Pay transparency – competing for talent in the UK: winning in the “comparison economy”
Last week in Bristol, Frazer Jones brought together more than 70 Reward and HR professionals from across Bristol and the South West for a highly engaging session on a topic shaping almost every hiring conversation we see: how organisations compete for talent in the “comparison economy.”
Hosted by Mike Doyle, Head of Reward, Unite Students, and delivered by Becky Pugh and Caroline Tierney from RPZ, the session combined market insight with practical application, reflecting what we’re seeing on the ground with clients and candidates across the Bristol and beyond.
The reality: constant salary comparison is here to stay
From a Frazer Jones perspective, this shift is not theoretical, it’s already embedded in the talent market.
Today’s candidates:
- Benchmark salaries in minutes via Glassdoor, LinkedIn and peer networks
- Receive frequent outreach from recruiters
- Compare multiple opportunities in real time
In Bristol’s competitive market, particularly across tech, professional services and high-growth sectors, salary visibility has fundamentally changed the dynamic. Pay is no longer private; it is increasingly transparent and continuously compared.
The risk: reward conversations becoming one-dimensional
A key theme from the session was the growing risk that salary becomes the only metric that matters.
Across the Southwest, we consistently see organisations:
- Investing heavily in benefits, wellbeing and development
- Offering strong flexibility and culture
- Yet still losing talent to marginally higher base salaries
Why? Because broader total value isn’t landing.
As RPZ highlighted:
“Employees are constantly exposed to salary data but rarely see the total value.”
When total reward isn’t clearly articulated, the market defaults to what’s easiest to compare, base pay.
The gap: employees see pay, not value
In many organisations across the UK, reward is fragmented and under-communicated.
Employees typically see:
- A payslip
- A salary band
But often miss:
- Career development opportunities
- Learning investment
- Flexible working
- Culture and purpose
- Benefits and wellbeing support
This creates a disconnect where significant investment in reward fails to translate into perceived value, impacting both attraction and retention.
The shift: from reward packages to reward stories
The session reinforced the importance of building a clear Reward Value Proposition (RVP).
An effective RVP doesn’t require changing your offer, it requires changing how you communicate it.
The organisations cutting through in the Southwest are those that:
- Connect salary, benefits, flexibility and growth into one coherent narrative
- Equip hiring managers to confidently articulate “why us”
- Reinforce value consistently across the employee lifecycle
Crucially, they answer the question every candidate is asking:
“Why stay here even if I could “earn” more elsewhere?”
Where Frazer Jones sees it working (and not working)
From our vantage point in the UK, a clear divide is emerging.
Where it works well
- Total reward is communicated early, clearly and consistently
- Hiring managers confidently explain value beyond pay
- Candidates feel they are gaining something, not just being paid something
Where it falls down
- Benefits are listed but not brought to life
- Messaging varies across the hiring process
- The “why stay” story only appears at resignation
Making it practical across the employee lifecycle
Through journey-mapping exercises, the Bristol session explored how comparison shows up at key moments – and how to effectively create the narrative that makes your organisation shine:
- Attraction: candidates arrive having already benchmarked salary
- Onboarding: they’re still being approached by competitors
- Year 1 – 3: comparison frequency increases
- Exit: offers are framed purely in financial terms
Across each stage, the same pattern emerged:
Employees compare what’s visible. Organisations often fail to make total value visible.
That gap is the opportunity.
A practical shift for HR and reward leaders in the UK
For organisations across Bristol and the wider region, the takeaway is clear:
You don’t need to redesign your reward strategy, you need to make it more visible, consistent and meaningful.
That means:
- Treating reward communication as a strategic capability
- Equipping line managers, not just HR, to tell the story
- Aligning reward, EVP and recruitment messaging into one joined-up narrative
Final reflection: clarity is the new competitive advantage
At Frazer Jones, one trend stands out across the talent market:
The organisations winning in today’s environment aren’t simply those that pay the most, they are the ones that offer the clearest, most compelling picture of total value.
- Clarity of message
- Clarity of value
- Clarity of experience
In a market where salaries can be compared in seconds, that clarity is fast becoming a key differentiator for attracting and retaining talent in Bristol and beyond.
If you would like to benchmark yours and your team’s salaries, please don’t hesitate to contact me. Alternatively, if you are looking to hire an expert reward professional, please submit a brief and we will be in touch. If your organisation wants to articulate total value effectively, RPZ are here to help.
