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OPINION

The Case Against Noncompete Agreements

businessman noncompete reading agreement

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) effectively tried to kill noncompete agreements last week. While some companies plan to challenge this, it was the right decision to make.

California — where I’ve spent most of my life — along with Minnesota, Oklahoma, and North Dakota, have already banned noncompetes. In California, this resulted not only in higher wages but also in the creation of Silicon Valley and provided a significant barrier to other states that didn’t have this ban regarding enticing employees to move.

This national ban should result in more employees moving to states with lower living costs, increasing salaries and benefits, and providing much better work environments. It will also result in stronger companies, even though many who fear their employees may leave will fight this.

Let’s talk about noncompete agreements this week, and we’ll close with my Product of the Week: a performance electric car that is an absolute bargain used.

The Argument in Favor of Noncompetes Is Largely False

Companies often argue that noncompetes are critical to protecting their intellectual property in case departing employees take their proprietary knowledge to another company. But if they do that, the former employer is afforded substantial protection. If an investigation finds that technology did migrate with the employee, the old employer gets ownership rights over the products created using their technology.

This kind of “theft” is surprisingly easy to prove. Patents, copyrights, and other protections over that intellectual property are in place, making technology theft, regardless of the method, excessively risky and expensive.

As a result, someone in a critical position changing companies without a noncompete is put in an administrative position for around a year to ensure they don’t accidentally compromise the projects they are working on.

The real reason for noncompete agreements is to prevent employees from shopping for jobs to get higher pay or better benefits. The noncompete effectively locks them into their company unless they choose to switch careers or relocate to a state that prevents enforcement — which was and still is a frequent practice to circumvent noncompetes.

This strategy enables companies to keep pay and benefits low for existing employees while increasing pay and benefits to attract external candidates, often resulting in huge salary and benefits differences between older and new hires.

Consequently, the company doesn’t have to be competitive with existing employees since the noncompete effectively locks them into the company, and new hires will eventually find themselves in the same underpaid position as their older peers.

The Problem With Noncompetes

Whenever you lock employees into a job, you risk them realizing you are taking advantage of them and revolting.

Revolt behavior could include theft of company assets, illicitly selling company secrets, union organizing (unions are not fans of noncompetes), lower morale, and reduced productivity. People who feel they are being taken advantage of but can’t afford to leave tend not to be top performers and may look for ways to reduce their contributions.

This scenario is not only bad for the employee, who may eventually get fired for deficient performance, but it’s also bad for the company because it effectively creates a hostile work environment where the employer is actively working against the employee’s best interests.

Thanks to California’s effective ban on noncompetes, I was able to leave my old company when they made decisions that I disagreed with, form my own company, and take my most valuable clients with me. Had a noncompete bound me, I’d have had to sit out a year, been unable to take my clients with me, and failed as an independent analyst.

The lack of an enforceable noncompete gave me the freedom to protect and grow my career, find an independent path, and become more successful and happier than I otherwise would have been.

Noncompetes Are Employee Abuse

Changing companies is often the quickest way to advance your career and increase your income. However, if you stay at a company, especially one that enforces noncompete agreements, you might find that salary increases do not keep pace with the cost of living, even if you are a top performer.

The presence of a noncompete agreement discourages employees from seeking better opportunities or higher pay unless they are terminated. Being fired might free you from the noncompete, but it also tarnishes your employment record, which companies tend to disclose during background checks.

This situation exemplifies how companies use their superior bargaining power and larger financial reserves to disadvantage their employees, effectively reducing their real compensation over time. As inflation increases, the purchasing power of employees’ incomes decreases as the cost of goods and services rises.

Microsoft’s Good Example

In 2022, Microsoft announced that in the U.S., only partners and executives would be subject to noncompetes, sparing its lower-level employees from the restriction.

This policy isn’t abusive because executives are usually wealthy and can afford workarounds, such as taking jobs in a California company like Google, which will keep them financially whole. Plenty of Microsoft executives have moved to Google over the years, resulting in products like Android on smartphones, a segment in which Microsoft failed.

In Microsoft’s case, the policy isn’t abusive so much as ill-advised because that supposed protection has resulted in a number of surprise critical departures over the years. It reflects bad governance in a company typically held up (for good reason) as one of the best-run technology companies in the world.

Wrapping Up: Noncompetes Are Bad for Everyone

Noncompetes are a form of lock-in, a practice that tends to be a company killer. I learned this firsthand at IBM, which used lock-in back in the 1980s to abuse customers to the degree that those customers abandoned the company, nearly putting it out of business a few short years from its 100-year anniversary.

If the company believes you can’t leave, it isn’t motivated to improve benefits, salaries, and working conditions — or even to take complaints seriously. It creates an adversarial condition between employees and management, which can result in a variety of problems, not the least of which are unionization and employees acting out.

Noncompetes are not good for the company, the employees, or the countries that allow them to exist because they foster employee abuse, even if it is only financial abuse, and that typically doesn’t end well.

I regularly disagree with the FTC. I particularly didn’t agree with it going after Qualcomm to appease Apple, which was 20 times bigger and far more powerful than Qualcomm. However, when it comes to noncompetes, the FTC is on the right side of the argument. Noncompetes need to be abolished for the good of everyone because they are simply bad governance and employee abuse.

Tech Product of the Week

The Audi RS e-tron GT

I’ve been looking for a new electric car. I was on the list to get a Fisker Ocean, which recently became far more attractive due to massive price reductions. However, the reason behind these reductions was the company’s impending bankruptcy, and even at around 50% off, I wasn’t willing to risk not being able to get the car serviced should the company go under — although Fisker might be sold to a larger car company.

The Audi e-tron GT and the Porsche Taycan are the same car in terms of performance, but I like the Audi’s look better. Typically, the cost of maintaining an Audi is less than that of a Porsche (though the Porsche conveys more status). Like with most electrics, the resale value of the Audi e-tron GT drops a lot after the first year, so you can find them for about half the price of a new one with 15,000 miles or less.

Performance, particularly for the more expensive RS version, is superior to many supercars and in line with the fastest Teslas (0-60 in 2.9 seconds for the RS) while providing better looks and interior comforts.

For instance, the Audi R8, which is a supercar, does 0-60 in 3.2 seconds. Drag races between the two cars, which are $100,000 apart, are fun to watch, particularly if you don’t own an R8. The e-tron will dust the more expensive car in almost any stoplight race. (The R8 does have slightly better brakes.) It’s also one of the fastest-charging EVs on the market, though its range of around 250 miles is lower than I like.

2022 Audi RS e-tron GT

(Image Credit: Audi of America)

You can find 2022 e-tron GTs with low mileage for under $50,000 and RS (pictured here) for under $75,000. In both cases, that’s a lot of performance for not a lot of money, and the cars are almost brand new.

Given we are approaching a major upgrade in electric vehicles in the next two years, it really doesn’t make any sense to buy a new one now because the used ones are terrific values. Though I have to say, having just seen an early video of the 2025 Audi RS E-Tron GT I may hold out for a new one. Yippee Ki-Ay!

I’m seriously thinking about grabbing one of them, so the Audi e-tron GT is my Product of the Week.

Rob Enderle

Rob Enderle has been an ECT News Network columnist since 2003. His areas of interest include AI, autonomous driving, drones, personal technology, emerging technology, regulation, litigation, M&E, and technology in politics. He has an MBA in human resources, marketing and computer science. He is also a certified management accountant. Enderle currently is president and principal analyst of the Enderle Group, a consultancy that serves the technology industry. He formerly served as a senior research fellow at Giga Information Group and Forrester. Email Rob.

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