Salary Guides 2 weeks ago
How to Negotiate Your Salary: Get Paid What You're Worth
Learn exactly how to negotiate your salary with scripts and strategies. New job offers, raises, and promotions — get paid what you're worth.
By Admin
Most people don't negotiate their salary, and it costs them $500,000-1,000,000 over their career. Negotiation isn't aggressive or greedy — it's expected. Here's exactly how to do it.
When to Negotiate
- New job offer: Always. 84% of employers expect candidates to negotiate.
- Annual review: Prepare your case 2-3 months before review season.
- After a major achievement: Closed a big deal? Completed a major project? Ask for a raise within 2 weeks.
- When your responsibilities increase: If your role expanded, your pay should too.
Step 1: Know Your Market Value
Before any negotiation, research what your role pays locally:
- Check job postings for similar roles in your city — many now include salary ranges
- Use salary data from sites like Glassdoor, Levels.fyi, or Payscale
- Ask peers in your industry (salary transparency is increasingly normal)
- Check the Bureau of Labor Statistics for your metropolitan area
Step 2: Quantify Your Value
List specific accomplishments with numbers:
- "I managed a team of 8 and we exceeded targets by 15%"
- "I reduced processing time from 5 days to 2 days"
- "I brought in $200K in new business last quarter"
Step 3: Use the Right Words
Don't say: "I need more money because my rent went up."
Do say: "Based on my research, the market rate for this role in our area is $X-Y, and given my contributions including [specific achievement], I believe $Z is appropriate."
Step 4: Negotiate Beyond Base Salary
If they can't budge on salary, negotiate these:
- Signing bonus (one-time cost is easier for employers to approve)
- Remote work days (saves you commuting costs)
- Extra PTO (even 5 more days has real value)
- Professional development budget
- Earlier review date (e.g., 6 months instead of 12)
- Title upgrade (helps your future earning potential)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Never give a number first if you can avoid it — let them make the first offer
- Don't accept on the spot — always say "I'd like 24-48 hours to review"
- Don't threaten to leave unless you actually have another offer
- Don't apologize for negotiating — it's a normal business conversation
- Don't negotiate via email if you can do it over the phone or in person
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