In my experience, at least with startups, non compete agreements are often pushed and drafted by the legal team of the entities investing in the business.
Investors want to be protected and their attorneys will do anything that's necessary to make sure there aren't loopholes left open for ideas to be stolen.
The result is poorly drafted and ridiculously broad non compete clauses that would not be enforceable in most if not all states.
However even when they may not be enforceable (and you will hear the hiring manager saying that 100 times), non competes can still hurt candidates big time once they go back to the job market because many companies actually have provisions to disqualify those coming in with the extra baggage of a non compete.
If candidate A and B have very similar skills and experience and A has a non compete and B doesn't, why would anyone bother with A?
So it is true, non competes are in most cases non enforceable but they can still reduce your chances of getting a (better) job.
I declined offers after months of negotiations because of non competes and I would advise others to refuse to sign them, unless you desperately need the job, the compensation package is amazing or there are provisions or amendments to the clause, like a reasonable garden leave, that compensates you for having to carry a stinky non compete agreement on your forehead for an entire year or more if things don't work out.
If they want the non compete, make them pay for it, don't pick up the tab yourself.
> non competes can still hurt candidates big time once they go back to the job market because many companies actually have provisions to disqualify those coming in with the extra baggage of a non compete.
Get a lawyer, ensure it's not enforcable, then sign it.
If you're in CA, sign it. If you're in MA and there is no garden leave clause, sign it. Then do what you want.
When a hiring company asks if you have a non-compete, specify: "I am not bound by an enforceable non-compete". If they ask for specifics, explain and mention the law firm you consulted. This has always worked for me.
I suppose you could also just say you're not bound by a non-compete, and leave it at that, as that's also not a lie. If I sell myself into slavery in the USA, then I can -- without lying -- tell everyone I'm definitely not a slave. Because I'm definitely, absolutely, not. Non-competes are no different: if it's prime facie unenforceable, then you are NOT bound by a non-compete, full stop, end of story. But I like to be a bit more up-front.
> If candidate A and B have very similar skills and experience and A has a non compete and B doesn't, why would anyone bother with A?
I've admittedly never been in this situation -- at least as far as I know -- because my skill-set is pretty niche (ie, I am pretty sure that I have always known all the other people in the world who are interchangeable with me for a particular position when I get to the stage of negotiating the offer).
>Get a lawyer, ensure it's not enforcable, then sign it.
There's a lot of daylight (and a few thousand dollars in legal fees) between "would be thrown out upon casual perusal" and "is not technically enforceable, but we'd have to litigate in front of a sympathetic judge".
The issue has never, EVER been whether or not Jimmy John's non-compete is enforceable, its that a person leaving a Jimmy John's for a $0.50/hr raise at the Burger King across the street can't afford to litigate it, and the Burger King franchisee definitely won't pay to litigate it.
For those of us who can afford a lawyer to analyze a non-compete clause (and the barest of legal fees necessary to show in front of a judge such a clause), they aren't really an issue. But that's actually a pretty small subset of the population.
The biggest problem with non-completes is that they have been weaponized to suppress wages against people without resources to fight them. Fast food employees should never be subject to them; it's absolute lunacy that assembling a burger involves any truly special training or unique skill that a company should be able to prevent someone getting a better job across the street later that same day.
I'm not in favour of banning non-completes entirely since I think they actually serve some function for highly specialized and compensated positions, but I do want to see pretty high levels of regulation. Non-completes shouldn't be allowed for any position making less than 3x the median wage. Any position making less that that simply isn't special enough for a non-compete to actually be protecting actual secrets. Companies should also be required to buy out any non-complete time at the employee's total compensation rate, including the average of the last 2-5 years of bonuses (whichever timeframe is highest) and any additional perks (like health care in the US since that can be a huge expense).
> Fast food employees should never be subject to them; it's absolute lunacy that assembling a burger involves any truly special training or unique skill that a company should be able to prevent someone getting a better job across the street later that same day.
Are you sure this is really a thing? It seems dubious to me but I haven't been in fast food for 20 years so things may have changed.
Totally agreed. My advice is targeted at laborers and employers who can afford the fight.
