Should You Share Salary in Your Job Post? (Yes. Here’s Why.)

Salary transparency isn’t a risk—it’s a reputation boost. Here’s why listing pay ranges in your job posts leads to better applicants, faster hires, and stronger studio culture.

Published on February 15, 2025

Signal Trust, Not Ambiguity

Salary transparency isn’t just about numbers—it’s about credibility. When you publish salary info, you show candidates that your process is fair, your culture is honest, and your expectations are clear.

Key Takeaways

  • Posting salary filters better-fit applicants from the start.

  • It signals equity, clarity, and professionalism.

  • Transparency builds trust and reduces negotiation bias.

  • It saves time for both candidates and hiring teams.

  • Studios that post salary data attract stronger, more aligned talent.

Why Most Studios Still Hide Salary

The usual reasons:

  • Fear of competition poaching staff

  • Concern about internal equity issues being exposed

  • “It depends on the candidate” logic

  • Habit—because that’s how it’s always been done

But the market has changed. Candidates expect more clarity. In many regions (and industries), it’s becoming law.

What Happens When You Don’t Share Salary

  • Candidates hesitate to apply—they assume low pay

  • You get a wider but less qualified applicant pool

  • You waste time with candidates who won’t accept your range

  • You weaken trust before the interview even starts

And for candidates from underrepresented backgrounds, this creates a barrier to entry and fuels pay gaps.

Example: A design firm in London shared that after removing salary ranges from their posts “for flexibility,” they saw a 30% drop in response rates from women applicants.

What Happens When You Do Share Salary

  • You attract applicants who already understand the role’s scope

  • You create a stronger shortlist

  • You normalize open conversation about money

  • You build a studio culture where fairness isn’t performative—it’s policy

Case Study: A boutique studio in Toronto began posting salary bands in every listing. Applications didn’t just increase—they became more focused. Candidates who applied were more aligned, more prepared, and more confident in discussing the role.

What Should You Share?

The basics:

  • A clear range (e.g., $62,000–$72,000)

  • Currency and location (important for remote or global roles)

  • If benefits or bonuses are included

  • Context on where this role fits within your pay bands

Example:

This is a full-time hybrid role based in NYC. Salary range: $72,000–$82,000. Includes health insurance, 401K, and annual learning stipend.

Worried About Internal Equity? Fix It, Don’t Hide It

If you’re afraid publishing salary will reveal gaps—good. That’s your cue to:

  • Audit your existing pay structure

  • Close unjustified gaps

  • Move toward banding by role and level, not negotiation

Transparency forces better systems. That’s a win.

Tip: If one candidate finds out they’re paid less than a peer for the same role, you’ve got a retention problem—not a transparency problem.

Worried About Flexibility? Be Honest About It

If the salary depends on experience or role variation, say so:

“Range depends on experience and scope, with flexibility for the right fit.”

But don’t let “it depends” become an excuse to hide the ball.

You can be honest and still professional. Candidates appreciate nuance—what they don’t appreciate is mystery.

When and Where to Share Salary

  • In the job post itself—ideally near the top

  • In direct outreach and DMs

  • On your careers page and internal documentation

The earlier you share it, the better your applicants.

Visibility tip: Include salary info in social media job promotions. Candidates scrolling Instagram or LinkedIn are more likely to stop and engage when numbers are clear.

Global Considerations

In many regions, transparency is now required:

  • California, NYC, and Colorado mandate salary ranges

  • EU trends are leaning toward posting expected pay

  • India and APAC studios increasingly use bands for global roles

If you hire internationally, staying ahead of this curve signals maturity and readiness.

How It Impacts Diversity

Pay transparency helps:

  • Reduce pay gaps for women and BIPOC designers

  • Level the playing field for candidates from nontraditional schools or regions

  • Prevent negotiation disparities rooted in confidence, not competence

Study Spotlight: A Harvard Business Review article found that organizations that adopted pay transparency saw a measurable increase in employee satisfaction—and significantly reduced gender-based salary variance.

The result? A stronger, more diverse studio team.

What Candidates Actually Think

  • 81% of job seekers say they’re more likely to apply if salary is listed

  • 67% say lack of salary info makes them question a studio’s fairness

  • The top reasons candidates ghost interviews? Unclear pay and process

Transparency reduces candidate anxiety—and shows you respect their time.

Make It a Studio Policy

Instead of case-by-case:

  • Align on salary bands per role

  • Train hiring managers on how to talk about pay

  • Update job templates to include salary language

  • Add salary to your DEI or hiring equity statement

Internal exercise: Host a salary mapping workshop. Ask: Are we consistent? Are we fair? Are we future-ready?

Consistency signals integrity. That’s attractive.

What If You Can’t Share Yet?

If you’re not ready, be transparent about that too:

“We’re working toward publishing all salaries. This role is benchmarked competitively, and we’ll share a range early in the process.”

But set a timeline—and mean it.

If you’re truly committed to change, even a simple statement can shift perception:

“We believe in pay transparency and are auditing our structure now. All new roles will include ranges starting [Month/Year].”

Bonus: How to Handle Candidate Reactions

If someone pushes back on the range:

“We’d love to hear your expectations too. We base our offers on internal bands, role scope, and regional benchmarks—but we’re open to a conversation.”

This shows fairness without being rigid.

If the range is below their ask:

“Thanks for being clear. This may not be the right fit right now, but let’s stay in touch. We’re committed to growing our compensation structure and would love to keep the door open.”

Final Word

Hiding salary doesn’t protect your studio. It weakens your process.

Clarity is leadership. Transparency is trust. In a market that values both, posting salary isn’t a risk—it’s a reputation asset.

Post the number. Build the trust. Attract the right people.

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