Start here
Use this guide to find the information needed for the Career Overview tab.
Open Personal Information
In Oracle HCM, go to the Me area and open Personal Information.
Open My Compensation
Inside Personal Info, select My Compensation to open your salary and compensation information.
Open Compensation History Report
Select your assignment if prompted, then click Compensation History Report under Show prior salary.
Copy the Compensation History table
Select the full Compensation History table, including the headers, then right-click and choose Copy.
Note: the table might take some minutes to load. If it stays empty, please go back to step 1 and repeat the flow.
Paste the data in this tool
Return to this page, paste the copied table into Paste Compensation History from HCM, then click Import pasted history.
Paste Compensation History from HCM
Paste the copied Compensation History table here. The tool will import rows named Base Salary and Annual Target Variable, grouping them by start date. Review the imported levels and job titles afterwards.
Career Overview
Review imported rows or add/edit entries manually. See the Start here tab for where to find this data.
| Start date | Level | Job title | Basic salary | Compensation | Benefits | Basic + Benefits | Total salary | Raise % |
|---|
Timeline Chart
The X axis is always the compensation history timeline. Select the values to show.
Scenario Simulator
Estimate a future level, salary, and compensation without adding it to your history.
Current vs Scenario
Compares current salary details against the simulated values.
Inflation Impact
Shows how inflation reduces the purchasing power of the selected salary period.
Official Spain inflation rates
Source: INE dataset 76144| Year | Inflation % | Δ vs prev |
|---|
Comparison range
Insights
Salary vs real value over time
How to read this chart
The dark line is the nominal salary amount. The red line is what that salary is worth after inflation, measured against the selected starting salary. The gap between the two lines is the purchasing power lost to inflation — shown numerically in the table below.
Year-by-year breakdown
One row per career entry between the selected dates.