BTW, there's a lot of money to be made here by an enterprising lawyer. The laws have been moving fast and most companies -- even those that should know better and will get very little sympathy -- aren't playing by the rules.
You have to be careful with that. Sometimes unenforceable non-compete can be amended by a judge and become enforceable. I believe the term is “blue pencil” rule vs “red pencil” rule.
First, the state's statute is extremely clearly worded. The amount of judicial activism required for me not to win some substantial monetary damages -- at least a multiple of garden leave -- would go far beyond taking a pencil to the contract; it would require substantially rewriting plainly worded statute itself. That's not a blue pencil; it's a sledgehammer to the constitution.
Second, I'm in an "equitably" state. A core claim of the counter-suit would be that I'm been deprived of a low-8-figure compensation package due to litigation. Lawsuits take years. No blue pencil can "reset" the contract to an equitable state without first evaluating that counter-claim. That's the point of the counter-suit, btw. I don't need the fucking money.
Anyways, given the composition of our judiciary, I think all of my previous and existing employers lack the balls to risk the precedent we'd be working to establish. Especially since, in order to establish that precedent, I'd settle for a Pyrrhic victory. (I have shitloads of cash, live a monk's life, and will burn the world down to kill non-competes.
Corporations are hyper-rational sociopaths, and if you're going to work for one you need to play the game theory accordingly.)
That said...
1. IANAL.
2. I have a lawyer but my lawyer is not your lawyer.
3. Get a lawyer to review anything you sign, before signing.
> Get a lawyer, ensure it's not enforcable, then sign it. If you're in CA, sign it. If you're in MA and there is no garden leave clause, sign it. Then do what you want.
What if the law changes and now it's enforceable? What if you move to another USA state, or to another country, and it's enforceable there?
> What if the law changes and now it's enforceable?
Before that happened, I'd remind my lawmaker of both my generous giving and also how valuable my personal time and network has been, relative to any campaign donation, in terms of winning and keeping the seat.
If it happened anyways, I'd move my primary residence.
> What if you move to another USA state, or to another country, and it's enforceable there?
That's not how non-competes work in any US jurisdiction of which I'm aware.
Even if it were: if a company wants my labor -- and enough do that I'm not concerned about finding takers -- then they have to hire me in a state where I'm comfortable with non-compete law. I don't care about in office vs remote, but I do care about non-compete law. Companies shop around jurisdictions. In-demand labor should as well.
Counter-sue for damages consisting of the total value of my foregone compensation package (which are typically 2-4 year packages). Triple real damages because enforcing a prime facie unenforceable contract is an unfair and deceptive business practice. I would be more than happy to be the test case for this novel theory.
My strong suspicion is that no competent employer has the balls to do anything other than settle the counter-suit (less about the $ amount than the precedent), and my even stronger suspicion is that I'd win the triple damages if the poor sops in legal were desperate enough for a severance package to try and fight.
> Investors want to be protected and their attorneys will do anything that's necessary to make sure there aren't loopholes left open for ideas to be stolen. The result is poorly drafted and ridiculously broad non compete clauses that would not be enforceable in most if not all states.
if the result is "poorly drafted and unenforceable", how can you say that they "made sure there aren't loopholes left open for ideas to be stolen"? makes zero sense.
A day after starting my second big tech job, I had to fill out a form about “prior legal obligations.”
I mentioned my prior employer made me sign a form similar to the one they had made me sign.
An hou later I was pulled aside by the CFO, and quizzed about the tech I used at the previous company (to make sure it wasn’t the same tech we were using there).
> Employers say they need noncompete clauses in order to protect their trade secrets and confidential information.
Which is such a clear and obvious lie that I'm amazed they even bother to say it out loud. There already exist several contractual and legal mechanisms that do a much better job of protecting trade secrets and confidential information.
Noncompetes aren't needed for this, and are only marginally useful for this at best.
Surely some CEO here, or someone who has worked in HR can illuminate us on how they believe this is true.
I once caught a company I worked for in the lie about this. I was advocating for a new employee who didn't want to sign the no-compete clause. They say they needed it. I asked what problems they had in California, and how it was impacting their business - they replied there were no problems. So I was like, "Ok, so if it isn't impacting you in CA, why do you think it will impact elsewhere?"
