Showing posts with label Salary Negotiation Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salary Negotiation Tips. Show all posts

Sunday, November 11, 2007

JOB VACANCY AT PT.ERICSSON INDONESIA

Ericsson Indonesia has been in Indonesia nearly a century, involved in the Indonesia Telecommunications development and are committed to support and ready to take the next step with our customers to be prepared for the next generation leading-edge services.

Now, we are seeking for talented and passionate professionals to be part of a very dynamic and challenging environment as as Customer Project Manager – Multimedia & System Integrations (Code: CPM-MMSI).

Customer Project Manager – Multimedia & System Integrations (Code: CPM-MMSI)

PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTABILITES ::
The CPM–MMSI role is to manage assigned MMSI customer projects to secure that project goals are met, customer's expectations are fulfilled and that the customer relation is handled in the best possible way within the scope of the contract.

REQUIREMENTS :
* Bachelor degree, preferably in Telecommunication, Information technology or Computer Science

* Certified as Project Management Professional (PMP) from Project Management Institute is preferred

* Minimum 5 years experience of project management in the Telecom and IT industry. Preferable in IN, VAS, 3G Application & Multimedia

* Exceptional project management skills, from pre-sales to delivery, including requirement analysis, scooping, sourcing, budgeting, scheduling, quality control and customer management

* Highly developed Business and Financial understanding, as well Sales Strategies and Methodologies

* Highly developed skills of relevant tools (MORE, Verdi, MS Project, etc)

* Highly developed Communication skills (Presentation, Interpersonal and Influencing Skill)

* English proficiency, both written and spoken, is a must



Put the job’s code on the Subject
Please submit your application in English with detailed CV and recent photograph to the following address within 2 weeks


job.vacancy@ericsson.com


Source :

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Earn More Money by Demanding It

Money, Money, Money

The hardest part of negotiating a work contract is the pay. I despise having to demand a certain amount of money, even though I am well aware that I deserve a certain amount of money. That's why I love working with job recruiters - they set the rates, and they usually do their best to get you the most money, because, let's face it, they're taking quite a bit more off the top of it.

But for freelance work, or if negotiating your own salary, you're on your own. And that is one of the most terrifying things for me.

It's odd, really. When I go through the interview process, I'll get questions like, "So, you think you can learn C++ in a week?" and I can say "Sure, no sweat" without batting an eye. But when the hiring manager finally gets around to "Alright, let's talk money", my heart leaps into my throat and I feel like I am going to hyperventilate.
History - They Told Me to Aim Low

This attitude is a product of my experience. I've had many interviews where the salary was discussed only at the very end. Terrified that I will knock myself out of the running by demanding too much, I would always aim low. Sometimes, that would mean that I got paid very little to do a lot or work. Other times, I would be told that $10 an hour is a LOT of money for someone with only 6 years of working experience. And sometimes, I believe that I have knocked myself out of the running by undervaluing my work.

This is a problem for most women. Thus, this article is written from a female perspective, but it can apply to men, too.

The fact that I am so bad at expecting to make money is odd. I'm a feminist, and I was raised by feminists. I went to a women's college, where being a feminist is more or less standard, unless you are one of the "conservative" women who believes that places like Smith and Barnard are actually finishing schools and not modern colleges. My college, strangely enough for all of their talk about empowering women, didn't do much to help us learn to negotiate salaries. At all.

When I graduated with my degree and headed to New York City to find work, the first bit of job advice I got was "Don't aim to high. Pretend that you really just want a stable job with a stable salary. You get your foot in the door, then you advanced after a few years. Don't show ANY ambition."

Another method for negotiating pay that I was taught to use was to find out what the pay range is before stating your rate or desired salary. Sometimes this works, and the manager will happily tell you; other times, you can go back and forth with one of those "What do you want to be paid?" - "Well, what's the pay range?" - "It varies. What do you want to make per hour?" - "How about you tell me how much the position can pay me, and I'll tell you if it's acceptable?" - "Well, what's acceptable to you?" kind of bulls*** loops that gets you nothing in the end.

This, and a need not to appear greedy, has me in a panic when it comes time for me to explain what my time and skills are worth, in hard dollars. I know I'm not alone in this behavior, because it's a common and well-studied phenomenon among women. There are some jobs in which women are paid more than men, but mostly, we lag behind.

There are lots of theories as to why this is. Some people would like you to believe that maternity leave reduces our productivity and thus, we get paid less over all. Some people believe it's part of the inherent sexism that we still deal with in our society (more on this in another blog post).

I'm not in the mood to crunch the numbers, but I will say this: part of the reason we don't get paid as much as men is because we don't expect to get paid as much as men.

