Do only and strictly what you are paid to do. No more. This is the principle behind the "Act Your Wage" trend that has been all the rage on TikTok in recent weeks
Doing only and strictly what you are paid to do is the idea behind the "Act Your Wage" trend.
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No one likes talking about their salary with their colleagues. Yet it's the main reason we enter the workforce. Due to the lack of transparency in companies, some employees turn to social media to make sense of the compensation they receive and how it relates to their day-to-day workload.
Do only and strictly what you are paid to do. No more. This is the principle behind the "Act Your Wage" trend that has been all the rage on TikTok in recent weeks. In fact, the #actyourwage hashtag has more than 110 million views on the preferred social network of the younger generations.
Yet this concept is not new. According to Business Insider, it was supposedly used for the first time in 2020 in a video from the TikToker @stephhannes. The 27-year-old American talks about her professional life and the difficulties she faces on a daily basis. "Sometimes I have to remind myself to act my wage. Like, if I've been doing too much at work, I'll have to be like, Stephanie, go sit in the bathroom and scroll on your phone for 25 minutes,'" she explains, adding that she only makes $7.25 an hour.
"Act Your Wage" advocates don't see this approach as a lack of investment or commitment, but rather as a way to demonstrate the disconnect between their seemingly endless workload or responsibilities and their pay packet. Especially at a time when the cost-of-living crisis is causing many employees to take a closer look at their purchasing power, and thus their compensation.