Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Know Your Worth Before Salary Negotiations

Before going into salary negotiating, it is critical to know exactly what your value is. If you do not know exactly what your value is, then it is a shot in the dark when you ask for a raise or try to get the most in your next job.

If you do not do your research, your employer will decide your pay increase for you and it may be very disappointing. Millions of people regularly negotiate salary, but very few get the maximum pay increase that they could.

Research ahead of time is critical before approaching your boss for a raise, or before putting your foot forward in salary negotiations at job offer time. It is like a card game. Do not reveal your cards too soon. In this case, your cards are personal secrets like how much you made in your last job, or how much money you'd like in the new job, or how much of an increase you'd like.

You should know what salary you can expect before you talk about it with your employer.

Whether you are looking for new employment or you are asking for a pay raise, do your research first. There are great Internet resources available, like SalaryExpert.com or Monster.com. These sites have continual access to all the salary information that is available.

It is important for you to know the the accuracy of the source of the salary market information. If a website is reporting pay scales as reported by their list of members, it may not be as current as if the salaries are reported by the HR departments of the companies in that job market.

Another method, if you are a little intrepid, is to do a bit of discreet research. If you know people who work for the firm, and are not fearful of asking direct questions, you may well find find out what other staff are earning in the same job for that business.

Better yet, if you can ask a valued human resources friend, you may find out not only about the company you work for, but you may also find out about other companies in your market. Whatever information you can find out, will be useful, as long as the source is someone you can believe.

Salary comparison is done on frequent basis by human resources personal within companies and between companies as well. There are even research reports published by large research firms and human resource organizations that share information openly about their hiring practice in their regions. If you are able to gain access to one of these reports, you have the diamond mine of information you need.

Next, salaries ranges are often reported based on percentages. A business systems analyst salary range may be from $50,000-$90,000 for a given region, but the reporting will be based on 0-25%, 25-50%, 50-75% and 75-100%.

If you perform well at your job, then you know it. Think about your performance critically and honestly, and determine using intuition where you think you fit in, as far as a percentile basis. Don't worry if you think you're in the lower regions. It may be lack of experience or tenure. If you are in the top end, you know you're a high performer and you're providing a lot of value to the company.

I have found it to be very useful to point blank ask friends at work where they feel I should be on the salary scale. They know themselves and measure themselves against you. You should do this with someone you have a very good rapport with. You will get great direct feedback.

Numbers speak loudest when dealing with employers and bosses. If you want to earn a larger salary, you need to make them understand you are worth it because you either cut costs, improved business efficiency, or drove profits. You know the work you do, and if there are quantifiable facts, use them to your advantage. If you don't relate directly to the bottom line, think of other quantifiable facts (e.g. a teacher with a high rate of students on the honour roll). This is the best way to communicate your value.

To your salary negotiation success.

Trevor Davide Grant is a project manager in the IT field and has extensive experience in salary negotiation. Trevor has worked for global telecom, electric utilities, software consulting, and a prevalent social network. He has learned salary negotiating in the most powerfulway. Learn great tactics on the topic of negotiating salary at www.HowToNegotiateASalary.com.

categories: salary,negotiation,career,pay,raises,advise,business,management,technology,health

View this post on my blog: http://travelnursesuccess.com/know-your-value-before-negotiating-job-offers

1 comment:

  1. Hi,

    You've nice blog. Several people nowadays don't know whether they're acquiring appropriate wage for their profession. To be clear one can check on-line wage comparison websites to know what other companies provide for the same position. For instance to compare salary of an analyst one can just type analyst salary in a salary comparison website like Whatsalary.com

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