Queercents covered this a while back, but it bears repeating. According to Forbes.com:

Here's a startling fact: By not negotiating their salaries, many women sacrifice more than half a million dollars by the end of their professional lives. "That is pretty scary," says Linda Babcock, the Carnegie Mellon University economics professor who researched that figure. Babcock surveyed M.B.A. students who graduated in 2002 and 2003 and found that those who negotiated received 7% to 8% more than what they were initially offered. And of those two graduating classes, 52% of the men negotiated, compared to only 12% of women. Over time, that adds up, since percentage raises are based on a person's current salary. "Women leave a lot of money on the table," says Babcock, who also co-authored the book, Women Don't Ask.
Put Your Monetary Past Behind You

Now, I think that employers should always state the pay range for any position. I don't like reading things like "Competitive" or "Commensurate with experience" in the Pay section of a job posting. I'm sure this is done to weed out people who just look for high-paying jobs, but still, it makes it very difficult. "Competitive" is a very subjective term. But since this is the game that we all must partake in, I have to say this:
Aim high.

It doesn't matter how much money you make right now. It matters how much you are worth, and how much you want to make.

I'd probably still be making a crap salary if I didn't have a hiring manager take pity on me and double my pay in one feel swoop. During a bad point in Seattle's economy, I was working my butt off at a company in which the writers made 30K per year while the web designers made something like 75K. What can I say? I was desperate for work, so I took a salary that I knew didn't reflect half of what I was worth.

When a manager at a local tech firm interviewed me for a new job, he asked me how much I wanted to be paid. I stammered a bit, and said something like, "Well, I guess $22 an hour or maybe... yeah. Like, $22." He stared at me for a few seconds, and then said, "I'm going to put you in at $35 an hour." That's what my skill level typically brought in, and it's what I should have been making all that time. But I didn't know enough to demand that much, so frightened was I of being unemployed.
Stick to Your Guns

I have an annoying habit of being wishy washy about pay. The truth is, for freelance work, I do have a wide range of rates. If I'm doing copy writing for a web site about bunny rabbits, then I charge much less than I would for highly technical documentation. So I've found it necessary to view the work before stating my rates, but I do like to give an estimate beforehand. I've finally just typed up a Word doc that states my hourly rate in a very matter-of-fact manner.

I have noticed, however, that it can be very easy to be manipulated into taking less than you are worth. For instance, a couple of months ago, I began an assignment writing some simple documents for a software company. I had stated my lowest acceptable hourly rate via email. The employer agreed to this readily.

When speaking to the manager on the phone, however, I was asked again to state my desired rate. I reminded him that his had been discussed already via email, and I sensed some hesitation on his end of the line. My heart fluttered around in my chest and I thought to myself, I'm asking too much. I asked if this was still fine, and he suggested that I accept $5 less per hour, because the company was small. I felt my stomach falling into my feet as I agreed.

A few minutes later, I decided to grow a spine. I wrote the manager back and told him that we had agreed upon a base rate, and that was the rate, regardless of the size of his company. I explained that I understood if he needed to find someone who would work for less, but that I simply wasn't going to be able to do the work for less than I had stated.

And he accepted it. I was pretty sure he wouldn't, but he did.

I'm aware that it's only $5 an hour difference, but over the course of the contract, that was an extra $1200 in my pocket (or in this case, towards a loan that I need to pay off).
Negotiate Without Fear

We all need to be aware how much our time and skills are worth (Bob Bly writes extensively about this on his web site, and he has an argument about time versus money that I will pick apart in a few days), but this is particularly important for women. We have not yet reached the point where we feel like we can demand high wages. Part of this is a lack of information - it's hard to know what a job should pay. But this is research that should be performed beforehand, so do that work before you talk to the hiring manager about pay.

The aforementioned Forbes article has some tips on how to negotiate salary.

Here are some of my personal tips for negotiating a good wage:

1. Practice maintaining eye contact when you talk about money. Don't look away or down. If you are discussing it on the phone, be sure not to sound particularly nervous. It's OK to pause when you are speaking, but don't fill gaps with ums and ahs.
2. Practice stating your desired wage in the mirror. Don't let your face get all weird on you. Ask a friend to guide you through it, too, so you can say it to a live person.
3. State your hourly rate or desired income without shame. For example: "I expect to make $25 per hour."
4. Don't let your voice get all high and squeaky. In fact, make certain that you speak in a low but clear voice. It's probably a male thing, but a deeper voice implies authority.
5. If the manager winces at you, don't say anything. Maintain eye contact and keep silent. It's their job now to ask if you will take less.
6. If they do ask if you can take less, ask if your requested wage is above the expected range for the position. If you are feeling ballsy, ask what other people who work in the same position are being paid. They can't tell you about individual employees' pay, but they can tell you the range.
7. Is the highest end of the pay range pretty close to what you want to make? Is it way too low? Also, never never accept anything below the highest pay rate of the range. Pretend it's not a range at all. Take the highest number, and assume that that is the least amount of money that you can possibly take.
8. If they give you a range in which the highest pay is close to what you want to make, you have some choices:

* Saying that you'll go ahead and take the lower rate of pay might make you look like a chump. My favorite way to handle this is to say something like, "Well, I'd like you to consider raising the rate. My skills and experience make me worth every penny. If you can't consider a higher rate for me, perhaps we can discuss bonus schedules or expected pay raises over time."
* Let them know that you'll think about it. "I'd like to take some time to consider this. Can I get back to you in a couple of hours?". In a way, this is a face-saving move. You can then really think about if you want the job at that pay rate, and if you do, you can write an email expressing your excitement about the firm, and accepting the highest end of the pay range.



