Can't say a lot of good things about a company that pays a "Chief Happiness Officer" more than most of its engineers. I know plenty of startups that seem to be doing alright in the customer service department without an overpaid exec heading it.
Does she really contribute more to the bottom line than any of the other 4 underpaid engineers?
A Chief Anything Officer should probably be paid more than engineers, or they shouldn't have the words Chief and Officer in their title.
And that seems like a very developer-centric viewpoint. Yes, good customer service can add a lot to a company's bottom line. Some companies have huge engineering issues and need engineers to solve them. Some companies have huge sales issues and need sales people to solve them. Some companies have huge customer service issues and need customer service agents to solve them.
Disagree. The founders of my company (including me) are paid less than almost everyone else that works with us.
I know few rigorous investors that would stand to pay their CEO/founders more than ~80k a year, at least until it's clear the company is maturing. Also, as a founder with significant equity, I'd much rather put as much of my salary that I can spare (My wife and I need to eat, pay rent, etc.) to go towards bringing in (and keeping) top sales or technical talent. If you believe in my company, the math works out very well.
I also do the occasional angel investment, and frankly, I'd be pissed to see a business I invested in run like this. Two annual international offsite trips? What?! You're building an app to schedule tweets. This is not rocket science. Get to work!
I upvoted you, but now I regret it. Not because this was a bad comment, but because I realize now that I disagree.
"Chief" and "highly compensated" are not necessarily joined at the hip. It should be possible to have a C-level exec with most of their compensation variable and dependent on company performance or certain metrics, rather than a whopping base salary.
I'm not sure you really understand what is involved in support positions. I make more than their "Chief Happiness Officer" and I'm nowhere near the top end of the pay scale for support at my employer.
untog|12 years ago
And that seems like a very developer-centric viewpoint. Yes, good customer service can add a lot to a company's bottom line. Some companies have huge engineering issues and need engineers to solve them. Some companies have huge sales issues and need sales people to solve them. Some companies have huge customer service issues and need customer service agents to solve them.
digz|12 years ago
I know few rigorous investors that would stand to pay their CEO/founders more than ~80k a year, at least until it's clear the company is maturing. Also, as a founder with significant equity, I'd much rather put as much of my salary that I can spare (My wife and I need to eat, pay rent, etc.) to go towards bringing in (and keeping) top sales or technical talent. If you believe in my company, the math works out very well.
I also do the occasional angel investment, and frankly, I'd be pissed to see a business I invested in run like this. Two annual international offsite trips? What?! You're building an app to schedule tweets. This is not rocket science. Get to work!
invalidOrTaken|12 years ago
"Chief" and "highly compensated" are not necessarily joined at the hip. It should be possible to have a C-level exec with most of their compensation variable and dependent on company performance or certain metrics, rather than a whopping base salary.
tallanvor|12 years ago
ra3|12 years ago
silverlake|12 years ago