guidance around how
to be good with money.
And if you don't want to do any of those things, keep listening.
Hi.
Happy to have you back.
Okay.
Today's episode is a really fun one with a friend of mine who's another fellow finance
content creator, Hannah Williams, and you have seen her videos.
If you follow us, you have seen her videos undoubtedly.
Hannah Williams is a 27-year-old content creator and former senior data analyst in the Washington,
D.C. metro area tackling a major issue, salary transparency.
With her viral series, Salary Transparent Straight, Hannah encourages strangers to share
what they do and how much they make.
She is inspired to combat discriminatory tendencies
and employment and close pay gaps that affect women,
people of color, workers with disabilities
and the LGBTQ plus community.
Hannah uses her platform to educate her community
on market research, salary negotiation,
laws to understand workers' rights and finance 101.
With this knowledge, she hopes to help workers
grow professionally and build wealth.
We talked about salary transparency, duh, how to be more transparent within your own
community and your workplace, and how to advocate for more salary transparency at a federal
level.
We discussed Hannah's journey into building salary transparency and what she's learned
by going viral interviewing hundreds of people about their salaries.
We also discussed advocating for yourself when it comes to what you earn and how to
learn more about what other people in your field are actually getting paid.
So without further ado, let's go ahead and get into it.
But first a word from our sponsors.
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You're still DC outside, right?
Yeah. Cool. Alexandria. Where is right? Yeah. Alexandria.
Cool.
Where is that?
That's Virginia.
Yes?
Yeah.
So actually, Arlington and Alexandria were part of DC.
It used to be a square, and then right where the river cuts off is where they just cut
it off.
So it's kind of frustrating because, yeah, I'm in Virginia, but technically a lot of
us consider that we live in DC.
But if you say you live in DC, you get called out for it.
So we say DMV.
Can you like not go to DC anymore with your microphone?
Have you like tapped out that city?
Like you're like, I can't go in.
I've done enough DC interviews.
I can't go back.
You know, it's two sided because yes and no part of me.
Yes, because I get recognized.
So it makes it so easy, right?
Like I don't even have to tell them like what I'm doing interviews for.
They either tell me yes or no from across the street.
Um, but then the other side of it is like, I'm so tired of interviewing
contractors and like government, you know, they all kind of do the same job.
So it's sort of boring after a while, I want like a little bit
more diversity.
Totally. Well, that's why I love seeing you pop up in different
cities. And you've done a couple in Seattle, you pop up and I'm
like, Oh, cool. Okay, I get to know what everybody else is
making.
I need to come back out to the West Coast.
I know. We love having money experts who come on the show
answer a question, which is what is their first money memory?
What is the first time you remember thinking about money?
The first thing that popped into my head right away
was a Nintendo DS.
Like when I was probably like nine or 10 years old,
that was the hot, you know, electronic to get
followed by the Wii.
But I remember like wanting it so bad and all the kids
in my class had one. And I mean, I didn't come from a not well off family. I was upper middle class,
but my parents are penny pinchers. You know, they are you have to talk them into it. It has to be on
sale. You know, if it's 300 bucks, like what is this bringing to your life? Like, and my parents were so against technology, like making me a zombie. So I remember wanting it really bad. And my
parents telling me that like it was too expensive. And that was the number one thing was expensive.
And I think I spent the next year, like on eBay, and looking for any like sale or like item of this
that was on sale and trying not to get scammed on the
internet. And eventually my parents got it for me a year later for Christmas. But yeah,
I learned pretty quickly like budgeting and value of money from my parents perspective.
I love even the conversation of like, what is this bringing to your life? Like how many
parents are sitting down and being like, all right, before we purchase this for you, we need to dive into the philosophical, what is this actually going
to do for you at a higher level?
Oh yeah, my parents were so strict. Like if it didn't have an educational component. And
I remember when they got it for me, I had to like save up allowance to get the games
that I wanted, which was like Animal Crossing and like Mario Kart, but they got me like Sudoku and like the brain game thing. So they were like, here
are the games we'll get you. And I had to find other ways to get the ones I wanted.
Yeah, it was really interesting growing up in my house where my parents were strict,
a different version of it though, where I actually didn't get an allowance. They were
like, you are a contributing member to this family. I don't get paid for housework. So you're not
getting paid either. And so there's like pros and cons I
see to all of that of like, I think allowance helps you
manage money, it helps you earn money, all of that. And then
there's the flip side of it too. So yeah, it's just always
interesting to ask that question and figure out, yeah, what what
did you learn about money growing up? What did you maybe
not learn about money growing up? And then how do all of those things affect how you manage money now?
Huge. I mean, I think that the relationships that we have with money are so influenced
by the relationships with our family members and what they've taught us about money. It's
all rooted in that experience and it carries over. So it is so important.
I personally know a bit about your story, but I would love to hear and I'm sure listeners would love to hear where your
idea for salary transparent street came from. You found out
you were being underpaid, right? So tell me more about that.
Yeah, I'll try to explain it where it's not long winded
because there's so many like curves and twists to the story.
But essentially, I found out that I was underpaid. I used to be a
senior data analyst supporting government contracts in Washington, DC. In 2021, I had been two years
out of college, graduated in 2019, so pretty young in my career, still somewhat like entry level,
mid-level, and I had gotten promoted to a senior data analyst role at another company,
mid-level and I had gotten promoted to a senior data analyst role at another company, making $90,000 a year, found out that, and for anyone who hears that and sees sticker shock, you
know, wow, that's a lot of money.
Like what are you complaining about?
This is in Washington, DC, which has, you know, arguably competitive cost of living
to New York and Los Angeles.
So it doesn't go as far.
But you know, I was very grateful for it.
And the key here is that I was fresh out of school, I did not know how to negotiate my
salary or how to do market research.
So when I saw that, you know, and it was more money than I'd ever seen in my life, I accepted
it without any hesitation.
I said, Yes, sign me up.
I want to do this.
Soon after found out that I was actually underpaid about $25,000 compared
to people doing the exact same job at different companies.
And when I asked for a raise at my company and I was a great employee, the contractor,
the client loved me, brought so much to the contract.
So it's not like I was asking without just cause.
They told me that I had just started.
