You're in a job interview, you get the offer—but the salary? Way lower than expected. The worst move? Accepting on the spot. The second worst? Declining outright. Here's how you can take the 'ick' out of negotiating: 1. Start with Gratitude →“Thank you for the offer.” 2. Share Excitement →“I’m really excited about the role and joining the company.” 3. Address the Salary →“Before I accept, I’d like to discuss the salary. It’s below what I believe reflects the market value for my experience.” 4. Reinforce Your Value →“I’m confident my expertise in A and B, and my contributions to C and D will drive success here.” 5. Reiterate Market Value →“Based on my research and track record, I believe a salary range of X to Y would be more in line with the industry.” Where to do research? Check salary data on sites like Glassdoor, Payscale, and LinkedIn, or ask industry peers and recruiters for real-world insights. Pro tip: Use multiple sources to get a well-rounded view and always adjust for location and years of experience. P.S. Have you ever accepted a salary because you didn't know how to negotiation? I'll go first: Yes, I have...
Handling Job Offer Negotiations
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
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Here's a 5-step counteroffer structure that got my client an extra $50,000 in salary (with an example template): 1. Confirm your interest and gratitude for the role. 2. Reframe their pain points as goals to achieve. 3. Reiterate your experience fixing pain points. 4. Make the ask (salary, bonus, vacation, etc). 5. Close them (most people fail to do this). EXAMPLE: "Hi Jane, Thank you for sending this offer to join [company] – I'm grateful to be considered for the role and remain excited to join the team. Throughout the interview process, I was impressed with what I learned about the role and the exciting opportunities to help grow the recruitment team, double hiring numbers, and bring recruitment in-house. This aligns closely with my experience at Babylon, where I led a team of 5 and helped hire over 500 clinical and non-clinical staff in less than 2 years while maintaining a $0 agency spend. Having reviewed the offer, I would appreciate the opportunity to discuss the salary, bonus, and vacation. Would [Company] be able to offer $220,000 with an increased bonus of 18%? Additionally, I currently enjoy 5 weeks of vacation, and I would prefer to maintain this amount. This overall compensation reflects market research and insights gained from discussions with similar-sized companies for comparable positions. If [company] could consider this, I would feel more comfortable formally withdrawing from other interview processes and prepare to provide notice at my current company. I understand this may require some time to review, so please let me know if you'd like to discuss this further. Sincerely, Your Name" Pro tip: Never say: "Would 'you' be able to offer $X?" Instead, say: "Would [Company] be able to offer $X?" This DEPERSONALIZES the negotiation by positioning the company as a 3rd party in the conversation. Follow for résumé + salary negotiation tips 🤝 Repost if this will help your network 🙌 P.S. do you have any negotiation tips that might help others?
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If you don’t want a 30% hike in your CTC at your next job, scroll past. But if you’re tired of hearing “This is our final offer” and settling for less then this is for you. Your negotiation doesn’t start when HR asks about your expectations. It starts the moment you know your worth. Here’s what most people get wrong: ✖️ They accept the first number without question. ✖️ They’re afraid to “seem greedy.” ✖️ They haven’t researched what the market pays for their skills. Here’s what I teach my students to do differently: ✔️ Research like a pro: Don’t just Google “average salary.” Dig deeper. Use real-time data, talk to peers, and know the exact range for your role in your city. Use platforms like Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary Insights, and industry forums to know the real numbers for your role and experience. ✔️ Lead with results, not requests: Instead of “I want a higher salary,” say “I’ve increased team efficiency by 25% in my last role, and industry data shows my profile commands ₹X–₹Y in this market.” ✔️ Let HR speak first: Don’t rush to reveal your number. Listen, then counter with data and confidence. ✔️ Be ready for a ‘no’ and have a backup: If the number can’t move, negotiate for bonuses, extra leave, or learning opportunities. Sometimes, the real value is in the benefits package. ✔️ Never apologize for asking: You’re not being difficult. You’re being professional. Employers expect negotiation from top talent. If you’re preparing for interviews this month, don’t just focus on clearing rounds. Prepare for the conversation that determines your true worth. Because while everyone else is accepting what they’re given, you’ll be the one walking out with the offer you actually deserve. #salarynegotation #knowyourworth #jobsearch #interviewpreparation #careergrowth #hike
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Most employers aren’t against overseas talent. They’re afraid of getting it wrong. This comes up in almost every private conversation. “What if we misunderstand the process?” “What if we choose the wrong pathway?” “What if we make a compliance mistake?” “What if it becomes a legal headache?” So employers do nothing. And the shortage continues. The irony is this: Avoiding the conversation feels safer - but often causes more damage long-term. The employers who move forward don’t do so recklessly. They don’t pretend to be experts. They don’t rush paperwork. They seek clarity first. They understand: What roles may be viable. What preparation is required. What their responsibilities are. Who needs to be involved. Where licensed migration professionals fit in. My role is not visas. My role is helping employers reach that clarity early - calmly and legally - so decisions aren’t made under pressure. Fear thrives in confusion. Confidence comes from understanding. What part of overseas hiring feels most uncertain to you right now? #WorkforcePlanning #OverseasHiring #SkilledMigration #BusinessLeadership #StaffingChallenges #EmployerInsights
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“I don’t want to come across as that candidate.” That’s what my client said right before we started working on her salary negotiation strategy. She was already the top choice for the role. She had aced the interviews. The offer was coming. But when it came to the money talk, she froze. She didn’t want to sound greedy, pushy, or risk losing the offer altogether. Here’s what we worked on instead: ✨ Positioning herself as a star candidate from the start - resume, referrals, and interviews all building her credibility. ✨ Gathering context and data before numbers - bonuses, benefits, and everything that adds value. ✨ Keeping her tone collaborative, not confrontational. When the offer came, she simply said, “I’ll miss about seven months of bonuses at my current company.” No demands. No ultimatums. Just calm, factual context. Within 12 hours, she got a 10% sign-on bonus on top of a 25% pay bump. Great negotiation isn’t about being aggressive. It’s about being informed, clear, and confident.