In the end, they did hire that person, and did not make them sign the non-compete.
Companies don't "believe" things. They will amorally advocate for whatever is remotely favorable to the company.
There is no financial incentive for them to say "We don't need noncompetes" or even "You know, it really doesn't affect our bottom line either way." So instead they will always say "Of course we need it." There's no downside.
Right, exactly. When Walgreens says "Walgreens feels very strongly that labor unions do not serve the best interests of our individual employees or the company as a whole," they are lying. Walgreens is not a person. It does not feel anything. You might apply this to their leadership instead, but it's also understood that Walgreen's leadership is also lying. They are quite aware that a labor union would better serve their individual employees. It's just culturally accepted that corporations can nakedly lie about this sort of stuff and it doesn't matter.
What a company says "We prefer thing X," everything they say after that is just the autocomplete of ChatGPT with a prompt "make up reasons why X is good." They're not their actual justifications. Their actual justifications are usually readily apparent, but it's comes across better to just make inane statements than to speak the truth.
Political interviews have the same problem. You ask the politician a significant question with a yes/no answer. The politician says "this is important" and then makes noises for 20 seconds. The noises don't matter. They don't say anything. What they're actually doing is declining to answer, but culturally it's acceptable to do it this way, and it's unclear why.
This is technically correct. (The best kind of correct, right?)
> They will amorally advocate for whatever is remotely favorable to the company.
This is not (at least, not as universally as you state it).
Companies are legal fictions; they do not act on their own.
People act. People talk. People believe things. People often amorally advocate for whatever they believe will be most favorable for their employer, or for themselves.
People are often wrong.
As companies are made up of many people, those people's beliefs and actions don't always match up, so it's still dangerous to talk too carelessly about a given company "believing" any particular thing without qualifiers.
Any time someone talks about a company "doing something", they obviously mean that the people within the company did those things, and those people's actions are guided by their individual and collective beliefs. They do not suddenly become perfect automata operating solely for the best interests of the company, without bias of their own, and they certainly don't suddenly become perfectly able to determine what will best serve the interests of the company.
> Companies don't "believe" things. They will amorally advocate for whatever is remotely favorable to the company.
I think this makes companies seem much more rational than they actually are. Plenty of companies do things because other players (especially larger players) in the space do it, regardless of cost/benefit to themselves. Where do you think the phrase "no one got fired for buying IBM" comes from?
If you've been around high-level exec's or their lawyers much - there's a whole lotta "what is the maximum amount of sh*t that we could get away with, or at least might benefit from attempting?" going on.
> some CEO here, or someone who has worked in HR can illuminate us on how they believe this is true
I'm trying to think of a case where I want to hire someone, HR says I need a non-compete, the candidate won't sign one, and I don't push back against HR. I'm coming up empty. That said, if a colleague wanted to hire someone, I was iffy on them and saw a string of short employment stints, I might press for a gardening leave or tighter NDA regarding client lists and IP.
OK, I can try and steel man it for you. Warning, long.
California hasn't had noncompetes for a long time (B&P 16600). But if you look in the code right around there, there are a few carveouts that cover most of the situations that are used most of the time for legitimate cases, like the split up of a closely held company.
There are other extreme examples that use a slightly different legal theory, like professional athlete contracts, which also rely on the forbearance of the other teams from employing the person in that specific role, though if Lebron wanted to pour beers for the Knicks, I'm doubtful that's covered. (Back when they were the worst team in existence, I did some work for the Warriors.)
The real reason they're haven't been so many issues in California is because they make you sign all kinds of things about IP, trade secrets, and so on which they will always start with if they really want to block a move. The courts know the score, they know this is just non-compete by other means, but if you cover your bases, it usually works (i.e. move is ok). Your new employer knows the score too and will usually just work a deal or fight the case. But if the cost gets too high, or maybe you kept an email print out you shouldn't have, it can get gnarly/expensive. And even just that drag/delay is enough of a deterrent.
