HOW TO NEGOTIATE YOUR SALARY
"The
Darkest Hour of any man's life is when he sits down to plan how to get money without
earning it." - Horace Greeley
It is very
important to delay discussions on salary or compensation until after you know the employer
has decided to hire you. Employers will always be willing to pay more once they have
committed to offer you the job and have decided they want to work it out with you.
Almost all
compensation discussions are negotiations and it is to your advantage to learn how to
effectively negotiate your compensation without alienating your potential boss. Having a
win-win goal is the right goal, but it takes skill.
Do you dread
negotiation? It's not irrational; few people enjoy butting heads with inflexible,
hard-nosed, all-or-nothing adversaries. Whether it happens in a car dealer's showroom,
realtor's office, personnel office -- or even at a flea market stall -- it's no fun when
you can't reach a meeting of minds.
The good news is,
salary negotiation doesn't have to be a win/lose game in which the best player wins. In
fact, when it comes to negotiating the terms for your career moves that's exactly the
outcome you want to avoid. If you win and your employer loses, you lose in the long run.
Inevitably, your employer will start looking for someone who can perform your function at
less extraordinary rates. If you lose and your employer wins, well, you lose.
So your goal going
into negotiation must be to secure the best possible compensation package you deserve and
can justify based on skills, past performance, and market conditions.
Assuming that your
work itself is satisfactory, good negotiating skills are the key to getting the maximum
possible increase in pay. Over a lifetime, these skills can double your income for the
same quality and quantity of work. Yet few people spend time learning to be good income
negotiators. Most people would rather just let their income "happen" to them
instead of taking charge of their income growth.
The sooner you learn
to negotiate, the sooner you'll start reaping the rewards. Unfair as it may seem,
employers tend to prefer those candidates who already earn a greater income. While these
candidates cost more to employ, their higher incoming salaries are assumed to reflect
greater competence, initiative, and achievement. So, it's triply in your interest to
pursue income increases at every legitimate opportunity. One, you immediately increases
your income each time you succeed. Two, you make yourself more desirable as a candidate
for your next position. Three, you increase your future income; the higher your
salary/benefit package going into a new job, the better the offer a prospective employee
must make to attract you. Four, it earns the employer's respect making him or her feel
comfortable with you representing the firm's best financial interest in dealing with
customers and suppliers.
Whether you're
looking for a raise and promotion within your current company, or looking for greener
pastures, the following strategies apply.
Prepare
before you proceed
Negotiating
a significant jump in income requires research on the negotiator, firm, and industry. You
must be familiar with the company's wage limits and fringe benefit options for the job in
question, and with the style, thinking, and perspective of the person with whom you will
be negotiating. Explore the types of compensation programs available in the industry and
the industry-wide income levels typical for persons with your background and experience.
Try to determine how much authority the interviewer will have to discuss salary and fringe
benefits.
Contact
industry associations, executive recruiters, and competitive companies for salary ranges
and fringe benefit packages. Research library references including the Occupational
Outlook Handbook and the American Almanac of Jobs and Salaries, and other reference works.
Also independent research companies like the Hay Consulting Group in Dallas, Texas, offer
industry data on average salary levels for specific positions. The Internet can also offer
convenient salary comparisons such as the Salary Calculator at http://www2.homefair.com/calc/salcalc.html or Jobsmart at http://jobsmart.org/tools/salary/sal-prof.htm.
Before your negotiation, set specific income and
benefit goals, develop acceptable trade-offs among these elements, and identify areas in
which you will be willing to make concessions. Keep in mind that it's not how much you're
worth, but how much they think you're worth that counts. Also, examine alternate routes to
the compensation you desire. These may include changing employers, changing positions
within your present company, or becoming self-employed. The less desperate you feel about
attaining your desired income through one particular course of action, the more vigorously
you can negotiate to get it.
Remember that you
are negotiating a total compensation package. Weigh pure dollars against all benefits --
perks, automobile allowances, guaranteed incentive and bonus, commissions, insurance,
country club privileges, financial and legal assistance, first class air passage,
four-week paid vacation, job title, secretary or support assistance, car phone, and so
forth.
One industrial
troubleshooter I earned $6,500 per year in 30 minutes just by researching his industry --
and by having a ready trade-off. In negotiating with a potential new employer, this man
had reached agreement on every point except salary. The employer wasn't budging from a
figure $7,500 beneath what the applicant felt he was worth.