So I had to be there at least a year before I even qualified for a raise.
And even then, they didn't give out raises of more than 3% to 5% at any one time.
So I either had to sit in my spot and be patient and constantly chase my market rate because
I would never catch up to it essentially, or I could go look for another job.
And so that's what I started doing.
And in my first interview with a recruiter, I give her so much credit,
because she was really the inspiration here.
She asked me what my salary requirements were.
Standard question and then the interview,
I'd gotten so used to it.
But in that moment, I decided to take a risk
and ask her what the budget was.
I had done my market research at that point.
I learned what to do.
And I knew that my rate was between 100 and $120,000. I had been prepared to ask for 105. I was like, okay, if I'm making
15k more than I'm making now, I think that's good. I feel like looking back now, I still
should have asked for more. But what's important here is when I asked her what the budget was,
she told me it was 115. No hesitation. I told her that was great,
that was right in line with my expectations, which it was, but that was $10,000 more than I'd planned
to ask. And in that moment, you know, this culmination of events, I realized, hey, transparency
had undercut me $25,000. Then it had also had the potential to undercut me by another $10,000. Like
these, and I'm a white woman. I have so
much more privilege than a lot of different groups of workers. And so I accepted that
job offer shortly after, started my job, but I just couldn't shape the experience. I was
like, wow, I figured this out. But the system is unchanged. People are still going through
this every single day. And there's a reason that the pay gap exists is a reason of pay secrecy. So I decided I'm going to create
a TikTok. I'm going to start talking about, you know, the money I made. And when I did
that, it resonated with people. It started performing really well. I've never been a
creator. I've never dreamed of being one. But talking to people online and finding that
community and sharing my message was so meaningful to me. It brought me a lot of value. So I kept going. People
really liked the topic of transparency. So I was like, how do I take this a step further?
Like we need companies to make the change. But you know, I don't have the power to call
up Elon Musk and tell him like, hey, you know, you might lose money. Like it's expensive
to pay people well, but like it's the right thing to do. I knew though that there's power in people and especially social movements
on social media. I graduated basically right into the great resignation and I saw how people can
have an impact in greater movements. And so I was like, hmm, simple concept. Let me just go on the
streets in Washington, DC and ask people, what do you do and how much do you make?
And maybe some people sharing will reach,
someone in Idaho who is unsure
if they're well compensated or not.
I brought my husband out with me and we went out,
posted the video, same day we filmed it on April 16th, 2021,
which is so cool,
because we're about to be two years old now shortly. But
yeah, it went viral overnight. Three weeks later, quit my job. My husband followed me
a month later. It's just been like so crazy, the roller coaster and how fast everything
happened. But that is the series of events in a nutshell.
I have so many follow ups to that. Did you say three weeks after you posted your first
video? Did I hear that right?
Three weeks. I really jumped off that cliff didn't I?
Were you making money at that point yourself?
No.
Okay. That was my first question. I was like, if you were already getting brand deals three
weeks in, first of all, incredible. But like, yeah, it sounded like, yeah, you took the
leap and was like, okay, I'm going to figure this out.
Yeah. And people always ask like, you know, at what point yeah, you took the leap and was like, okay, I'm going to figure this out.
Yeah. And people always ask, like, you know, at what point do I quit my job to pursue this
full time? What was the reason for you? And like I said, I wasn't making money. I didn't
sign my first brand deal until September and we started in April, I quit in May. So several
months of not having a contract, so not even guaranteed pay. And I didn't get paid until
probably like October. So the real reason that I decided to take the risk, first of all, I had
savings, my husband and I, you know, had that little nest egg, we knew that we could go about
six months with everything that we had, you know, to pay the mortgage. And that's what we had. But
when we posted that video, and it went mega viral overnight,
I had been on TikTok for like two or three months
with my personal account.
And in that amount of time,
every day posting every day, three videos a day,
super like lots of work into this.
I gained 50,000 followers in three months.
When I posted that video on a blank profile,
no followers, no videos,
overnight I gained 50k. And so I was looking at it and I was like, if I don't find a way
to monetize this, I'm an idiot. There's gotta be a way.
The exact same thing happened to me. I spent like three years posting every single day
on Instagram. And then our fifth TikTok went crazy viral. And I was actually looking at the
numbers the other day. I think we did 80 to 120,000 followers
in like a few days from that one video.
Crazy. Yeah. So when you've got that momentum, you know, you
have a moment to monetize and to really grasp it. And I'm young,
you know, I was 26 or 25 at the time, I'm
27 now I'm trying to do the math. But I was, you know, in my early 20s, my husband and
I don't have children of our own. We were in that moment in our careers where we were
like, you know, let's do it. Like, let's go got a bet on yourself, you got a bet on yourself.
And we've always dreamed of working for ourselves. That has always been, you know, whatever we do, that's the goal. And so having that freedom, the opportunity to it was something
that we couldn't resist. And thankfully, it worked out. I understand that there's a lot of privilege
that comes with, you know, taking that leap. But I think that having that savings was so critical to
giving us the security to be like, okay, we have to make something happen, but also we can continue for six months. And luckily we turned it around.
Right. I wanted to call that out of like the power of the emergency fund, right? Or the
power of having savings, right? Like we talk about her first 100K all the time that when
you have money, you have options. And that's the truth is it's like, okay, I can take six
months and see if this thing has legs. And if it doesn't, okay, I can take six months and see if this thing has legs.
And if it doesn't, okay, I go back to my job.
I go back to the corporate and that's fine.
Or if I hate it or whatever happens, but you don't know unless you try, but money gives
you the safety net to be able to try even to have the option to try.
And failing is also not the worst thing.
Like I said, I was young.
When I quit my job, my manager was like, you know,
call us if things don't work out. I had a great reputation. You know, I knew that there were
opportunities for me outside of this. But also, there were opportunities that I could create for
myself by trying. Maybe I wouldn't succeed at that, but I would find something else. And that risk to me
was so worth it. The other thing I want to call out that you said too, which is something that I
preach and that is so important. And in that whole story, it was very easy to gloss over
something that is so crucial for anybody listening. When somebody calls you up and, you know,
trying to talk to you about a new job, when you're on a job
interview, when you're talking to a recruiter, and they say something like, what is your
desired salary or what are your salary expectations?