So what's left? An employee who leaves with no critical information who just wants to open a competitor near by? There are a few circumstances like this where it might matter. Small company, key employee leaves, he has no IP, but it will probably impact your business. So what do you do?
Realistically, you probably engage in guerrilla tactics. And this brings me to my steel man.
How much of the oblique, bank-shot BS litigation (the guerrilla tactics I mentioned) about "trade secrets" is really just back door non-compete? That's your cost. Your benefit is free movement of employees, which means employees have more leverage in a freer market for labor and employers have to run their business well and can't just collect rents on their non-protectable intangibles, like being the only iPhone repair shop in town.
If you had a fair, reasonable standard for non-competes that had statutory limits and were void otherwise and that had to be supported by separate consideration, sort of like how we're trying to do employment arbitrations here, then I might be interested whether this cancels out the BS trade-secret litigation is enough of a benefit to outweigh the cost.
Of course, I doubt it. I've been involved with this stuff for decades and it's never perfect, and I understand that other states might want to be careful about adopting California stuff, but this statute is so old that it's from when Earl Warren was governor.
No one will miss these much. But I think the next question is how to tone down these BS trade secret cases too.
Employers do have legitimate concerns in their IP, but those are protected other ways. Maybe they don't believe that can be done easily. Or maybe it's in your brain and you can't unforget. Well, then the solution is in the IP universe, not in keeping competition out.
tl;dr best argument is that it's the only practical way to protect IP, but this can be addressed other ways both legal (contracts, lawsuits) and nonlegal (cybersecurity), which is exactly what people in CA have done sometimes too much.
As you say, California companies have a ton of things they can pull on departing employees--especially if those employees did take IP or client lists out the door with them.
In addition, while signing non-competes and having them stringently enforced isn't quite a man bites dog situation in other states, it's very far from universal. Only time I had one was while I was briefly working for EMC (big non-compete advocate) who acquired the company I was working for. And, in that case, the non-compete only applied to becoming an executive of a storage vendor.
I wasn't aware of non-competes being a widespread thing in the MA computer industry at the time. The company I worked for was actually founded by an ex-DEC engineer. That said, I'm happy to see the current pushback. They definitely have a chilling effect on especially small firms hiring people because they're seen as a risk. The very small company I worked for over a number of years saw any non-compete as a hard pass.
What I have told people, both as a business owner and as an advisor to others is, there's this magical thing you can do to keep employees from moving to other companies. It almost always works. If it doesn't work, you can try the second thing.
Wages and working conditions.
No one wants to hear that because they want a magic piece of paper that makes all problems solved for cheap.
Wages can be hard if you end up having to compete with FinTech, BigTech, and some other fields--or even just some company that really wants a person.
And working conditions covers a lot of ground. People just get itchy feet even when conditions aren't objectively bad. Or they liked the company when it was smaller but it has outgrown them.
But I'll agree that companies change and people change, and both should just be prepared to move on when the mutual bargain no longer works.
The pro sports restrictions are because they have a union and a collective bargaining agreement. If it weren't for that all the draft, trade, free agency, and so on rules would be unenforceable.
Sort of. There's a nexus between antitrust and the unions, but in terms of why someone can't just quit and go work for another team, that relies mostly on what's called a "negative covenant" that's in all of the standard player contracts and related clauses and it involves jumping between leagues or even sports as well, so the anti-trust surface is a bit different or possibly not in the mix, and can also involve individual sports like tennis or boxing.
A lot of the other anti-competitive things sports leagues get away with are because of what you're talking about, but the reason every California-based professional athlete can't just rip up their contract and walk away is they have a different kind of reasoning going into it based on their rarity.
I think part of what is going on here is that lawyers are incentivized to identify and mitigate risk. They don’t carry the downside to over-mitigating risk — in this case the company writ large and employees do, but lawyers are penalized — or at least they perceive they will be penalized - if they don’t identify any conceivable risk for their clients.
There are also a lot of asshole business owners out there. A friend once had a former employer successfully enforce a non-compete agreement against him for structured cabling work while his daughter was undergoing treatment for leukemia. He had to drive 200 miles one-way to work for a year to avoid being sued. For snaking Ethernet cables behind drywall.
