[HTML1] Do you know what your current skill set and job responsibilities are worth in your geographic area? This information is critical for you to compare that dollar amount to what you are currently getting paid. Today you are going to meet one of the co-founders who created GetRaised.com a web site that helps you find out what you are worth…in your job. I went on the web site and tested it and even I could get a big raise from my current job. . . Using this tool. GetRaised.com could change your life.
My guest, Matt Wallaert, is the lead scientist who has developed a dynamite program to lead you through the process of self-discovery and even gives you a sample letter to give to your boss that will help you ASK FOR A RAISE. In other words ask your boss to pay you what you are worth!
Go to GetRaised.com, sign up and try it and once you do let me know if it works for you. If you like what you see isn’t it worth $20 to get information that will help you get a raise or promotion which increases your compensation? GetRaised.com will send you your $20 back if after 6 months you have not gotten a raise.
USE THIS TOOL SO YOU CAN:
- Know what your current job is paying in your area and if you are underpaid do something about it
- Get ahead by using GetRaised.com
- Recommend GetRaised.com to your friends and they will thank you for the tip
More about Matt Wallaert
As Co-Head and Lead Scientist at Churnless, Matt Wallaert specializes in creating functional happiness: the combination of momentary delight and long-term satisfaction with products that create behavioral change. He believes happy is as much an action and an environment as a feeling and that inspires everything he builds.
Before launching Churnless, Matt was wrangled out of academia to serve as the Lead Scientist at Thrive. He lead the company’s behavioral finance efforts by combining academic research and user testing to guide the product development and shape the overall function of the site, creating a platform empirically proven to help people spend less and save more.
Matt’s academic path spans the globe – from Li Po Chun United World College in China to Swarthmore College to Cornell University – and he continues to both publish actively in a variety of academic journals and collaborate with other academics to push forward the field of behavioral psychology. He is passionate about new data and new ideas, revels in the Lego-like process of combining existing services with new technologies, and spends far too much time tinkering with electronics, environments, and the world to see if he can make them better.
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