You almost never want to give a number first because of something like what Hannah was
just talking about, where you undercut yourself because you don't understand the full scope
of the role.
So if you can ask literally, like, I don't understand the full scope of the role. So if you can ask literally like, I don't understand the full scope of the role
at this time in the process, but would love to know your budget nine times out of 10,
they are going to tell you their budget. So you don't undercut yourself.
Absolutely. Yeah. And I think that's something I probably learned from watching your videos.
Honestly, like I was like, let me just ask about the budget. Like, and it worked and
you have nothing to lose by asking.
If they say, oh, well, you know, we can't share the budget, then okay, you go to plan
B. But you're missing out by not just trying to test the waters and ask.
Yeah.
And we're seeing a lot, and we'll talk about this a little later too, like a lot of legislation
around like posting the salary range in the job description or you know the other common questions
like what is your current salary? Fun fact that's illegal and you probably know better than me. I
think it was 20 states last time I checked I think it's higher than that now. 22 I think now. Yeah
so you know that's the other question that I think trips a lot of people up. You never have to answer
a question in a job interview that you don't want to answer, but especially something as bullshit as like, what is your current salary?
Like it doesn't that you don't have to answer that question.
But the reason you don't want to answer that question is because if you are currently not
being fairly compensated according to your market rate and they ask you how much you're
currently making, they're going to use that number that you give them. There's no other
reason that they would ask is other than to use that number that you give them. There's no other reason that they would ask
other than to use that number to determine what they'll compensate you next. I mean, imagine if you're a mom that took a year off to raise your newborn, you come back to the workforce and they
ask you how much are you making? It could be either zero or what you were making a year ago,
and that's less than what you should be making now. There's so many reasons that that question is
illegal. So if you're not sure if your state has that law, just double check really quick because if
a company asks you, it's a great opportunity to educate them on your state's workers' rights
laws and also that you shouldn't answer it.
Yep. Couldn't agree more. You gave us so much meat even into your introduction that I want
to call out one last point, which is you said, okay, if I would have just said this is my
budget and I wouldn't have been able to understand that their budget actually
started 10K more than what I was willing to take.
Yes, you get the money then, which is huge, right?
You get the increase in salary that makes a real life impact on your day to day, on
your ability to save or pay off debt in real time.
But let's talk about to your point
of like, okay, if I would have taken 105 instead of 115, well, your next job would have been
115 as opposed to something like 130. And you know, the potential to invest that money
you would have lost out on that too. So something I always remind people of when they negotiate
as it's yes, it's about the money right now, because we want to be compensated and we want more of that money right now. But it's also about
like, what are your career earnings for the rest of your life, for the rest of your career?
And also what is the impact of putting that money in even a high yield savings account
or something that is, you know, even more fruitful like investing in the stock market?
Yeah, I mean, there's a reason that especially women of color miss out on millions of dollars over their lifetime.
And it's because of things like this where that $10,000, you know, maybe it doesn't sound like a lot right now, but over your lifetime, it adds up.
And $10,000 is money that should be in your pocket, probably a little less after taxes.
But shoot, $2,000.
I don't know anybody that couldn't, you know, make something
good happen with $2,000, whether it's paying down debt, you know, building your emergency
fund, paying off credit cards, it goes a long way.
One of the things I've always wondered, and I think people can wonder watching your videos,
how scary and weird is it going up to somebody on the street? First of all, just that that's
scary enough of like, Hi, can I interview you for this thing? And then asking them the
most taboo topic of all time, right? We'll talk about sex, death, politics, religion
before we'll talk about money. So what is that process like actually like going up and
asking somebody what happens when they say no, what happens when they say yes, I would
just love
to know more.
It's interesting and I think that it's helped me with my people skills because I used to
like hate awkward moments and like awkward pauses and now I embrace it.
So it's really taught me a lot about like social interaction.
But you know, one thing I think people wouldn't guess about me is that I'm kind of introverted
and shy.
So making the decision to go out and interview strangers on the street was very difficult
for me to wrap my head around.
But I think ultimately I was just so motivated by I knew that it would have such an impact
on people just because of how it has impacted me and what I'd heard on the internet.
So the drive there was what kept me going to do it and conquer my fear. It's incredibly awkward, though. I've gotten so
many different responses and reactions to it. I've got people who give me double takes, you know,
I've heard, what do you want next? My social security number, I've heard like, why are you
doing this? Like, why do you need to know?
What are you selling?
And I think that when I started the page, I knew that there was going to be a level
of skepticism and concern and rightfully so.
You know, if a stranger asks you how much you're making, you better understand why before
you answer.
And so I think I had that understanding before we started.
And because of that, I put a lot of energy
towards our branding and making sure
that people took us seriously.
So if you go back to our first video,
I actually had had the idea for Salary Transparency
a month before we did it.
But I was waiting on, A, getting a logo done,
and B, getting the t-shirt with the logo done
before going out to do it because
I knew that having that on my shirt and saying I have an account, I have a name, I have a
t-shirt with the logo would give me this, you know, professionalism and people would take
me seriously.
I still have people tell me they think I'm a college student doing this for a project
and they pity me, but I will take the pity.
Like, I'm OK with that.
I'm totally fine as long as, you know, they embrace the reason for what we're doing
and, you know, hopefully contribute as well.
But I also think it's a real testament to Gen Z and millennials
and their embrace of the paid transparency movement.
It's a full 360 from our parents, Gen X and boomers.
And I see that in the amount of people who say yes and no.
The demographic split is always women and workers of color
are more likely to share than white men, statistically.
But in recent months, I've actually seen that changing.
And I think that that's a testament also to pay
transparency laws and the movement becoming more normalized that white men are now seeing, oh, like,
I actually make the most, let me help everyone else out, you know, and pull them up and take them to
the penthouse with me. And those are allies that, you know, I give so much credit to the reason that
my page is successful and what I do is much credit to the reason that my page is
successful and what I do is successful because I wouldn't have a page without
them. So I'm really just grateful to everyone that wants to share. But I
unfortunately have found that the majority of people that embrace the
movement have been victims of secrecy themselves. So we're all kind of
traumatized together and trying to move forward.
