Q: Why does my payslip always feel so confusing?
"Because most payslips are made for rules and tax offices, not for people. But the payslip is really your story: it shows what your boss promises you, what the law takes, and what is left for you. If it’s not clear, it’s not your fault, it just means your employer should explain better. A payslip should give you trust, not headaches."
Laura De Troia
Numbers Never Tell the Whole Story
When I speak with employers and employees, I notice the same thing every time: payroll is often treated as a “box to tick.” A list of figures, added up neatly, ready for the tax authorities. But behind those numbers, there is always a story.
A payslip doesn’t just tell you how much someone earns. It shows how a company deals with trust, care, and responsibility. Payroll reflects choices: whether you’ve built in clarity for your employees, whether your company’s rules align with reality, and whether people feel seen beyond the numbers.
Transparency Is Not Bureaucracy
Recently, I read a decision under the Dutch Woo law (Open Government Act). In short: the requestor asked UWV for documents about specific employer assessments. The answer? “We don’t have those documents”.
At first glance, it looks like a boring legal rejection. But read deeper and you’ll see something important: transparency only works if the information exists in the first place. And isn’t that the same in payroll? If your records are incomplete, your employees can’t trust the system. If you hide the reasoning behind a bonus or deduction, it feels like bureaucracy instead of fairness.
The Why Behind the Payslip
Every employer should ask themselves: What story does my payroll tell?
- Does it show that you invest in your people, or only that you follow minimum legal rules?
- Do employees understand their payslip, or is it a mystery in small print?
- Do you use payroll as a communication tool, or just as an accounting product?
When an employee receives a payslip they cannot understand, it’s like being handed a letter in a foreign language. The numbers may be correct, but the meaning is lost. And when meaning is lost, trust erodes.
Lessons for Micro and Small Entrepreneurs
For large corporations, payroll is a machine. For micro and small entrepreneurs in the Netherlands, it’s much more personal. Your team sees payroll not just as money, but as a signal of how much you value them.
- A delayed payment feels like broken trust.
- An unexplained deduction feels like unfairness.
- A small but clear explanation feels like respect.
Payroll is often the only direct message your people get every month about how the company views them. Don’t underestimate its weight.
From Compliance to Culture
Of course, payroll must meet all legal obligations, tax, social security, pensions. But if that’s where you stop, you’ve missed the opportunity. Payroll is culture in numbers. It’s where compliance meets humanity.
When I explain this to entrepreneurs, I often see the penny drop. Payroll is not “just Excel.” It’s storytelling with numbers. The kind of story that can either motivate people or quietly push them away.
My advice to both employers and employees: never settle for “just the figures.” Always ask why. Behind every line of a payslip there is a decision, a value, a signal. And when you treat it that way, payroll stops being a burden and becomes what it should be: a tool for trust.
Head of HR-Salarisadministratie
Laura De Troia leads Xtroverso’s payroll and contract practice with a dual focus: technical mastery and human fairness. With extensive experience in HR and compliance, she ensures that salaries, contracts, and employee records are not just managed, but safeguarded.