There’s a number most high-performing women in corporate environments have never calculated.
It’s the gap between what they’re currently earning and what someone who joined their organisation two years after them, with less experience, is being paid right now.
That gap has a name. I call it the loyalty penalty.
Here is how it works.
Organisations give their largest salary increases at the point of hiring. Once you are inside, annual increments rarely keep pace with the market. Two years in, the gap between your salary and market rate begins to open. Four years in, it is significant. Six years in, it is often embarrassing.
RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK
The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to.
The woman who stayed gets increments of 8–12% per year. The woman who moved, or negotiated hard at hiring, jumped 30–45% on entry. The compound difference over five years is not marginal. It is life-changing.
“Loyalty is not being rewarded. It is being assumed.”
The loyalty penalty is not just financial.
It shows up in title, too. The woman who has been ‘Senior Manager’ for three years while her external peers have been Directors. The woman who is the most experienced person in the room but carries a title that does not reflect it.
It shows up in visibility. The longer you stay in one place, the more invisible you can become, not because you are performing less, but because familiarity breeds assumption. People stop seeing what you do because they have always seen you do it.
And it shows up in confidence. The woman who has been waiting for the right moment to ask, negotiate, or move, and finds, after years of waiting, that the waiting itself has cost her more than the risk ever would have.
What the loyalty penalty is not
It is not an argument for never staying anywhere. Depth and continuity have real value; to your expertise, to your relationships, and to your work.
It is an argument for being clear-eyed about the cost.
RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK
The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to.
Because the penalty only exists when loyalty is passive; when staying means not negotiating, not repositioning, not making visible what you are doing and what you are worth.
The antidote is not necessarily to leave. It is to stop being invisible inside the organisation you have chosen to stay in.
One question before you go
When did you last benchmark your salary and title against the market? Not estimate. Actually check.
If the answer is ‘more than 12 months ago’ or ‘never’; that number I mentioned at the start? It is growing.