Well, Hannah, what a testament to your work though, because I have a feeling the data
is not entirely trackable, but I wouldn't be surprised if, you know, the move, you know,
the pay transparency is more likely and things are shifting because of the work that you're
doing, right?
And it's like it's normalizing conversations that again, feel weird.
And actually, you literally answered the follow up question we had, feel weird. And actually you've literally answered
the follow-up question we had, which is like,
do you feel like some people are more likely to share
versus some people are less likely to share?
So it sounds like there is a gender racial
as well as age divide.
Is that probably accurate?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you know, it's so easy to see, you know,
it depends on who you approach. If they are, you know,
seem a little older, that's where the skepticism comes out. And they have questions when they're
younger, they kind of are like, Sure, you know, like, I totally support this, me and
my colleagues, like helped each other get a paper pay raise by talking about pay, they
almost always have a story. And that's why they support it. But gosh, like, it is kind
of frustrating, because I do think that our page
has had an impact on the movement as a whole. But like
you said, you know, how do you track the data there? We have a
billion views on our videos. So that is probably my strongest
data point that a billion people saw this and thought it was a
great thing. But you know, my I'm just glad that we have helped spur this movement along. I think it's probably my greatest accomplishment
and might be my greatest today and ever because we're really helping people make more money
and that is helping them get out of debt. It's helping them, you know, buy a home, buy
a car for their kid, go to college, pursue opportunities
that they didn't see for themselves before. And gosh, that is, I could do that for free.
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Have you ever had somebody in real time realize that they are being under compensated?
Yes.
And you know what's so frustrating about that?
That the time that that happened, I don't have the clip because we used to be using
this old microphone that was like really cheap and janky. And we were on a bridge. And I
think that there was some interference with like the mic and the bridge and all the audio
cut out of that video. But in that interview, I approached three young Asian students from, young Asian men from Austin, Texas, in Austin, Texas.
They were all engineers, had just graduated, all had just gotten jobs, you know, so they are on
level playing field. They have the same degree, same years of experience, same college. In real
time, they talk about how much they're making. And one found out he was making significantly less than the others. And in
real time, he's like, wait, why am I making less like and they
had a conversation. It was it was beautiful to watch because
they were, you know, like figuring out like, well, I'm at
this company and you know, they do this and so like the
industry, and they had the conversation, but he realized
like he had actually accepted less than his buddies and they walked away being like, thank you.
Like you know, grateful, but also like, oh, you know, now I have to figure it out.
But you know, at least now you know, and that's why transparency is important.
Right?
So it sounds like they hadn't talked about it with each other before. Like there was no conversation,
even though they were even close friends. They hadn't talked about, hey dude, what are you making?
What are you making? Not at all. It was, I guess, the first time that they had probably even talked
about pay, let alone with themselves or with each other, with the group. It was so refreshing to be
a part of it. But man, I'm hoping he's making more now.
But what a cool gift to be able to be like, yeah, maybe I should talk about money more
with the people around me, especially you very rarely get that same data, like same
sounds like same age, same race, same education.
Yeah, same job like, because that's, you know, anybody on my Instagram is like the bank app,
is it real, blah, blah, blah, because like, I don't like, no, that's, you know, anybody on my Instagram is like, the pay gap isn't real,
blah, blah, blah, because like, I don't like no, that's the perfect example of like, okay,
across the board, some people are still underpaid compared to others.
Yes. And gosh, the whole the comments section. Oh, I don't even want to talk about it unless
you really feel passionate. No, I don't. Because I don't want to give them any energy or my
time.
And anybody listening to this podcast knows that the pay gap is real.
There's no reason we need to educate them on, on why that is.
So, yeah.
Yes.
Are there any industries or jobs that tend to get, well, actually speaking, which
we actually have a do, we have a comment or a question about this.
Do you, but from the comment section or from your audience, let's say, is there
any industries
or jobs that tend to get more like love or hate than others?
And then why do you think that is?
My gosh, so many I'm trying to think which ones to spotlight the most.
So the jobs that I see that are the least well paid, and I think that'll help guide
me, you know, they make the least and they're also the ones
that should be making more. Our teachers, social workers, social services, those are
the ones that I always hear on average making under 50K with multiple years of experience.
The comment section supports that often, that teachers are undercompensated. But then there's
always the argument of people who are like, well, you only work nine months a year.
And you just babysit.
It's not like a real job.
And there's just, I think that what it comes down to
is a lot of times when there's arguments in the comment
section about whether or not a career is well compensated,
a lot of times it comes down to whether or not
they value the work of women. Because a lot of these jobs that are is well compensated. A lot of times it comes down to whether or not they value the work of women
because a lot of these jobs that are not well compensated
that deserve these pay raises
are usually predominantly dominated by women, the majority.
And the sad part is, is the pay gap needs to close
by desegregating all industries and jobs.
We need to stop holding a majority in nursing
and teaching and in these social services jobs
because the idea that women are more nurturing
and caring is a stereotype.
It is not something that we are born with.
And so the idea that it makes sense that more women
are nurses than men is not actually rooted in any fact.
It is just based on what we push women towards and
then we pay them less for it because they're women. I think that once we get
more men into female-dominated career fields, we'll stop having this problem of
these careers being lesser compensated. But other arguments about, you know, the
value of work is a whole conversation. Like, you could, you talk about this for
hours. It's very disheartening and sometimes I feel like the comment section what I've seen is really put a damper on the work that we do and you know the value of sharing because when you share your salary on the internet.
People in the comments section feel very entitled to share whether or not they feel you deserve it and And it's frustrating when you have a teacher making 70K
and people telling them you are overcompensated
because I'm an electrical engineer
and I make 20K more than you and that's not right
and I do more than you.
And at the end of the day, we really need to separate
the amount of money we make and our value.
And I think that's why the comment section gets riled up
is because we root so much of our self-worth and our value and how much we make and our value. And I think that's why the comment section gets riled up is because we root so much of our self-worth and our value
in how much we make.
And whether or not we feel like we make enough
determines whether or not we value ourselves
and our own work.
And at the end of the day, like all of us
are under-compensated.
