I Refuse to Earn $20K Less Than the Colleague I Trained

People
3 weeks ago
I Refuse to Earn $20K Less Than the Colleague I Trained

Workplace inequality, pay gaps, and career growth remain some of the most talked-about issues in today’s job market. Many professionals are rethinking loyalty, salary transparency, and what it really means to know your worth. Recently, one reader sent a letter to Bright Side sharing her experience with these exact challenges.

The letter:

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Dear Bright Side,

I’ve worked at this company for 6 years, bringing in major clients and driving some of the highest profits. I’m the one who stays late, fixes the big problems, and takes on the extra work.

Still, I never got a raise. Every time I asked, HR said, “No budget,” and I accepted it even though I knew my value.

Then I found out a colleague, who joined this year and whom I trained for 6 months, earns $20K more for the same role. I confronted HR. Their answer was, “The market value changed!”

I smiled and said nothing.

The next day, everyone froze when they found out I’d been secretly planning my exit.

For the past year, I’d already been thinking about career growth and exploring new opportunities. My idea was to start my own small firm.

Most clients trust me, and I have the skills and experience to do it. I hesitated because it’s a big risk. But after seeing how unfair the pay gap is, I’m ready to take the next step.

So my team was shocked when I sent an email. It said, “Dear colleagues, I’m moving on and starting my own project. This will be my last month here. If you’d like to join my team, I’d be happy to work with you again.”

HR panicked. They said it was wrong to announce it without speaking to them first. They told me I was being emotional and irrational.

Then they offered the $20K raise and asked me to reconsider leaving and starting a competing business, saying, “Most small businesses don’t make it.”

Now I’m torn. I know launching a startup is risky, but staying feels like accepting disrespect.

Should I stay or start my own company?

Katherine

Hi Katherine,
Thank you for sharing your story with us.

Your letter highlights a real and painful workplace reality, and you’re not alone in facing it. Here are some clear, practical perspectives to help you decide your next move.

Make the raise “real”.

What they meant to say was if you start your own company they won't be able to compete with beginner employees and they will be done

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Leave, they don’t like you one upped them, take a chance you have experience you can make this work. Good luck. 👍

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Follow through with leaving. They didn't respect you enough to offer you a payrise until you pushed them into a corner. Things won't change.

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2 weeks ago
We've got nothing to hide. Except this comment.

You want 25k you trained your subordinate. You should get more.
Or make sure you have all your financial help in line and a years cushion( at least 6 months) and GO FOR IT.

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You have to take chances to be successful so what if your first try fails do you know how many times Henry Ford went bankrupt before he was successful and you miss 100% of shots you don't take.

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Do both, employ people to run the business for you, you can already breeze thru your current job.

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100 percent bail and start your own it will be hard but if u make it you will be better off save the contacts u have made email and phone them too tell them you are starting your own firm if they would like to continue this business relationship they would be more then welcome to join your new firm poach ya clients the only reason HR offered u the raise is so they won't lose the clients not u good luck in the new career

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They took advantage of you for years, and will do it again when they can; this is not a place that will treat you with dignity and respect, and pay for performance. Leaving is the right decision!

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You should start your own. Here is the thing even if you fail then your resume is so much better for upper management and I've seen small businesses where the owner and the main leader both owned a business realized they each where better with different aspects and combined to make a business that lasts much longer.

Many times what fails when skilled and putting in the needed time isn't the business as much as the growing 'I don't want to do this anymore'. And sometimes you do actually fail, at which point you will be more poised later to start a business as you start noticing what things where done differently that could have improved yours.

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Get it in writing with an effective date and new title/level. Add client ownership (your biggest accounts) and scope tied to profits. Ask for a compensation review clause in 6 months.

If HR won’t formalize it, it’s panic pay, not market value. One clean document will show if they’re serious or just reacting.

Run a “client loyalty” test.

Book continuity calls with the clients you brought in and rescued. Ask what they’d do if you weren’t on the account and what they’d pay for. Capture exact pain points, retainer, and timeline signals.

That data tells you if your startup has real demand. If the answers are vague, you’ll know you need a stronger offer before leaving.

Turn your last month into leverage.

Keep the resignation live, but treat it like a negotiation window. Track who escalates: CEO, Sales, key clients. That’s your value proof.

Ask for a stay bonus + raise, not just matching pay. If they only match salary, they’re buying silence, not talent. Use their urgency to lock in terms that reflect what you already deliver.

Protect your exit plan legally.

Review non-compete, non-solicit, and IP before you launch. If you stay, request a written non-compete waiver or narrowed terms.

If they refuse, your “competition” threat is about control, not risk. Then you can exit clean and build without surprises. A quick legal check now can save months of stress later.

Recently, we received a letter from Heather. After her company laid off staff, she was asked to take on their workload and work extra hours. She refused, and the company responded by cutting her salary. This is her story.

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