Every company I've worked at when I ask says "yeah, they're basically not enforceable ... wouldn't stand up in court ... sign here" -- so why have them?
It's just bullying. Do you have $50K to drop on a litigator to dismiss a lawsuit from your former employee? If you were a startup hiring someone would you want to burn your valuable equity dollars on such legal defense? Probably not.
You should just be asking for dismissal. You should be be counter-suing for legal fees + k*N, where:
- N is l.b. by the total value of your possible employment contracts, including any active offers and your current position. Where total value is defined as total comp out m years, where m is the last day of the last stock grant.
- k is the maximum possibly relevant statutory damage multiple.
I certainly understand why companies do this, but often these non-competes are so overly broad to a point of being farcical.
When I was at Apple, in my free time, I started hacking on a clone of Plex Server. I had gotten multiple emails around the time saying that open-source policies have changed, and every open source contribution needs to be approved by the VP of technology, which sufficiently scared me. I managed to get a meeting with the VP of tech when I was in California, and while he was extremely polite, his response was that because my project dealt with video, and Apple sells video, it's therefore competitive, so I need to immediately stop working on it. [1]
It honestly kind of soured my opinion of the company, and I subsequently became a kind of crappy worker, because I stopped really caring if I made Apple better. I stayed on for about 1.5 years after that, and accomplished very little in the aftermath.
If he had just let me open source my stupid project that, lets be honest, would not have diverted a single dollar away from Apple, I think they would have gotten much better work from me by the end of my time there.
[1] Yes, obviously I could work on it in secret, and maybe it was a fools errand to ask permission on this, but I really didn't think Apple was going to be so overly broad with their definition of "competitive".
Here in France we can have them as well but there is a counterpart: if I want to go to a company which is a competitor, my current employer can say no but they have to pay me for that for the time of the non-compete (something like 75% of the salary). This is the law and they have no choice (short of not enforcing it)
French here. The exact amount is negotiated (aka decided by the employer) and written in the contract. I had multiple work contracts where the indemnity would have been 30% of my annual salary, never more (which is actually pretty bad because you still have to find a job without breaching the non-complete).
Non-compete clauses must also be limited in scope (geography and profession) and must not stop employees to live from their trade. As a result companies rarely exercise non-compete clauses since they are regularly thrown away by courts ("conseil des prud'hommes" in french).
Still they are part of the so called "standard work countract". I imagine most companies just get their base contract copy-pasted from the same template.
The amount also depends on the employee (some employees can actually negotiate if they have the upper hand, others as you mention get what is in the contract). On top of that there may be provisions in the collective agreement (convention collective). An example is the collective agreement for metallurgy (CC Métallurgie - this is a French thing and the name is historical) where the lowest compensation is 50% of the salary computed over 12 months.
That is a thing in other countries as well, and is usually what makes the non-compete enforceable. It's the idea of "consideration" -- in that the other party is getting paid in exchange for not working in that industry.
You see it in Oil & Gas a lot. Take 2 years off w/ a 80% pay, teach at a local community college or something for a minute, then back to the industry, etc. etc.
You can't have a society that claims that "the right to work" is a thing while disallowing workers to go work for the competition if the competition offers a better compensation. NDA already exist for trade secrets.
Of course you can! It's what we have in the US. Don't confuse capitalism -- the ideology of capital -- with marketism or competitionism or dynamism.
If you take it as an axiom that capitalism is an ideology designed to acreed economic activity to holders of capital -- and you should, it's literally in the name -- then "right to work means union busting and strong non-competes that sacrifice the right to work on the alter of return to capital" makes perfect sense
Reminds me of how "economic freedom" metrics usually include[1] how easy it is to fire people, but not how restricted employees are by non-competes and other measures that make changing jobs harder. This seems to hinge on the idea that employer-employee relationships are non-coercive and potential employees can always "vote with their feet". However, employees usually depend on having a job to live and - whether through collusion or herd mentality - employers in an industry tend to converge on a common set of restrictions on their workers.