None of us are making what we should
when you have the 1% making billions
and most of us are making on average about 52K, which is not enough in most areas of this country. I'll
step off my stool here, but like, gosh, I could go on forever about this.
No, soapboxes is what we do professionally here at her first 100K in financial finance,
so don't worry.
Soapbox, thank you.
Yeah, no, the other thing too that I think is so important, what you just said is,
you know, to take the example of like the teacher versus the
electrical engineer, it's like, I think that people definitely
compare salaries because it feels like such an identity or
such a, you know, this is personal to me. But it's also,
we see it as an us versus them, or we see it's not a,
how do we collectively make more money? And how do we start charging billionaires the taxes they
should be paying? But rather, just because we're all tired and overworked, and there's so much,
you know, again, stigma around money in general, but also we take it so personally. And because
we're so mad at the system that exists, it's just very
easy to take it out on another individual, even an individual making, you know, slightly more money
than you. Like, I've been very open about how much money I have and, you know, there's shit I get all
of the time on the internet of like, you have so much money. And I'm like, yes, I do. I have a lot
more money than the average person. There's a ton of privilege in that, but like there was a very big difference
between even a millionaire and a billionaire with a B.
Like that's a huge gap.
And then there's also, of course, a gap between,
on average, $52,000 and then everything above that.
So I do feel like there is this like us versus them thing
that starts to happen.
That's just what the internet's good at in general.
It's just like dunking on people. But I think that that is probably too where the
hate comes from. Because you know, I've gotten it personally over and over and over again,
I see other creators in our field get it. I see people who are, you know, have the audacity
to be transparent, where it's just like, you're mad at the system and you're taking out that anger on a corrupt,
unjust system on an individual.
And it's like, that's not the point of this.
Right.
And I mean, gosh, a great example of that is nurses.
Right.
I recently did a roundtable interview with travel nurses.
Well, not all of them, but there were two travel nurses on the panel and others that
were RNs.
And they were making like 100,000 each,
but the travel nurses were more around like 180, 200K
in Los Angeles, like in San Francisco,
high cost of living areas.
And the comments were, it was so disappointing
because we were so excited about the episode
and releasing it and hoping that nurses
would see it as inspiration.
And the comments just like destroyed it.
You know, they were saying this isn't realistic, like they're overcompensated.
This is why our medical bills are so high.
And it's it's frustrating because it's like we all need to realize that our battle is
not with the 99% of which most of us are all in on.
I make 200k and I'm still part of the middle class
in my area. I don't make jack shit. I forgot that I could swear, so I was like, what's my other word?
But yeah, it's so important to understand your cost of living and how far your money goes and
how that affects other people's salaries and that you can't compare
yourself if you are a potato farmer in Idaho making eggs to a registered nurse or a travel
nurse in San Francisco making eggs. You know it's not comparable and we need to also understand that
our fight is not with one another it is with our employers and the ones who set our rates. Don't be mad at the person making X. Be
excited and eager to learn what negotiating strategy worked for them. What did they ask for?
You know, what kind of skills or experience that they have that I should get so that I can ask for the same.
That's what I hope our videos instigate, but sometimes it does go the wrong way. I just think that any time you try to talk about anything that is, yeah, just emotionally charged,
it's just so... And again, the internet loves this. This is what these platforms want,
is they want discord. They want the back and forth. And so, yeah, I think it's just always
really hard to have these conversations and you hope that people show up in a way that's like supportive of other people and supportive of, you know, transparency. And I think just a lot of people haven't gotten there yet. It's it's uncomfortable to talk about for many people. And again, like you said before, it's, it feels like a personal defect if you're not making as much as you think you should be making compared to somebody else.
to somebody else. Right.
And I also want people to remember
that how we react to people being transparent
on the internet will also determine how the transparency
movement moves ahead.
If it starts getting really negative
and people are scared to share how much they make because
of the fear of being unfairly vilified,
you can't blame them for not wanting to be transparent.
And unfortunately, that backfires on all of us.
It doesn't backfire on the companies who
we should be holding accountable.
What the pay transparency movement delivers on
is us all working together to share and learn
from one another and have these conversations with people
in similar fields so that we can get ahead
in our respective fields.
But if we, you know,
see someone making more and start pointing the finger in our mean, I, you know, I'm not
seeing it as people, I won't have people to interview, the pay transparency movement won't
move ahead period.
Right. Right. I've talked about it on the show before, but there's a reason I'm not
as transparent about my money as I used to be. And it's because both of like a threat
to my safety, which is a real thing, but also just the stigma around women earning money.
We don't as a society, we don't like women with money. Yeah, like we don't like women
pursuing money. We don't, we don't feel comfortable with that. But men are worshiped to have money.
So yeah, I've experienced that as someone who is trying to perpetuate transparency and
talking about money, I have to now put
safeguards up and put boundaries up that even I don't want to do, but because of the system
and the society that exists.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's really like the boy boss, right?
Like if a guy, young guy goes on the internet and he says, I made $500,000 drop shipping,
oh my God, they are like minions at a concert. It's
like, Oh my God, I love you. Tell me how you did it. But if I say I made a million dollars
and I made 200k, they're like, you're lying. I need to see your tax return because that
doesn't make sense.
Right. It's daddy's money. It's your husband's money. 100%. Why aren't you donating more?
Which is my, my favorite one. You should just
be doing this for free because you love it. Right. Right. And I also do want to say though,
like, you know, sharing your salary, obviously is a wonderful thing. But there are valid
reasons to not want to share it. And I've, you know, ran into people on the street who
will tell me I fully support pay transparency, like I will, I will tell anybody directly,
you know, in my in my group of like my friend group or
network, how much I make, but I don't want to go on the internet with it. And you know, there's privacy reasons for that. But
there's also that people might be negotiating. And that's why pay secrecy laws exist. You know, you don't want the recruiter to
know how much you're making and then use that against you. So you know, I'm not vilifying anyone that doesn't want to share, but I do want to stress that we need to encourage people to share. And
if you're able to even anonymously, it goes so far, like I call it paying it forward,
literally and figuratively. And I think it's something we all should do.
Are there any standout interviews or people you've spoken to and like what makes them
memorable?
Oh, great question. You know, it's so interesting. I can see an image of a person, and I always
remember what they do.