"In my current
job," this man recalls, "I had calculated the monthly revenue I generated for my
employer through billable hours and warranty claims avoidance. It turned out to be about
$12,000 per month over and above my salary."
"I also knew
that the position for which I was applying had been open for two months; experts in my
field are rare. So I pointed out that it would cost the company less to hire me on the
spot at my desired salary than to wait another month and hire another applicant at the
lower salary -- if they could find one. They wavered. So I offered to use my new personal
car for regional site visits at a fair reimbursement rate. (I prefer my car over their
fleet cars anyhow.) That clinched it. They offered me $6,500 more and I happily took
it."
Identify the goals
of your prospective employer by trying to anticipate what offers you will be made. Run
through all possible scenarios you may encounter in the negotiating phase. Set limits you
will accept, and be prepared to walk away if your terms can't be met -- assuming they're
reasonable and realistic. In the early stages of the negotiation, let the negotiator know
you're interested only in an exceptional opportunity. You thereby set the stage so that
the interviewer is unlikely to make you a low offer.
Choose a
conducive setting
Choose an
environment for the negotiation in which both you and the interviewer feel comfortable. If
possible, avoid distracting events such as dinner, and distracting settings such as
lounges or lobbies.
Make sure the person
you're meeting has the authority to make the final decision. Otherwise, delay until
someone with authority can meet with you.
Always
negotiate in person
Negotiating
in person gives you the greatest control. Face-to-face meetings provide the chance to read
and exchange body language, use silence constructively, make eye contact, and in general
enjoy a much richer and subtler communication. Less personal means of negotiation -- phone
calls and/or the mails -- will almost always result in a less satisfactory outcome.
One sales engineer
told me the difference it made to negotiate in the office of her future boss. "The
minute I walked in, I noticed pictures of racing sailboats on his wall. Well, I'm a
nationally ranked, Hobie Cat racer, so we wound up swapping great racing stories for 20
minutes before we began talking business. I got the job -- not only because we built a
personal rapport, but because our good feelings convinced my boss that I'd warm up his
firm's prospects, too."
"By
phone," she concedes, "I never would have had the visual cues that got things
moving in the right direction."
Never
negotiate with strangers
Build
rapport early in the meeting. Creating an open, relaxed, friendly environment develops
trust and mutual respect. Start negotiation proper only after you and your counterparts
are comfortable with one another.
Establish
mutual goals
Concentrate
on establishing and reinforcing points of agreement. Continually reiterate your feeling of
mutual compatibility and cite the positive attributes of both parties. This creates a bond
of harmony to help overcome the differences, which are likely to arise in negotiation. If
you hit a sticking point, reviewing your points of agreement and shared goals will rebuild
your accord with your negotiators.
Let the
negotiator raise the subject of money
The first
person to mention money usually pays for his impatience. Let the employer bring it up as
many times as necessary -- without talking numbers yourself -- until you feel ready.
Getting the employer to want you is crucial to maintaining the upper hand in your
negotiating.
If the question of
money arises too soon, tell the interviewer you need to learn more about the company and
the job opportunity before discussing financial needs. If the employer still persists, ask
if your are being offered the job. If pressed to give a salary figure, speak in terms of
the job's worth and your ability to do it well. Let your interviewer know that, while
money is not your main objective, you believe in excellent compensation for excellent
performance.
A good answer to the
salary question is to quote another offer you've been made, provided it is attractive. You
may announce the salary you would expect or answer that it depends on the total
compensation package with fringe benefits and other perks.
You might also
respond by saying that salary is the third item on your priority list. Number one is
making sure you can work well with the employer, and number two is being the right
candidate for the job. You also invite the company to offer you what it feels you are
worth based on your skills and accomplishments.
Your weakest
response is to divulge your present earnings. Or worse, to say, "I'm willing to
accept a comparable offer with good earning potential." This will typically net you
to a zero-to-ten percent increase, with an accompanying song and dance about the many
intangible benefits of your new position. If you must quote your current salary, tell the
employer that you will be getting a salary review, and you expect at least a 10% increase.
If this isn't true, make it true by having such a discussion with your current employer.
If you're ready to
discuss money and your negotiator still hasn't brought it up, you can move her in that
direction if the mood is highly positive and you feel that she really wants you for the
job. You might say, for example: "I feel very comfortable with you, the position
available, and the quality of this corporation. Now where do we go from here?"
Remember, don't be
impatient! Your ultimate goal is to get the interviewer to make the best possible offer
first. This offer is simply the opening gambit as you begin further negotiations in
earnest.
