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Guard’s Raise Cut & Boss Says ‘Quit If It’s Not Enough’

by Sunny Nguyen
November 24, 2025
in Social Issues

A one-year on the job. A promised raise. Then the boss drops a bomb: “If your raise isn’t enough, quit.”
You’d think in 1992 the promise of loyalty still meant something. In his case it meant a 50-cent raise was in the books. But what showed up? 35 cents.

And the message: If you’re not satisfied, leave.

Our storyteller served in the Army, came to work as a security guard, trying to build something stable. The company paid low, turned over staff, and used small incremental raises to keep people nominally “incentivized.”

By the one-year mark he’d done his job, put in the time and was told, by the boss, that any more raise than what was laid on the table was a sign he should walk.

Now, read the full story:

Guard’s Raise Cut & Boss Says ‘Quit If It’s Not Enough’
Not the actual photo'"If your pay raise isn’t enough, quit."?'

EDIT: This took place in 1992-1993. I got a job as a security guard after leaving the Army. The company refused to pay very much so they had high turnover.

Because of the turnover, they had very small raises built in at 90 days, six months and a year as an incentive to stay on.

My one year anniversary rolls around and I don’t see my 50 cents an hour raise in my paycheck, but something more like 35 cents. So I called the boss.

Supposedly they wanted to give all employees a raise, so they did.

Furthermore, I wasn’t going to get a raise for one year my one year raise because, “You just got a raise. No one gets two raises at once. If your...

I spent the next week calling in sick and showing up late while job hunting. Called my last day, at the end of my shift, and told them I was...

Panic mode ensued. Everyone else was at 40 hours for the week and they hated paying overtime. One of the salaried managers had to cover for me.

… (He continues)

… I left that s__tty job to become a computer network engineer after college. Did that for a bit under ten years.

The 2001 tech bubble burst put a lot of us out of work. I started teaching to put food on the table. After that I felt a calling and decided...

In his story, the driver of his next career was less about the raise and more about respect. He served in the Army, showed up, did the job and when the boss told him to quit if he wasn’t satisfied, he blinked… and walked out.

This moment reflects something real: sometimes your value is not determined by your pay—but how you respond when your employer refuses to meet you halfway.

At the root of this story lies a core theme: compensation + respect. He wasn’t angry just about 15 cents. He was angry at the message: “If you’re unhappy, there’s the door.” It wasn’t a raise, it was an ultimatum. That line rubs people the wrong way because it erodes loyalty.

Studies show that raises do matter for retention. One investigation found that salary raises influence employees’ intention to stay but crucially, how employees perceive fairness in raises matters as much (if not more) than the actual size of the raise.

For example: “Employees who have less favourable perceptions of salary adjustments, compared to what they believe their colleagues think, are more likely to consider another employer.

Another review concluded that compensation is a key factor in retention “but not the only one”. Employee satisfaction, recognition, leadership and development all play roles.

And it’s not just staying, it’s loyalty. A loyalty-focused study notes that firms with high perceived employee support reduce turnover significantly.

Advice: Lessons for employees and employers

For employers:

  • When you tell someone “If it’s not enough, quit,” you just flicked off their loyalty tap.

  • Make raises transparent. Explain why someone gets 35 cents versus 50. The fairness of the process matters.

  • Use more than money. Recognition, development, communication boost retention alongside pay.

For employees:

  • Track your own value. You may accept first low pays but if the raise or process signals disrespect, it might be time to move.

  • Don’t accept an ultimatum as motivation. A boss telling you to quit if you’re unhappy is often the first step in losing you.

  • Use wage history and career progress to negotiate. The guard in the story turned his next move into a networking and education play and ended up in teaching.

This story is not just about 15-cent differences. It’s about a culture that says employees should be grateful, even when treated poorly. The guard’s walk-out wasn’t petty, it was principled. He used exit (rather than ongoing resentment) to preserve dignity.

As one model of organizational behaviour claims: when people feel their “voice” is ignored, they resort to “exit.”

In that, the story is a textbook case: leader issues ultimatum; worker uses exit; the organisation freaks out. But what if the boss had said: “Let’s talk about your raise and your future here”? Maybe that worker might’ve stayed.

Check out how the community responded:

Furious at the employer’s penny-pinching greed

USAhj - They lost an employee for $0.15 more cents an hour? So stupid.

machinerer - My personal experience is that you have to job-hop to get a pay raise unless you are unionised. Sad times.

cancerousiguana - When I worked retail … a year later I get promoted and they dock my raise 5 f__king cents to “be fair”.

TeamBlackTalon - u/bikerjedi on another sub?! Love your stories!

Lokgar - That last sentence hurts my soul.

Backing the guard’s choice & undervaluing loyalty

pereira2088 - Employer: if you don’t like it, quit. Employee: ok i quit. Employer: ShockedPikachu. jpg

jaymakestuff - I decided to take another job … they told me “we don’t think you’re worth that” … They replaced me with three people, cost them three salaries.

Dreambowcantsing - Thank you for becoming a teacher.

Noob_DM - Seeing you out of r/MilitaryStories is like seeing your teacher at the supermarket.

metkja - “The company refused to pay very much so they had high turnover”. Gotta love companies’ inability to understand this correlation.

Sometimes the turning point is 35 cents. Because it isn’t about the cents, it’s about being valued. This guard walked away not because the raise was tiny but because the message behind it was toxic.

What would you do in his shoes? Stay and hope things improve? Or leave the second you see the disrespect built into strategy? And if you’re the boss reading this: what kind of message are you sending when you devalue someone’s future with “quit if it’s not enough”?

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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