I just have it ingrained in my memory.
And some of my favorite interviews
were probably with small business owners,
entrepreneurs, because they just have such great stories.
And they just have so much to share, so many lessons learned.
I am so tired of people telling me, like, you know,
pursue your dreams and, you know, take the risk.
But sometimes when they say it, like,
you actually feel like it's valid.
I interviewed a hot dog stand owner in Indiana,
and he was posted up right outside their Capitol building.
So in downtown Indiana, so if you ever go, you know,
hopefully you can swing by and he'll still be there. But he was previously incarcerated, you know, had gotten out of
jail. And while he was in jail, he had come up with the plan, you know, to turn his life
around and start his hot dog stand. And he'd been doing it for I think, like two years
then and was making good money. And gosh, he was just like the nicest guy, you know,
we haven't even planned on asking him
because he was working. He was you know, there were people trying to order hot dogs while we
were doing the interview. And I didn't want to, you know, stop his business. He's an entrepreneur.
And he was like, I'll do the interview like while I'm doing this, like if you can work around me.
And I was like, sure thing. Like, let's do this quick. Like let's in and out, you know, get you
back to your customers. But he was so like willing to share about his story. And I think those people,
especially in communities, you know, are so impactful to the
youth, you know, and sharing that there's other opportunities
than what most of us learn in school, which is pretty
standard, you know, finance, tech, like, I feel like people
don't know about a lot of different career opportunities,
like the hot dog stand, and, you know, making a good living if you think that, you know,
making 50k as an assistant is okay.
You can also make 50k as a hot dog stand owner.
There's so many things you can do differently than make the same amount.
Other people that I've interviewed that I really like look back on I interviewed I forget
her exact title, but it was an optical therapist
she worked in assisting the blind and especially students blind students in schools with you
know navigating their their environments and teaching them about you know the tools and
resources that they can use and I guess that this is something that a lot of students need, but they don't have
access to or adults need.
And so she was she was blind, you know, and had joined the program.
And so that story was just so inspiring and really sweet.
And for her to reach out and want to willingly talk about it was really meaningful.
I also interviewed a water vendor outside the White House who was making like four
thousand dollars, I
think a month or a week. And I believe it because he was selling his water bottles for
like a dollar a bottle. And in the interview, he sold like six, like while we were talking,
like because if you've ever been if you've ever been to DC in the summer, it gets freaking
hot and humid, like 100% humidity, not enough water to cool
you down. And these families, you know, if you've got a family of four, they're buying
eight waters, that's eight bucks right there in 10 seconds. So the people that say cap,
you know, he's lying. No, he's not. And you know, we should applaud him for seeing this
as a great venture. He also had a team, you know, on every single block. So it's something
that I think it's really remarkable when
you see people work with their community and build their team
to all, you know, bring back a bag and bring other people with
them instead of, you know, just keeping it all to themselves.
That hustles real man. That's great. That's so smart.
Yeah, seriously. But yeah, like just being scrappy. There's so
many things that you can do. Like my job right now is made up
I have a made-up job
I created my job where I asked strangers on the street what they do for a living and how much they make and I make
200k doing it like there's other things that you can do that sound just as crazy just as silly
But if you see an opportunity out there or a way to fix something
There's almost always a way that you can turn a business out of
it. But it really like having an impact and having meaning in your work, it just makes it so much more
enjoyable and fun and life more meaningful as well.
So as you might know, I am going to a wedding in Italy this summer. It is in the El Moffi
coast. It is going to be hot. It is going to be like 90 degrees. I have to wear pastels.
I don't own pastels and I'm curvy girl. So a little hard to fit. So when Hill House reached
out to us about sponsoring the podcast, I was like, yes, yes, yes, yes, because Hill
House Home invented the viral nap dress and you're thinking nap dress, but the nap dress for the wedding?
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survive the heat in, Hill House Home makes fun fashion that makes you feel good.
The other cool thing is that they
have this like one signature dress with some other styles too, but in every single color or pattern
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Speaking of 200K, you're paying yourself less than when you started
and you've had all this growth.
I would love to know why you made that decision and then some of the financial safeguards
you're putting into place that help your business and help you as well.
Absolutely.
So I'm actually I'm back up.
So I did bring my salary down.
So I was making 200k like mid last year, and then I brought it down to 125k
for the end of the year, because I wanted to make room in the business like we haven't,
you know, solidified our revenue yet. And when you work in content creation, you'll
learn very quickly that when you sign a contract does not mean when you get paid it usually
get paid like 90 days after if you know that's upon contract signature.
Sometimes it's 60 days after the video is posted.
So it's tough to predict your revenue, especially when you spend months navigating and negotiating
brand deals and sometimes they fall through.
So I brought my salary down from 200k to 125k so that we had you know a little bit more
flexibility that we weren't really tight.
And I mean, I was making 200K before,
bringing me back down to 125K.
When I quit my job, I was making 115.
So I didn't see it as like a negative.
It's not like I had immediately gone out
and bought a nice car.
I didn't change my budget or my means of living
when I quit my job.
And I think that's very intelligent.
And I'm glad I did, didn't, actually I'm glad I didn't
change my, how I live because, you know,
when I went back down to 125K,
I had nothing to worry about, nothing, you know,
where I was scrambling or needed to get into my savings.
Now we're in a really great place.
We have brought on like new team members that are part-time.
We've really navigated a lot of brand partnerships
that are more long-term.
So I'm back up to 200K.
I honestly hot take think I'm underpaid
because my business makes over a million dollars last year,
made over a million.
We're on track this year to make the same amount.
So it's probably gonna be more at the end of the year,
at least I'm hoping. But you know, it's all about making a long-term investment in the
business. I work like 60 hours a week completely willingly with love but it's a lot of work and
anyone that would do my job at a standard corporate you know private organization would
probably be making like 500k. I know
that that is in my future and I'm okay with waiting because life is good and I can't complain.
There's also something to be said that I wish more people would talk about and I don't want
to spend too much time talking about it because we've touched on it a little bit, but like
the emotional toll that a comment section can have, like, I don't think we can put a
price on it, but I think we can put a price
on it, but I would love to put a price on it. And it's way more than people think it
is. Like most people's jobs are done in an internal way with no external feedback, right?
