Step 3: Pay Gap Action Plan

Close the Gap Between Your Pay and Your Value

Step 3: Turn Data into Action

We know it is hard to advocate for yourself. Converting research into action feels risky.

But staying underpaid is a bigger risk. If you are earning below the 50th percentile, your compensation does not match the market or your impact.

This has a downstream effect: smaller future raises, lower retirement contributions, and less lifetime wealth.

It is time to align your pay with your value. Follow this five-step roadmap to request a Market Adjustment.

1. Determine Your Target

Decide who has the power to move the needle.

  • Your Boss: Usually owns the performance side. They must vouch for your wins.
  • HR: Usually owns the market data side. They verify the pay ranges.
  • The Strategy: Start with your boss. Give them the data they need to fight for you in the budget room.

2. Set the Meeting

Don’t “drop in” or bring this up at the end of a casual 1-on-1. This requires a dedicated calendar invite.

The Script:

Subject: Discussion: Compensation Market Alignment

I have completed an audit of the current market and company pay range for my role. Based on the data, my current package is trailing the market median.

I’d like to schedule 20 minutes to discuss a timeline for bringing my compensation into alignment.

3. Prepare Your Data

Don’t just talk about the data. Present it.

Put your research into a PDF to share during your meeting. Cite your sources clearly. This is your Evidence Portfolio. It proves you have done the work and that your request is based on market reality, not a personal feeling.

Your PDF should include the following

  • Your Total Annual Compensation: Show the full number, including benefits, bonuses, and 401k matching.
  • Your Market Data Research: List the market sources you used
  • The Market Percentile Calculation: Clearly show your current percentile (e.g., 0.35) vs. your target (e.g., 0.75).
  • The Internal Company Findings: Reference the pay range, reports found in your employee manual, or what others with the same title are being compensated.
  • Your Performance Evidence Log: List your top 3 “Wins” from the last 6 months. Quantify the impact in dollars or time saved.

4. The Ask: Adjustment vs. Raise

Know the difference before you speak.

  • The Market Adjustment: This is a “Correction.” You are asking the company to fix an error where your pay fell below the market floor. This often comes from a different budget pool.
  • The Performance Raise: This is a “Reward.” This is extra money given because you exceeded your goals.
  • The Winning Strategy: Ask for a Market Adjustment first to get to the median. Then, discuss a Raise based on your high-impact wins.

5 – Document Your Meeting

The conversation doesn’t end when you leave the room.Create a written record of what was discussed, what was promised, and the timeline for the next step.

Send a “Summary of Discussion” email within 2 hours of the meeting.

    The Email Script:

    Subject: Summary: Compensation Alignment Discussion – [Date]

    Key Points Discussed:

    • My current position at the Xth percentile vs. my 75th percentile performance metrics.
    • The industry data from [Source 1] and [Source 2] showing the $[Amount] gap.
    • My recent wins, including [Major Win 1] and [Major Win 2].
    • (you can attach the PDF)

    Next Steps:

    • You agreed to review the budget and provide an initial response by [Date].
    • We will meet again on [Date] to finalize the adjustment timeline.

    I’ve attached the PDF of my research for your records.

    Why You Document

    • Professionalism: It shows you are organized, serious, and tracking the results.
    • Paper Trail: If your manager leaves the company, your new boss has a record of the commitment.
    • HR Link: Your manager can forward this exact email to HR to start the approval process.

    The Bottom Line

    If you don’t ask, the answer is always “No.” You have the data. You have the scripts. Now, take the meeting.

    Share Your Story

    Turn your experience into evidence. Share your story to help us shape the laws of tomorrow.

    Data informs, but stories persuade.

    Your experience makes the pay gap visible to representatives who have the power to change workplace legislation. Your voice provides the evidence needed to demand accountability and measure real progress.

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