Seek the
employer's position before stating your own
Just as you
should allow the employer to mention money first, you should also encourage the employer
to mention his or her other terms -- relocation, starting date, car allowance, salary
limits, job title, and the like -- before revealing yours. Probe carefully to see what he
or she really wants. Size up the importance of any points of disagreement. You need to
gain an understanding of the employer's position to plan your proper gain and to plan your
proper strategy. Don't let the negotiator pressure you into accepting an offer until you
feel satisfied you're fully informed.
Keep good
records of your achievements
Throughout
your career you should develop the habit of documenting everything that reflects positive
performance. Save (and when appropriate, solicit) written letters of recognition. Note the
overtime you work, the goals you achieve, the money you save your employer, the bonuses
you earn, etc. Be specific. Having all the pertinent facts at your disposal will help you
build a credible case for your worth to the company.
A colleague of mine
helped place a substance abuse counselor who began in this field as a volunteer. Years
before, this man's hometown paper had devoted a Sunday feature story to his volunteer work
and the crisis intervention center he had helped found. "I made this article an
attachment to the resume," says the counselor. "It said things about me that
might have sounded egotistical had I said them -- and carried more credibility as an
outside source, too. I believe that article, as much as any one thing, helped me win my
current position."
Never
make an easy concession
When you
make a concession, let the employer know it's difficult. Make small concessions first. Say
to the employer, "If I give this up for you, what will you do for me?" or
"Will you give me this in return?" You can afford to trade a few chips from your
pile for an immediate concession from your negotiator in return. But remember the value of
your concession diminishes rapidly, so the time to work your trade is before you concede a
point for keeps.
Sometimes the best
way to reduce your ultimate concession is to "flinch in surprise" and then be
silent for a few moments when a figure is given. You may even slowly repeat the figure and
then be silent again. If the employer becomes anxious about your apparent resistance, he
or she may sweeten the offer to mollify you.
Always
counteroffer
When you do
respond to an offer, make a counteroffer a little higher than you expect to get. The
result? You may gain something without having to give up something later in the
negotiation. However, keep your ultimate goals in mind: a win/win resolution. You have to
come to work every day with your negotiator, so it's important to appear reasonable as
well as self-respecting.
Accept
when the time is right
If your
instincts tell you the time is right for getting the best offer, push for a decision
immediately, even if it's your first offer. Sometimes an employer will be more receptive
to making an offer right after a long, impressive interview than after a thoughtful delay
and a cooling-off period. Emotions play a major role in every negotiation, so settle when
the employer's emotions are most strongly in your favor.
Get your
agreement in writing. Better yet, write it yourself!
As you
accept an offer, establish your expectation of receiving the offer in writing by a
specific time. A written agreement reflects a firm commitment, and clarifies what is
expected of both you and your employer.
As part of your
agreement, insist on a three to six month severance pay. This protects you if things don't
work out. It protects you from a company merger, takeover, new boss, and similar
surprises. It also insures fairer treatment from the employer.
Offer to write the
agreement yourself as this allows you to ensure the inclusion of all details to which you
and your employer agree.
If you're switching
employers, don't turn in your resignation until after you have the letter of agreement in
your hands.
Guarantee your performance, and honor
your guarantee.
You can
generally negotiate better terms for yourself if you are willing to commit to specific
performance goals. Doing so also works in your favor when it's time to review your
performance; these goals provide a ready-made, tailor-made yardstick. Once you commit to
performance goals, follow through. Negotiations with employers are a continuous cycle,
beginning the day you arrive and extending to your next salary review when the cycle
begins anew.
Irreconcilable differences
If you decide not to
accept the offer for whatever reason, make sure you leave on the best of terms. Treat
every offer seriously and graciously. You can never tell who you may be doing business
with in the future so do not burn any bridges with your current or new employer.
However, using the
offer as a means to increase your current financial stature with your present employer is
considered unethical. Once you commit yourself and accept an offer you cannot back out
without losing your reputation and compromising your integrity. Changing your mind after
giving your word will cause employers to feel used, and will shatter their favorable
perspective of you. Decide before you get to the offer stage if the position is right for
you.
"The article above was written by construction recruiter Frederick Hornberger, CPC, president of Hornberger Management Company in Wilmington, Delaware (www.hmc.com), a construction recruiter specializing in senior level, executive search."
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Hornberger Management Company - Construction Recruiter. All Rights Reserved.