Page 301 - Marky Stein - Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job-McGraw-Hill (2009)
P. 301

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


             Or . . .

             ANSWER:     My base salary is $78,350 a year with an excellent
                         benefits package worth $12,000, so that puts my
                         entire compensation package somewhere in the
                         nineties.


             If you’re at a first interview and are reasonably sure of a second
             interview, or if you’re being screened on the phone, you should
             not get into serious negotiations. The question “How much do
             you expect to earn here?” is just a screening question to get you
             in or out of the next interview. The best answer is sometimes
             “flexible,” “open,” or “negotiable.”
                 Even if the interviewer mentions that the position pays an
             amount that isn’t amenable to you, don’t reject it in the first inter-
             view. You haven’t even tried to negotiate yet!




                     Your objective in the first interview is to get to the
                                     second interview.




             Hang in there. You don’t have to accept the figure that is men-
             tioned. Simply say you’d be willing to “consider” it. By the second
             interview you’ll have a lot more bargaining power. You know the
             company is very interested in you. You may be one of only two or
             three candidates. You may be their only candidate. You’re in the
             seat of power.
                 Another client of mine, Gary, was offered what he considered
             to be an unacceptably low salary in the first interview. He contin-
             ued with the interviewing process and made it to the second
             interview. Gary was able, after a 45-minute negotiation, to get the
             employer to raise his salary from $35,000 to $49,000.
                 Gary did it by continuing to stress his skills and using Q state-
             ments. He was sure to let the employer know of the value he
             could contribute to the company, and he made himself absolute-
             ly irresistible. Earning $14,000 in the space of a 45-minute nego-
             tiation is certainly time well spent!



                                           288
   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306