Why Non-Compete Agreements Can No Longer Derail Your Career

Episode 459 | Author: Emilie Aries

New legislation could make your non-compete obsolete in the near future.

Some exciting news for workers made headlines recently: there’s a really good chance that non-compete agreements are on their way out the door. In April 2024, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission voted to approve a set of regulations that will render this often problematic part of employment contracts largely unenforceable. 

To this, I say good riddance! If you’ve ever been boxed in by an employer’s non-compete agreement, you are absolutely not alone. In fact, you’re in the company of around 30 million other Americans. In this episode and blog post, I break down where non-competes came from, the problems they cause

 for workers, and explore what a future without them might look like.

What’s the goal of a non-compete agreement?

Non-compete agreements prevent employees from taking a job with competing businesses, usually within a specific time period or region around the company location, in the interest (at least originally) of protecting trade secrets. At first, it was mostly knowledge workers in consulting and professional service industries who had to agree to this rule when they signed a new contract. Over time, their popularity spread to encompass more working-class industries, including—as a 2023 New York Times opinion documentary revealed—service workers like hair stylists.

The big problem with this restriction is that it leaves a lot of workers handcuffed to their current jobs. In my opinion, when the rule is expanded to a wide range of industries, it ends up going far beyond protecting trade secrets to curtailing healthy labor market competition and the underlying principle of supply and demand. 

When non-competes show up in non-unionized workplaces, in particular, they essentially eradicate the only bargaining power that an employee has when fighting for higher wages or better working conditions: their ability to leave for a better job elsewhere.

What do the new rules say?

Assuming legal challenges to the new ruling don’t win out (it’s looking promising), 120 days after the ruling passes (which would be August 21, 2024), existing non-competes across the nation will no longer be enforceable.

The one exception is for executives, who are defined as employees making more than $151,000 per year and “serving in a policy-making position” in their companies. These individuals will still be held to their existing non-competes, but should they begin a new executive-level job in the future, their employer will not be allowed to enforce a new one.

Employer’s intellectual property is still protected 

If you’re wondering how any employer will be able to protect their intellectual property (their “IP”) once these changes kick in, worry not. It’s fair for entrepreneurs and other business leaders to be concerned about employees leaving and taking all the company’s hard work with them. I certainly would be upset if my employee brought all the excellent systems we’ve developed to one of my competitors.

But non-competes are far from the only way to protect intellectual property. NDAs or “non-disclosure agreements” prevent employees from sharing company creations, as do patent and specific trade secret laws. Rather than saying that IP isn’t worth protecting, this new legislation supports the belief that it’s not okay to protect your IP at the expense of employees’ options for freedom of movement within the free market.

What do you think of all this? Have you been impacted by a non-compete in the past? If you’re an employer or employee, how might this news affect you? Let’s keep this conversation going in the Courage Community on Facebook or in our group on LinkedIn.

Related Links From Today’s Episode:

Statistics from the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

New York Times “The Great American Labor Trap”

Jon Stewart’s interview with Lina Khan

HIRED: my Job Search Accelerator

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Make your next best move with HIRED:

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