A London betting firm offers employees the chance to decide their own salary as well as being able to check what their colleagues are paid.
Smarkets encourages their staff to have pay rise requests endorsed by peers who offer suggestions on a suitable rise percentage.
However if the person isn't happy with the suggestions given they can also come up with their own request, which is typically between 10 and 30 percent.
The radical pay transparency policy also allows staff to check their colleagues' salaries in a bid to minimise the gender pay gap.
Angeline Mulet-Marquis, a software engineer at Smarkets, said: 'Most people get what they ask for.'
Ms Mulet-Marquis requested a 12 percent rise in her last appraisal which was granted to her.
The starting salary for a graduate engineer is around £45,000 but can rise to a six-figure sum for high qualified seniors.
UK broadcaster BBC was forced last year to disclose the salaries of some of its top staff, showing men made up 12 of the 14 highest-paid posts and leading to complaints of unequal pay for the same work.
Software engineer Caglar Senel said allowing employees to see each other's salaries is a way through which companies can ensure equal pay.
However several staff believed that the same approach may not work everywhere as pay transparency could be demotivating.
In Norway the tax agency publishes key information online about taxpayers each year, including their earnings and wealth, allowing Norwegians to see how much their colleagues are earning.
There are similar approaches in Finland, where people can request tax information by phone or in person, while in Ireland employees have a right to request pay information broken down by gender for the same level of work.