Employers are using signing bonuses at an elevated rate to attract talent — and there are ways workers can capitalize on the trend.
A signing bonus is a financial sweetener — often a lump sum of cash — that businesses offer prospective hires.
Offers vary widely by company and position, and they can be quite generous. For example, Walgreens is offering a $75,000 signing bonus to pharmacists in some areas to reduce staffing shortages, according to a recent report in The Wall Street Journal.
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In July, 5.2% of all job postings advertised a signing bonus, a slightly lesser share than the 5.5% peak in December but still about triple the level in July 2019, according to an analysis of internal data by career site Indeed.
That suggests employers are competing to fill open jobs at a time when workers are still «in the driver's seat,» according to AnnElizabeth Konkel, an economist at Indeed.
«If employers could find workers a dime a dozen, I don't think they'd be using signing bonuses in this way,» Konkel said.
The trend is more prevalent among in-person health-care jobs, like nursing, dental, medical technicians, physicians and surgeons, and home health care, according to Indeed data. More than 10% of jobs ads in these respective categories offered a signing-bonus benefit in July.
For example, the share of job listings advertising these bonuses jumped from 6% to 18% in the three years from July 2019 to July 2021, according to Indeed.
Here are the top eight occupational sectors that advertised a signing bonus in July 2022, according to Indeed.
Workers have
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