> Many types of labor-market regulation infringe on the economic freedom of employees and employers. Among the more prominent are minimum wages, dismissal regulations, centralized wage setting, extension of union contracts to nonparticipating parties, and conscription. The labor-market component (5B) is designed to measure the extent to which these restraints upon economic freedom are present. In order to earn high marks in the component rating regulation of the labor market, a country must allow market forces to determine wages and establish the conditions of hiring and firing, and refrain from the use of conscription.
My most upvoted comment on HN is from some time ago specifically about non-competes. In summary: fuck non-competes. I will not sign them. I will not work for any company that puts non-competes in their employment contracts. I will advocate that all of the people in my professional network (all of whom are top of their fields) do the same.
I have never seen a single convincing argument for why companies need non-compete agreements for employees. Every single argument I have been provided, including the arguments in this article, are not even covered by non-compete agreements and are actually covered by non-solicitation or non-disclosure agreements instead.
Non-competes are amoral, create a social and moral hazard that depresses wages and further imbalances the power relationship between employees and employers, and are on their face rather stupid. There is not, and never has been, any legitimate reason for any company to put a non-compete into their employment contract. The only reason companies do this is because they're allowed to and any competent corporate attorney will try to get as much over on the other party as possible in a contract negotiation.
This research is completely unsurprising to me. Anyone with more than 5 brain cells to rub together can easily figure out that non-competes are a total farce and have no reason for existence.
In europe, in my country, the company that wants to enforce their non-compete has to pay the former employee their salary for the duration of the non-compete. I mean if i was working at a bank diing ordinsry software development like is done at all the banks then if they want me not to use my knowledge of payment schedule snd late fee calculations at other banks then they have to compensare for it.
This change in the law killed all the non-competes for software developers, because it was ridiculous. If you wsnt me not to work then pay me for my time.
Interesting,. In my European country, non-competes are fully legal and one-way, with no compensation for the employee if the other party chooses to enforce it.
noncompetes that don't include full compensation for the period of the noncompete are purely a tool for wage suppression. That uncompensated noncompetes are legal, let alone a thing that companies do, is abhorrent.
Garden leave is a pretty imperfect mechanism. Given bonuses/RSUs and benefits, even 100% base salary could represent a 50% compensation cut plus the potential cost of taking a year break mid-career. Sure, some would be happy to sign up but a lot wouldn't really want to be in that position.
Oh I agree entirely, the compensation should match your opportunity in industry. Specifically if you can get an offer for total compensation X and your current employer chooses to say you can't work at that other company, your current employer gets to match X plus say a 20-30% premium to compensate for lost year of experience, lost year of promotions, etc and to try and say "do you really want to inflict this noncompete on people?". Note that you would not be employed by your current/former employer, they are paying you to not work for a competitor but if they require you to do work for them then they're just reseting the non-compete period.
My goal in limiting NCAs would be for employers: "you cannot use non competes to artificially lower employee compensation, as your total cost will be much very expensive"; and for individuals: "if you are subject to an NCA you will actually be compensated for that period".
It would also mean you can do industry standard practice of changing jobs to increase compensation even while subject to an NCA as they would be required to pay you more than the "competitor" if you get an offer and they want to prevent you taking it. Again the goal is to prevent the use of NCAs for wage suppression - the company requiring the NCA would have to be really dedicated to their belief the NCA is needed.
The law in Denmark requires that you include all components of the compensation, not just base pay. This includes bonuses, pension, and things like the value of a company-provided car or phone.
Regarding RSUs, the document I'm reading does not explicitly mention them, but it says that it includes all benefits that you are taxed on, and well, I'm certainly being taxed on my RSUs.
All that said, the clause says you only get 40% or 60% of your full compensation (depending on the duration), so it is a ~50% pay cut for other reasons. Furthermore, it reduces to 16% if you manage to find another job in the same industry, and you are required to look for such jobs.
I am not entirely sure if you juxtapose the legal framework for Danish non-competes and garden leave. But assuming you do: In Denmark you are formally not employed, and you are free (actually obligated) to look for other job opportunities. You just can't, well, compete. So you can not take employment in a competitors company etc.