Like internally, it's like, does my boss think I'm doing a good job? Am I doing a good job
for myself and my team? Great. I am doing my job
well. But when you are a public person, content creator, an entrepreneur with a following,
you answer. Now, of course we don't because we have standards and because fuck the trolls,
but like we answer to millions of people on a day to day basis. And like, as much as we can all say,
oh yeah, like men being mean online, we don't pay attention to them. People screaming about like, oh, this
is stupid. Like, okay, fine. But the emotional and physical toll that that takes over and
over and over again on literally in like second by second, not day to day, but second to second,
minute by minute, hour to hour basis. That's fucking crazy. And I think we're only just starting to talk about
the mental toll that you have to deal with
in addition to keeping the lights on,
creating the things that you're trying to create
to make sure you're managing your team members,
writing back emails, all of the rest of that.
Oh gosh.
I literally mic drop on everything you said.
I couldn't agree with you more.
It's frustrating sometimes because I think that as content
creators, we're told to kind of sit down, shut up, suck it up.
And I believe that there is some truth to that.
When people say, well, you chose to do this, you're not wrong.
Kim, people are dying. There's a genocide happening.
Right. Yeah.
Exactly. And like, I get it. But I I've done the hard jobs. Like I didn't, you
know, I wasn't a content creator my entire life. I've only been doing this
two years. I used to have the shitty jobs. I used to be a telemarketer. I used
to work at a gym. I used to wake up really early. I used to commute. I used
to take the metro. I've been there there so I understand where people are saying well, you have a really easy job and I agree
I have the easiest job on the planet
But that doesn't mean that it doesn't come with some cons and unfortunately those cons aren't physically difficult
They can be depending on how it impacts your mental health, but they are mentally difficult and gosh
I wish that, you know,
my job came with guaranteed therapy
because it's a lot of work.
And also, you know, when you become a content creator,
and I'm not whining at all,
I'm just letting people be aware
that when you choose to do this,
you do kind of sign away your privacy and your security.
I loved being incognito. I didn't realize
you know that it was so wonderful to walk down the street back in the day and no one
would stop and talk to me because I'm an introvert. I get very like nervous when people come talk
to me but now I expect it every time I leave the house and you know if I have a bad day
I can't show up that way with somebody that
wants to come talk to me because that is the impression that I'll leave with them you know
and people don't understand that sometimes I had a bad day sometimes I got bad news and
you're really held to a pedestal that sometimes is impossible to please.
I'm really like crying for you know I'm making 200k so a lot of people might not resonate
with that but there's a lot that goes into it that mental health you know, I'm making 200k so a lot of people might not resonate with that, but there's a lot that goes into it that mental health, you know, has, it has its impacts and I've
I've felt it. Also, the the work life balance is tough, like the hamster wheel of the internet
never turning off. It's impossible almost to take a vacation because you know, even
when you're scrolling off, you know, when you're on your break, you're still doing research,
you're still seeing what's out there
and because you're on your phone,
you get notifications all the time
of different people pinging you.
So there's trade-offs and it's just important
to be aware of that before you decide to go all in.
The last thing I'll add is that, like you said,
you answer to like one person, maybe five people in your nine to five when you're working your boss
And your colleagues like you said we answered a millions of people every single day with our content and everybody has an opinion
Which is great. I love to hear it
But at the same time, you know when you open yourself up to that it can be really hard to like
You know figure out the way to move. And so from a business perspective, it can be really loud.
And so it's hard to navigate next steps in your strategy.
But also, I don't have an HR department.
This is like the only job where it's legally like expected and allowed to be
bullied horrifically or stalked.
Like I, I, I go on the street to ask people what they do for a living and how much they
make to help people get paid. I didn't ask for your opinion on my tattoos. I didn't ask
for your opinion on my weight. I didn't ask for your opinion on my hairline. You know,
like, all of these things are completely unrelated, but I get them on a daily basis. And so it
does get very loud.
The metaphor I've come up with to the best explain this experience to somebody who isn't
a public person, who isn't online. Imagine you're in your home and someone comes and
knocks on your door every two seconds and expects to be let in. And let's say you let
them into your home and then they decide to tell you that
you're fat and unlovable and that no person would ever desire you or want you or that
your advice is stupid and bad and you should just shut up or that actually this other person
that they follow is way better.
Why aren't you more like them?
What would you do?
You would kick them out of your home. If you had
the, if you invited somebody into your home and said, Hey, I'm inviting you over for dinner.
Right. And in this example, you're coming onto my Instagram, you're coming onto my TikTok.
That's my home. And then you yell at me and you tell me I'm too fat and too ugly and never
going to be anything. What am I going to do? I'm not going to let you stay. No. Yeah. And
then the other version of this too, is it's just like, you know, I think about you
because a lot of the feedback you and I get is lovely and like, Oh gosh, we get messages
that we change people's lives.
Right.
But like that's still overwhelming because again, other metaphor I use, if I'm walking
down the street and a hundred people yell at me and 95 of them say, you changed my life.
I love you.
This is great. But five of them
are awful. It's still overwhelming. It's still overwhelming to get that much feedback and
opinions from people. That's what I have tried to like convey to people who this is not your
industry. This is not what you're doing. Yes. Do we have like cushy jobs? Do we get to sit
at home? Yeah, we do. There's a lot of privilege to that. And also, I cannot tell you that like, I'm
in a better place now. But over the past two years, my mental
health has been awful. Oh, I'm in the thick of it. Right. I've
had physical symptoms from the stress of people's opinions and
people's feedback. And like, you want to let it roll off your
back. Nobody's wired that way.
No, and you're, you're lying if you say that you aren't because we're all human. You're lying if you
say that you're not affected by five comments, four positive and one negative. You're going
to think about that one negative. Now imagine you're a content creator and you get five
or 10 of those a day. They stick with you. It is difficult.
It's like golden handcuffs. And so it's just important to be aware of the cons and have
strategies in place to handle it. I think the most important thing is having really
great people around you and a great support system. My husband is everything to me. I
will tell him about a comment and he makes me always feel better about it. And if you didn't, if you don't have that in place, it can be a
very tough job and have those impacts. Like I have had so many bouts of depression and
burnout in the past two years that is important to talk about that is a company meant to the
jobs that we have.
