NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 21, 2003--More than two-thirds of
hiring managers (68%) surveyed in the metropolitan New York area say
their companies have not implemented any employee salary increases in
2003, according to a just-released survey conducted for The New York
Times Job Market. Nearly the same proportion of hiring managers (67%)
say they expect salaries at their companies to remain at current
levels for the remainder of 2003.
Thirty-two percent (32%) of hiring managers surveyed say that
their organizations have implemented salary increases in 2003 compared
to 47% in 2002. According to the survey, the median salary increase to
date in 2003 is 4%.
Beta Research Corporation, on behalf of The New York Times Job
Market, conducted telephone interviews with 250 hiring managers and
200 job seekers in the New York metropolitan area. Job seekers are
defined as those who are currently looking or plan to look for a new
job in the next six months.
Salary Increase Criteria
Hiring managers who gave increases say they consider several
criteria to determine employee salary increases, including:
Most hiring managers (73%) say they initiate salary increases
versus doing so only in response to an employee's request (27%).
Salary Expectations
Sixty-one percent (61%) of job seekers say they expect their
salary levels to increase, 27% expect them to remain the same and 12%
expect them to decrease at their next job.
Seventy-five percent (75%) of job seekers currently employed by
companies with 100 or more employees are more confident about
receiving a salary increase in their next job compared to 50% of job
seekers at companies with fewer than 100 employees who say this.
About Job Market
Job Market, the print and online recruitment services offering of
The New York Times, provides employers and job seekers with
comprehensive resources to streamline the recruitment process. Job
Market appears in The New York Times every Sunday and is updated
throughout the week at NYTimes.com, where job seekers can find job
listings, career-related Times articles, exhaustive company research,
a resume database and valuable career resources.
Through the newspaper's national audience, which includes 5.0
million weekday readers and 5.5 million Sunday readers as well as the
1.4 million readers who visit NYTimes.com every day, The New York
Times Job Market reaches a marketplace of high-quality professionals
actively seeking new job opportunities or considering career moves.
Each week, The New York Times Job Market issues research on
industry trends and workplace practices affecting employers and job
seekers in the metropolitan New York region. On a monthly basis, The
New York Times Job Market releases its Job Market Confidence Index.
The Index tracks current conditions for recruitment in the New York
metro area as well as future outlook for the coming six months. Copies
of Job Market research reports are available upon request or at
NYTimes.com/jobmarket. New York-based Beta Research Corporation, via
random telephone interviews, independently conducts The New York Times
Job Market research.
NOTE: Job Market research is not affiliated with the editorial
operations of The New York Times newspaper and does not reflect the
views of the newspaper or its journalists. Source all references to
Job Market research as: The New York Times Job Market.
About The New York Times Company
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with 2002 revenues of $3.1 billion, includes The New York Times, The
International Herald Tribune, The Boston Globe, 16 other newspapers,
eight network-affiliated television stations, two New York City radio
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boston.com. For the third consecutive year, the Company was ranked No.
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Admired Companies. In 2003 the Company was named by Fortune as one of
the 100 Best Companies to Work For. The Company's core purpose is to
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This press release can be downloaded from www.nytco.com and
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CONTACT: The New York Times
Betsy Areddy, 212-556-7633
aredde@nytimes.com
or Al Leach, 212-556-4483
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SOURCE: The New York Times Job Market