So, if you're a lawyer, you just can't work as a lawyer. Or at least you need to work for a different type of company which may not be easy to do depending on your specialty. In fact, forcing someone to look for work doing something different seems like an even worse outcome than letting them do whatever personal activities they want for a year at reduced pay.
Except what normally happens for professional jobs in the US is that someone lines up a new job, then they quit (and maybe take a few weeks off between jobs). In general, in the US, not being able to start a new job for 6 months would be a non-starter in many situations. And, while some occupations may be very hot, depending upon your age/experience/etc. being able to just quit and count on quickly lining something up when you start looking seems risky.
I am not advocating this system at all, merely pointing out that in Denmark there are protections for employees and a requirement for the employer to pay.
Right, and so you should be compensated at the rate of the profession your former employer is preventing you from working.
I don't see why an employer gets to say "well actually if you want to change your job you have to take a massive pay cut for 6 months. oh that means you can't afford your mortgage? ... that must suck. Have you considered working here for your current compensation indefinitely? that way you can keep your house"
That is the first thing I redline in any potential contract. I've never had serious push back beyond, "oh, um, that's just boilerplate from our legal team. You're the first person who has said anything."
It's basically along the lines of, "we know you have talent in x niche, which is why we are hiring you. However, you will no longer be allowed to work in that niche if we part ways for whatever reason" Yeah, ok.
In the early days of the dotcom era someone thought "internet technology" was a niche and tried to make me sign an NC, after I moved to take the job.
I said "I'm not signing this", they did the old it's not a big deal thing and I said if it's not a big deal you can change it.
In theory he was supposed to give me a reworded NC, but he promptly forgot it. Un/fortunately for him they didn't have anything that I would compete with.
Pair this story with the other one that made the front page - about Meta paying employees not to work, but not to work for their rival FAANGs. And yet I'd be surprised if there weren't a horde of lawyers that go to bat on behalf of employees trying to hop to a different Big Name but have to deal with noncompetes.
It's a weird world in the Valley.
When you put those two approaches side by side, you're almost forced to say Meta did it better, simply because if an employee bound by a noncompete can't work for a rival, at least Meta was paying them not to.
> And yet I'd be surprised if there weren't a horde of lawyers that go to bat on behalf of employees trying to hop to a different Big Name but have to deal with noncompetes. It's a weird world in the Valley.
The difference is that non-competes are (mostly) illegal in California, so silicon valley tech companies don't use them at all. Meta has no choice but to employ and pay developers if they want to stop Google from having them.
Right, right, the California Exception to Everything...
At a past job, there was a 2-year noncompete clause that stated I could not work with any company, anywhere in the world, who currently competes or might someday compete with the company I was at. I'm in the biotech industry, so I was unimpressed when I first read that. I can only imagine it was designed to intimidate people who would take that clause at its word, not realizing it was so broad and vague that it would be unenforceable.
This tendency is not necessarily human. There are enormous numbers of humans disinterested in control of others, or their environment, etc.
Those who want control might suggest otherwise, and they might actually believe it, but that's just lack of creativity (thinking of other possible worldviews) or empathy (realizing that others might see things differently).
Yup. In a group of 100 people, if only one wants control, guess who will probably get control? Paradoxically, it's probably the last person you want having control.
If that’s all they were, then we would have never seen companies create broad non competes that deprive a person of their livelihood.
I agree that’s one purpose, but I think another is to penalize the employee for leaving, discouraging them from doing so… and as a result increasing retention and/or reducing the pressure on the company to deliver increased benefits and wages in the future.
Interestingly, when I am presented with an employment contract, there are two things that often appear and that I always require to be removed: noncompete clauses and wording that assigns the rights to all of the work I do (even work that does not use my employer's time, resources, or knowledge) to my employer.
I have never once had an employer refuse to remove or modify those terms, but a couple of times it took a bit of negotiation to get there.
Jimmy John’s forced fast food employees to sign non-competes.
The labor pool of potential fast food workers is so vast, and the number of employees is so vast that it’s very clear these non competes were intended to threaten workers and suppress wages.
More like—if you can do something that's very, very unlikely to benefit you, but also costs you nothing and cannot hurt you, you may as well do it (unless you care about, like, ethics or any of that mumbo-jumbo)
The Jersey shore has, for some reason, been the vacation spot run by teen labor.
