Nobody will make you sign one and that's your choice but typically employees who are asked to sign them are very well compensated for a reason.
I signed one. It just says I can't steal clients.
Nobody will make you sign one and that's your choice but typically employees who are asked to sign them are very well compensated for a reason.
I think they are perfectly reasonable, depending on the kind of work you are talking about. I own a consulting business. Why would I hire an employee and introduce that person to my clients and let them build a relationship without some protection against the person deciding they might be able to walk away at some point and take the clients with them that I introduced them to. I think any sales position, consulting business, etc., should have non-compete contracts with the employees that have relationships with customers. Those employees would not have the relationship or access to any of those clients if the company had not hired them and given them access to clients in the first place. People should not be able exploit that situation. I also think people who have sensitive information or proprietary information that could be used to compete against the company should also have to sign one. There is probably no reason for your typical employee to sign one.
Employers have too much power.Wow, you could not be more wrong. They can absolutely keep him from working per the terms of the non-compete. He can work in another industry or outside the geographical area designated in the agreement but otherwise they can keep him from working.
Employers have too much power.
Sucks how they kidnap employees and lock them in a room until they sign.Employers have too much power.
Where I worked it was stipulation to sign the non compete clause before being hired.Sucks how they kidnap employees and lock them in a room until they sign.
This is supposed to be capitalism. If your business can't sustain a loss of an employee, you don't have a business.False.
Where I worked it was stipulation to sign the non compete clause before being hired.
This is supposed to be capitalism. If your business can't sustain a loss of an employee, you don't have a business.
Probably thinks the kid at McDonalds asking if you want fries with that deserves $15/hr too.Cool. You should tell the countless employers that have non-compete clauses that they don't have a business.
After that, try to reconcile how you can complain that employers have too much power in one post, and champion capitalism in the next.
Just as the employee wasn't forced to sign the document or take the job. It's part of the contract.This is supposed to be capitalism. If your business can't sustain a loss of an employee, you don't have a business.
What you all are posting makes no sense.Probably thinks the kid at McDonalds asking if you want fries with that deserves $15/hr too.
How do you feel about unions?Just as the employee wasn't forced to sign the document or take the job. It's part of the contract.
We use them for high level employees. The techs and field staff are only required to sign confidentiality agreements. Pretty unfair to put a non compete on anyone below management. Hard to enforce as well if you can't prove the employee can cause harm to your business.
Granted it would not be a cheap legal battle. My suggestion is do the leg work and if you decide to leave go quietly and don't go after their clients or employees. Just fall off their grid.
My opinion is that union are not needed if good management is in place.How do you feel about unions?
How so?My opinion is that union are not needed if good management is in place.
What you all are posting makes no sense.
Not a direct response to what you said, but I don't see how someone can be for non competes and for RTW.
And no. I don't think fast food workers should be paid a minimum of $15 an hour.
I'm not necessarily for non-competes but it is the law and I support the rule of law. As long as they are allowed they should be enforced.
And most employees who would be eligible for unions or fall under RTW laws won't be asked to sign them anyway.
Maybe that's the issue here. Only a small percentage of employees are asked to sign them. Even companies that use them only use for a small percentage of employees.
What percentage of non-compete violations would you guess are successfully prosecuted?
Nope, I wanted to work for them, but they made it plain that I had to sign the non-compete clause to work there.Forced you to work for them did they?
They aren't litigated often...too often not worth the trouble. When they are litigated, getting a judge to rule is key for the employer. If it goes before a jury, usually the employee wins.No idea. Not a whole lot are going to be litigated but I'd say if those that are the employer wins more often than not. Good question I'll see if I can find an answer
Yep. Jury nullification in full affect.They aren't litigated often...too often not worth the trouble. When they are litigated, getting a judge to rule is key for the employer. If it goes before a jury, usually the employee wins.