Page 297 - Marky Stein - Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job-McGraw-Hill (2009)
P. 297

Get a Great Job When You Don’t Have a Job


                 • It is not a cutthroat battle to the finish, where the winner
                    finally gets what he or she wants and the loser storms out
                    and slams the door.
                 • It is not a balancing of a scale, where the two parties
                    meet right in the middle and neither really gets what he
                    or she wants.

             Rather than using the metaphor of a “battle to the finish” or a
             “balancing of the scales,” I’d like you to think about negotiating
             in terms of an “open door.” In open-door negotiating, there are
             no declarations of finality, no threats, and no settling for some-
             thing mediocre just because it happens to be in the middle.
             There especially isn’t a passive acceptance of the first offer you
             get just because you fear you might lose the job if you mention a
             higher figure. Open-door negotiating is about creating possibili-
             ties, carefully weighing those possibilities, and coming to a civi-
             lized agreement.

             The Rules of Open-Door Negotiating

             There are several rules to observe in the game of open-door
             negotiating if you want to play it well:

                 • Try to postpone the salary discussion until a job offer has
                    been made or until you are in a second interview.
                 • Do not be the first one to mention an exact amount of
                    money, no matter how many ways the interviewer tries to
                    get you to inform him or her of what you earned or what
                    you wish to earn in the future.
                 • Speak in terms of ranges of salary rather than using
                    exact figures.
                 • Postpone saying no to an offer until you are sure you
                    have all the information.
                 • Postpone saying yes to an offer until you are sure you
                    have all the information.
                 • Postpone, postpone, postpone. There is no reason to
                    rush a salary discussion, especially when that discussion
                    could add 15 to 20 percent to your earnings. Be patient.



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