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If you have been fortunate enough to receive a job offer right now, first of all, that is huge. Truly. This is one of the most competitive hiring markets our industry has seen in years. But once the excitement settles, do not lose your nerve when it comes to negotiating. An offer is not a fragile glass sculpture that will shatter the moment you ask a reasonable question. Companies expect some level of discussion, and how you handle this stage sets the tone for how you value yourself throughout your career. Here are some practical tips to help you navigate it calmly and professionally. • Take a breath before responding Thank them, express genuine excitement, and ask for a little time to review. Even 24 to 48 hours gives you space to think clearly instead of reacting emotionally. • Know what actually matters to you Base salary is only one lever. Also consider bonus structure, equity, contract length, remote flexibility, relocation, title, scope, learning opportunities, and team stability. • Do your homework on ranges Look at industry salary data, talk to trusted peers, and understand what is typical for your level, discipline, and location. You are not asking for a favor. You are aligning to market reality. • Anchor your ask in value, not need Avoid framing things as “I need more because my rent is high.” Instead say “Based on my experience with X, Y, and Z and current market ranges, I was hoping we could explore a base closer to…” • Be specific, not vague “I was hoping for something higher” is hard to act on. “Would it be possible to move the base to 115K?” gives them something concrete to respond to. • Prioritize your asks Do not negotiate ten things at once. Pick one or two that matter most. If base cannot move, maybe sign on bonus, remote days, or title can. • Stay warm and collaborative This is not a battle. You are future teammates. Use language like “Is there flexibility here?” or “Can we explore options?” instead of ultimatums. • Get everything in writing If anything changes from the original offer, ask for an updated letter. Verbal assurances can get lost when teams change or time passes. • Remember they already chose you They spent time, energy, and political capital getting you approved. A thoughtful, professional negotiation rarely kills a deal. Silence about your needs can hurt you for years. • Know your walk away line privately You do not have to share this. But be honest with yourself about what would make the role unsustainable long term. That clarity helps you negotiate with calm instead of fear. You worked hard to get here. Negotiating respectfully is not greed. It is part of being a professional in an industry where roles, teams, and companies change often. Starting from a fair place makes every future step easier.
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Most people treat a job offer like a take-it-or-leave-it proposition…Big mistake…👀 When a company extends an offer, they’re not just offering you money—they’re inviting you into a conversation. A negotiation. And how you handle that conversation can set the tone for your entire career there. Here’s the key: be curious, not combative. Questions to Ask After Receiving the Offer: To understand the offer: • “I really appreciate this offer—can you walk me through how you arrived at this number? It’ll help me better understand the framework.” • “What’s most important to the company in this compensation package—base salary, bonuses, equity, or benefits?” • “Are there opportunities to adjust parts of the package to better align with my contributions and market trends?” To uncover flexibility: • “If we were to explore adjustments, which areas would have the most flexibility?” • “How does this package compare to others for similar roles in the company?” • “What would it take to get closer to [specific figure or benefit] given the responsibilities we’ve discussed?” To gather more context: • “Does the team see this role as a critical growth driver? How can the compensation reflect that?” • “How does this package reflect the impact I’d be expected to deliver in the first 6-12 months?” • “What incentives are available for exceeding expectations in this role?” How to Propose Your Own Terms: Frame it as mutual problem-solving: • “I’d like to explore how we can adjust this package to better reflect the value I bring while aligning with your goals. Here’s what I had in mind…” • “Would it make sense to discuss a structure like [specific proposal] that better reflects the market for this role?” Anchor high with rationale: • “Based on my experience, the scope of this role, and market benchmarks, I was expecting something closer to [specific number or range]. How can we work together to close that gap?” • “For a role at this level with the impact we’ve discussed, I typically see packages in the range of [specific number or range]. Does that align with what’s possible here?” Be collaborative with priorities: • “I’m flexible on some elements of the package but prioritize [e.g., base salary or equity]. Could we explore adjustments in that area?” • “If adjusting the base salary isn’t possible, could we look at [specific alternatives like sign-on bonuses, stock options, or vacation time] instead?” Close with curiosity and an invitation to collaborate: • “How do you feel about this proposal? Is this something we could explore together?” • “What would you need from me to make this adjustment work on your end?” • “Are there other creative ways we can structure this to get closer to what I’m looking for?” The key is to make it clear you’re not demanding—you’re problem-solving together. This keeps the tone professional, collaborative, and respectful while ensuring you advocate for what you’re worth. #joboffer #negotiating #knowyourworth