When you read these stories, the sense of entitlement of low-wage employers comes through strongly. If they aren't getting a steady supply of cheap labor, they get frantic and lobby for more cheap labor.
Last week it was slaughterhouse workers. Countries that don't have a big underclass have to automate.[1]
If you want to argue that it's okay to roll back child labor laws to allow some children to work 50 hours per week over the summer but that it's not okay to roll back child labor laws to let children work as late as 9:30 on a school night, be my guest. I tend to agree that the Wisconsin bill is worse.
The parent comment implied that it is always wrong to remove child labor laws, and that the GOP is the awful, backwards party that is doing it anyway. If you concede that it is okay to remove some child labor laws, in the words of the old joke, "Now we're just negotiating." I prefer that level of nuance over partisan ragebait.
If you meant to say something else, posting the full content of both bills is not as illustrative of your point as you might think.
> the GOP is the awful, backwards party that is doing it anyway.
My favorite part about GOP apologists is that you don't even have to explicitly say what's wrong with their platform, and yet somehow they always know what the criticism against them is.
> If you meant to say something else
I meant exactly what was implied. Both parties are trying to roll back child labor laws. One is clearly way more sensible than the other.
> I prefer that level of nuance over partisan ragebait.
LOL. Re-read your original comment again. Pot ----> kettle.
I can only interpret this as you not having read what I said at all. Especially that last bit, where I said I prefer your comment's nuance over the parent's lack thereof, and you pointed to my having added nuance earlier as evidence of pot calling the kettle black.
Of course, if you intended that as a compliment, it would make sense. But I apparently belong to the class of people you call "GOP apologists", and resultantly can read between the lines.
There are sufficient numbers… they expand the labor pool to reduce pressure on employers to increase pay and benefits. Need people desperate if you want to keep paying $7.25/hr.
The bottom end of the labor market has the most slack… it’s the last place in the labor market where you need additional supply.
I've never fully understood the market failure here.
Let's assume no Monopsony. Let's assume no collusion by employers, since this is explicitly illegal, indeed it did happen, but the tech firms were slapped on the wrist for it.
Why do employees not attempt to strike out those portions of their contract? Why does no entrepreneur create a tech company with one of the innovations being a no "non-compete" clause and using that to woo employees?
My guess is that employees do not actually dislike non-complete clauses that they would accept a lower wage in compensation for no "non-compete".
* Lack of laws. Non-competes should be treated as an exclusive employment by the company, to expressly NOT work on any of the covered topics. They must be funded.
Who has more "power" in the arrangement seems to be a function of the business cycle. Employees, in tech (we are on hackernews), had far more power 1-2 years ago.
Why does there need to be a law here? Why don't employees say: "If you want a non-compete you have to pay me $X/hr more" or conversely if non-competes are common : "you can pay me $X/hr less if there is no non-compete".
That this doesn't happen, and that there isn't a wiley entrepreneur out there figuring out that "if everyone would take X less for non-compete job, I'll offer then X/2 and make bank!". Since this doesn't happen, this means that employees don't care much at all.
Investors want to be protected and their attorneys will do anything that's necessary to make sure there aren't loopholes left open for ideas to be stolen.
The result is poorly drafted and ridiculously broad non compete clauses that would not be enforceable in most if not all states.
However even when they may not be enforceable (and you will hear the hiring manager saying that 100 times), non competes can still hurt candidates big time once they go back to the job market because many companies actually have provisions to disqualify those coming in with the extra baggage of a non compete.
If candidate A and B have very similar skills and experience and A has a non compete and B doesn't, why would anyone bother with A?
So it is true, non competes are in most cases non enforceable but they can still reduce your chances of getting a (better) job.
I declined offers after months of negotiations because of non competes and I would advise others to refuse to sign them, unless you desperately need the job, the compensation package is amazing or there are provisions or amendments to the clause, like a reasonable garden leave, that compensates you for having to carry a stinky non compete agreement on your forehead for an entire year or more if things don't work out.
If they want the non compete, make them pay for it, don't pick up the tab yourself.