And not to harp too much, we'll move on in a second, but to your point about feeding
the beast, like that's the other thing is it's like our jobs are never done. There's
no like task you can check off. It's like I posted by three TikToks today and I got
to post them again tomorrow and the day after that and for the foreseeable future for forever.
If I don't post three TikToks, guess what happens is the business suffers. And it's something that I've had to learn to be okay with.
Is that like, okay, all right, we're not going to post on TikTok today.
That's fine.
I can see a direct impact on the business when I don't, but I have other things to do
or I need to take a vacation or I just don't want to be online today.
I don't want to show my face.
I don't want to look at my face today.
Yeah. I feel that there's so many days where I'm like, I
don't want to film today. Like, or I've been in back to back
calls, and I still have to edit, I still have to go film. It's
never done. It's it's the hamster wheel. So it's it's
like Groundhog Day every day.
I want to transition us because I mentioned at the beginning of
this interview, I'd love to talk about some of the transparency
laws that are happening right now. So current state of affairs
on federal pay transparency laws. What does this mean? Tell
me what's in the pipeline.
Yeah, lots of exciting movement with pay transparency laws. I
think the the launch of our page was timing was so perfect,
because right when we launched was when this momentum
started moving with these pay transparency laws.
It really started with Colorado and California.
They were some of the first states to have these really
all-inclusive pay transparency laws,
which means that companies that qualify more often than not,
they have to have like five or 10 employees.
Each state is different.
So please check your state's language to see who qualifies.
But the gist of it is,
is that companies have to list the pay range,
a fair range for internal and external job postings,
promotions and transfers.
It differs per state, I'll say again,
so please check your state's laws.
But these are really monumental laws
that are gonna help workers understand, you
know, how much is this job actually paying?
You know, and how do I compare?
How do I position myself in the best place to make what I what I'm worth?
And it also helps close that pay gap that we're already seeing the results of that in
Colorado and California.
So we have 15 states, I believe now have pay transparency laws
either signed or in the works. I've been involved, luckily I'm so grateful to
organizations that have reached out to me because I am NOT a lawyer, I don't
have a legal background, and some of this really is like hard for me to keep up
with. And so organizations like the ACLU, the National Women's Law Center,
have tapped me, you know, and been like, hey, this is what's happening. Can you come testify?
And thankfully, I've been able to so far testify in support of DC, Virginia and Maryland pay
transparency laws, which I live in the DMV. So it really goes like so much further for
me to feel like I'm helping, you know, my fellow constituents
and in my state.
Unfortunately, Virginia's governor vetoed our pay transparency law very recently.
And so we are probably going to have to appeal, go back to the books, you know, wait for a
different governor and try again.
I don't know the exact roadmap ahead, but I'm going to be working closely with organizations
to make sure that we can get this for Virginia constituents.
The Maryland pay transparency law is on the governor's desk and it is expected to go into
signature and that it will be signed.
So hopefully in a couple of weeks the news will come out there that it'll go into effect.
And DC's pay range act passed and it is going to go into effect this
June. So very exciting. And lots of other states like Massachusetts, Illinois, they have pay
transparency laws like in the works, like they are moving through the legislature, you know,
the steps of becoming a law. So we're on the up and the momentum is really in our in our favor.
Nicole Zakem I imagine if anybody listening wants to support those laws, they can call their legislation
in their states and advocate for them?
Absolutely.
Okay, cool.
Yes, please.
If you are listening and your state does not have one or has one in the works, it means
so much for you to use your voice because what we are up against is really well-paid
lobbyists that are repping private corporations
that it helps their bottom line to underpay people.
What we need to do is use our voice, just like how we're using a social platform like
TikTok and Instagram to share this information and create momentum.
Using your voice and talking to your your legally elected representatives is the
best way to have an impact in your own community.
Hannah, if I can ever lend my voice to any of those, please let me know. I will fly out. We'll make it happen.
Good to know. Awesome. Yeah, we're gonna we're gonna make big things happen. I think in the next few years, like all of these, you know, not just you and me, but financial influencers and content creators as a whole that are really involved in social impact movements. And that's probably why they're trying to ban TikTok,
but we won't be faced.
That's a whole other thing.
That's a whole other topic.
A whole other topic. Hannah, I am so thankful for your work. I'm so thankful for your friendship
and your collaboration. It's hard out there for financial creators who are women, but
we are banding together and doing the best we can. So I would love to know where people
can find you and learn more about your work.
Thank you so much, Tori. This has been an absolute pleasure. I'm so honored. As a listener
of your podcast, I'm like, oh my God, I can't believe I'm here. Patting myself on the back,
super excited. But if anyone is interested in what I do, you can follow us at Salary Transparency.
We're on all platforms. I had to get on all platforms, so my dad could watch it because he
doesn't have TikTok or Instagram. So if you don't have TikTok or Instagram, we're also on YouTube,
we're on Facebook, we're on LinkedIn, we're on Twitter. You can find us on all those platforms.
And if you want to contribute your salary anonymously, you can go to salarytransparency.com.
We have an anonymous salary database there
that you can use for your own market research as well.
I love it. We'll link it down below too.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you so much to Hannah for joining us.
You can follow her at salary transparent streets
on TikTok or Instagram.
Transparentstreet.com is a great place
to go for her resources.
She has a bunch of incredible salary resources, salary like aggregators, you can see what other people in your industry are
getting paid. She's just doing incredible work around advocating for not only transparency at
the individual level, but at the policy level too. Thank you as always for joining us Financial
Feminist. We appreciate you. We appreciate you listening to the show and we'll talk to you later. Go talk to somebody about your salary.
I dare you.
Okay, bye.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields, associate producer
Tameisha Grant, researched by Ariel Johnson, audio and video
engineering by Alyssa Medcalf, marketing and operations
by Karina Patel, Amanda LeFeu, Elizabeth McCumber, Masha
Bakhmakeva, Taylor Cho, Kaylin Sprinkle, Sasha Bonar,
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photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire Her
First Hundred K team and community for supporting this show. For more
information about Financial Feminist, Her First Hundred K, our guests, and episode
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