Actual salary-range numbers are increasingly showing up in companies' job postings.
Why it matters: Applying for a job with no real idea of the kind of money you might be making could soon become a headache of the past.
Driving the news: Microsoft last week quietly became one of the biggest and most influential U.S. employers to commit to publicly sharing salary ranges for open roles, a move that will likely set the tone for other companies.
- The number of LinkedIn job openings with salary data was up 44% year over year in April, the company says, with pay info showing up in 25%-30% of U.S. listings.
A big worker-friendly change is coming to the job hunt
THAT’S RICH: World’s first trillionaires could be from Texas. “A new report published by the software company Tipalti Approve estimates that newly relocated Texas resident, Tesla CEO and billionaire Elon Musk, could become the world’s first trillionaire by 2024. Houston native and Dell Technologies CEO Michael Dell could become a trillionaire by 2033.”
I Am Weak - The Catholic Thing
I have often said that I could have been a Crusader. I could fight and die for the faith. But be crucified or burned at the stake? No wayIn our age, when the silence of God that gives Endo’s novel its title, is so often taken to be the silence of non-existence, the silence of nothingness, we presume as I once did that the opposite of faith is doubt. But sometimes it is mere weakness.
Important journalism to consume this weekend
18 links to vital journalism for your weekend reading list
… A Micro Poem and Four Haiku by Katherine Gotthardt
… The Daughter Who Tends to Her Mother by John Grey
… Better Than Streaming John Dorroh
… Amber Alert by Cameron Morse