• @elephantium@lemmy.world
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    149 months ago

    How TF am I mischaracterizing it? The teacher in this story got a pay bump by taking a marketing job with Costco corporate, not by working in the warehouse. The headline implies that she got a raise by working for her local Costco. That’s misleading.

    • @SomeKindaName@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Well then in that case your reading comprehension is pretty bad.

      In September 2022, I started full-time on the memberships team at a new warehouse in Athens, Georgia. I had two 15-minute breaks, and 30 minutes for lunch. Otherwise, I was on my feet all day.

      At first, I made $18.50 an hour — a little less than what I earned as a teacher. I put in 40-hour workweeks, five days a week, and got a $1-per-hour raise when I hit 1,000 hours.

      The article also describes how she worked in the bakery.

      • @elephantium@lemmy.world
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        69 months ago

        My reading comprehension is fine. Do you understand the difference between the headline and the article?

        To recap, my critique is that the headline obscures the real story – that she got a raise by getting a corporate job. “Works at Costco” clearly implies working at a store, not corporate.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        19 months ago

        At first, I made $18.50 an hour — a little less than what I earned as a teacher.

        So you agree the headline is a lie because she was not making 50% more by switching to work at Costco but by finding a job with vertical promotion possibilities and getting a corporate job using her degree which few would be able to follow in her footsteps cause their is limited positions.

        She took a pay cut to work on her feet all day.

        This is a recruiter article bragging about how much better it is to work for Costco and they try to make the pay cut seem like not a big deal when there is vastly different perks and benefits.