Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Never, Ever Make This Mistake Negotiating an Offer
Never, Ever Make This Mistake Negotiating an Offer Never, Ever Make This Mistake Negotiating an Offer Negotiating a job offer is challenging. Thereâs pay, benefits and schedules to talk through - and having so many details to discuss can leave room for a lot of errors. But thereâs one mistake you can make when negotiating a job offer that is much worse than any other - and thatâs not knowing your worth - and fighting for it, says David Wiacek , a certified professional career coach and resume writer. âThe single most common mistake I come across with my clientele - mostly entry-level, and middle management, but, yes, even senior leadership - is approaching it from a place of fear or desperation, which often results in folks under-selling and under-valuing themselves, and asking for less money than what they deserve,â he says. And of course, if you make the mistake of not knowing your worth, it âskews the entire process in the favor of the employer, and results in less earning potential,â Wiacek explains. So, why do so many people make this mistake? âThe fear often arises from desperation - as in, I hate my current job and need to leave, and therefore I should settle for whatever salary is presented without ruffling any feathers,â Wiacek says. Whatâs more, some candidates use their previous salary as the measuring stick for their new job offer - but if your previous company underpaid its employees, that pay is a detrimental measuring tool, Wiacek says. But donât worry: You can easily avoid making this mistake. Like anything else, negotiating a salary is a skill you can hone. First, find out what youâre worth. You can use Glassdoorâs Know Your Worth tool to get an accurate estimate of what other professionals in your field and region are paid. Next, come up with a list of things you bring to the table that prove your worth beyond the market figures you uncover. âMuch of my client work is focused on getting clients to think objectively about the value they bring to the table,â says Wiacek. âDuring an interview, and all the way through to the salary negotiation, your emphasis ought to be on what you can tangibly improve, mostly because youâve improved things under similar challenges before.â If you can prove your worth throughout the process, negotiating your salary will be easier. Then, practice negotiating ! With practice, youâll develop confidence. And âshowing that you are assertive and can stick to your guns, and youâve done the industry market research, and you know your value, is compelling in its own right,â explains Wiacek. âThe assertiveness is a form of confidence, and employers want to hire confident, decisive employees. This skill will drive all sorts of success, whether internally focused [at the company] or externally.â Of course, if youâve flubbed negotiating your salary and undersold yourself, all is not lost. Yes, it will be tough to backpedal and ask for more money, but âthere is no rule book that says you canât do this,â says Wiacek, who suggests approaching a re-negotiation by saying, âAfter careful consideration of the scope of this role, and what Iâve learned through the interview process, as well as additional research Iâve conducted into industry salaries, Iâm confident that I can offer much more value to your company and that Iâm worth $XYZ.ââ And, if you canât get a company to budge on salary, be sure to have a few other benefits in your back pocket that you can negotiate. âMaybe youâd value an extra week of vacation, or flex time, or working from home two days a week, or some other hard or soft benefit,â says Wiacek. âDo the research, identify whatâs most important to you, and be willing to budge until youâre not; in other words, have some hard limit after which you wonât take the offer.â
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