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I didn’t negotiate my first job offer. Not because I didn’t want to. Because I didn’t know I could. I thought asking would make me look ungrateful. Or replaceable. Or difficult. Meanwhile, every guy I knew was throwing out 30% higher numbers with confidence and getting them. That first silence cost me. Since then, I’ve learned: you’re not too young, too new, or too lucky to negotiate. You’re just underinformed. That’s fixable. So I built a full toolkit. For the girl I used to be. 🔹 How to benchmark salaries 🔹 What to say (and when) 🔹 What to negotiate besides money 🔹 What to watch out for 🔹 And yes, a secret section on the soft power tactics no one tells you If you're early in your career (or managing someone who is) this might be worth a read. Comment “💰” for the free worksheet link. #SalaryNegotiation #CareerGrowth #WomenAtWork #EarlyCareerTips #ProfessionalDevelopment #WorkplaceEquity #CareerAdviceForWomen #NegotiationPlaybook #TheGirlsClub
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Dear job seekers, salary negotiation is a career minefield. Last week, I watched a talented professional walk away from her dream opportunity because she didn't understand the unwritten rules of compensation discussions. After coaching 100+ professionals through career transitions, I've distilled the most effective salary negotiation practices that actually work. Here's what most candidates don't know: Never be the first to mention numbers. When they ask about salary expectations, redirect: "I'd like to learn more about the role first." "What's the budget range for this position?" "What do you typically pay for this level?" Research shows 85% of companies have room to increase their first offer by 5-20%. But here's where most candidates mess up: They negotiate based on their current salary. They accept the first offer immediately. They focus only on base salary. Instead, follow these proven steps: 1. Wait 24-48 hours before responding to an offer This shows you're considering it seriously and creates space for negotiation. 2. Start with enthusiasm "I'm excited about the opportunity and believe I can bring significant value..." 3. Present your research "Based on market data for similar roles in this industry..." 4. Consider the full package - Base salary - Equity - Bonuses - Benefits - Remote work flexibility - Professional development 5. Get it in writing Verbal agreements aren't enough. Request written confirmation of the final package. The data is clear: - 57% of people who negotiate get more money - Top performers often secure 10-20% more But remember this isn't just about money. You're setting the tone for your entire relationship with the employer. A professional negotiation shows you value yourself and understand business dynamics. Think about it... You don't just want any salary. You want fair compensation for your expertise. You now know exactly how to get it. The next time you're in a salary discussion, remember: it's not personal, it's business. Take control of the conversation. Show your value. Get what you deserve. #salary #jobseekers #interview
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Negotiated the salary, the role looks good on paper, the team seems sharp, and still, something doesn’t sit right. 🤔 You feel “I just don’t know if this is the right place for me.” And when you think about it more, it’s clear that what you’re struggling with isn’t the role or the pay. It’s the culture. But here’s the tricky part: we ask “How’s the culture at this company?” as if it’s universal. It’s not. Culture is personal. → What one person finds inspiring, another might find suffocating. → What looks like “ownership” to someone might feel like a lack of support to someone else. → What feels like “fast-paced” for one person might be chaotic for another. So when you ask someone, “How’s the culture?” the answer you get is about them, not you. That’s why the better question is: Do the values and ways of working here match how I want to work and live? And to find that out, you need to ask deeper, more personal questions when you’re evaluating an offer: → Can I be myself here without pretending or performing every day? → How do people handle stress or failure? Do they talk about it? → What kind of people get rewarded here, and for what kind of behaviour? → What kind of conversations happen in meetings? Is it safe to disagree? These aren’t things you’ll find in a Glassdoor review or a recruiter’s pitch. 😶 →You find it by asking current employees how they feel on a rough day at work. →You find it by paying attention to what’s not being said in interviews. →You find it by checking in with how you feel after each conversation. It’s not always a clean, logical process; sometimes it’s just a quiet “this doesn’t feel right.” And that’s valid. That’s enough. 💯 If you’re in that stage right now, wondering whether to say yes, don’t just look at the offer letter. → Look at how it makes you feel. → Look at what your day-to-day might feel like six months in. And trust that it’s okay to walk away from a good-on-paper offer if it doesn’t feel like home. Because culture isn’t a line in the JD. It’s what shows up when things go wrong. And you deserve to be in a place where, even on your worst days, you feel safe. It’s okay to take your time. You don’t need to justify that feeling to anyone. ✨
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