News1 min ago
Pay band
7 Answers
I currently work in the NHS but will be losing my job next month.
There is a job advertised on NHS jobs on behalf of an external organisation which is a pay band lower than I am on at the moment. Is there a polite way of finding out whether they would appoint on the highest point of the pay scale?
I've always understood that the issue of pay should never be raised until after a job offer has been made, however I would rather not waste my time or theirs if they strictly appoint at the bottom of the pay scale.
Thanks
There is a job advertised on NHS jobs on behalf of an external organisation which is a pay band lower than I am on at the moment. Is there a polite way of finding out whether they would appoint on the highest point of the pay scale?
I've always understood that the issue of pay should never be raised until after a job offer has been made, however I would rather not waste my time or theirs if they strictly appoint at the bottom of the pay scale.
Thanks
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You are perfetly entitled to phne the company for salary details If the job is being outsourced I would have thought you would be given the opportunity to apply. You will probably have to take a lower salary. The new company has to make a profit so it is a way of cutting staff plus other costs like you public sector pension.
Sorry I should have been clearer - it's a different job in an external organisation (but advertised on NHS jobs).
lcg - I've definitely found that with the jobs I've been looking at in the NHS. It's quite tough facing the prospect that my next job may be a backwards step in terms of pay :(
Thanks for the advice
lcg - I've definitely found that with the jobs I've been looking at in the NHS. It's quite tough facing the prospect that my next job may be a backwards step in terms of pay :(
Thanks for the advice