Source :

Thursday, November 8, 2007

How much should I be making?

by Pat McClellan

The most common business question sent in by readers is "How much should I be making?". The problem is... no one seems to know. And while most questions posted to the listservs get pounced on by multiple respondents, questions like these go unanswered. Why? Because nobody really knows the answer.

Salary is a difficult thing to discuss for a couple of reasons. First, people are uncomfortable sharing infomation about how much money they make. For good or bad (probably bad), most people associate a person's worth -- or their own worth -- by this monetary metric. Second, employers don't want you discussing it. The worst thing that ever happened to management is when laborers decided to share info on their wages, which of course led to re-negotiating wages as a group (or "union".)

I remember hearing a story a while back about an executive who left a Silicon Valley company under duress. His last act of defiance was to send an email to everyone in the company, publishing the salaries of all the workers. Why does this seem so outrageous? Why should management care? Because it gives the workers power to negotiate, it tells them how much they are valued (or not valued) in the company, and it informs the underpaid that they should wake up and stop getting taken advantage of.

So back to the question: How much should you be making? The simple answer is... it depends. It depends on a multitude of interrelated factors, the significance of which probably varies with the individual. Most of these influencers are at work in any line of work. Keep in mind, we're not talking about what should matter, or what is legal to matter, rather, we want to focus on what really seems to matter. They include the following:

* Gender
* Race
* Age
* Personal Attractiveness
* Location
* Education
* Experience
* Expertise
* Company Size
* Company Industry
* Past Salary

I can't defend any good reason why gender, race, attractiveness or age should matter. Of course they shouldn't matter, and we have laws that are aimed at preventing this. But we all know that this kind of discrimination is still prevalent. When I think back to the crowd of developers at UCON, I can't help wondering if there is some discrimination going on. Most of the developers I saw fit into a fairly focused demographic... and I can't imagine why.

When the discriminatory act determines whether a person is hired or fired or promoted, then that's easier to spot and prove. But when it manifests itself in small percentages of wages... that's easy to explain away as related to "negotiating skills".

There are some other factors related to our business which seem to have some significance in determining salary. Those factors include:

* Staff vs. Freelance
* Shockwave vs. Projector expertise
* Experience with other languages or databases
* Type of production (training vs. games for example)

I can't really say which of these is "better". We just don't have the data to know. But we're going to try to change that.
Salary Survey

Director Online is now hosting an online salary survey (database). This survey will appear continuously in our Features section. We'll collect data from all of our readers. All the data is anonymous -- you will never be asked to enter your name, email or any other personal ID. A cookie will be set in your browser so that you can update your own data if you get a raise or change jobs. The data will expire after one year, so at any given time, you'll be able to access the results covering the last calendar year to date.

How valid is this survey? Well, it is what it is. We can't police it to make sure that people tell the truth. But there's no benefit to entering false data, so we don't see why anyone would lie. Cookies have their limitations, but anonymity is more important so that's as much personalization as we're going to do. And we're not professional researchers, so you might have disagreements with the way we word some of the questions. Please try to pick that answers that seem to be the best choice for you -- even if it's not an exact match.

We're trying very hard to ask the questions that many of you have told us matter. And please recognize the fact that we have tried to find a balance between having enough choices to questions and yet still maintain identifiable and statistically valid segments.

The results will be displayed like a compound search on a search engine. You'll be able to select up to three categories and it will return the corresponding results. For example...

Return salary information for people who...

Educational background = Computer Science
Director Expertise = Advanced
Location = California

As the database becomes populated, there will be a statistically valid number of people who meet these criteria. If so, the salary info will be displayed -- low, high, median, and average for the group. It'll be up to you to determine the factors which you think most influence your salary. Compare different combinations to see which seem to matter. Obviously, as time goes on and more people enter their data, the validity of the sample will increase. So be aware that if only 3 records match the criteria you select, you shouldn't put too much credibility on the results.
The Bottom Line

This salary survey has the potential to provide you with information of great importance. But simply knowing what others make doesn't change anything. Only you can turn that information into negotiation power. Ultimately, you're worth what you believe you're worth.


Source :

Cover Letter for Salary Negotiation before Joining for Accounting Jobs

Mr. John Smith,
National Accounts Inc.,
257, Park Avenue South,
New York, NY 12345-6789.

Dear Mr. Smith,

From our meeting and phone conversations, I got the privilege to know your company in detail. I am very excited by the prospect of working for National Accounts Inc. Your finance and accounting team is among the most impressive I have met in my job search. Your company ethics are clean and your work-force efficient.

In short, I am eager to accept your offer and begin working for National Accounts. However, I should be telling you that I have received another offer of employment with Regional Accounts Inc., NY. While everything at your company holds a greater opportunity for me, and my career, I must tell you that they have offered a salary $5000/annum higher than your offer.

Instead of accepting their offer immediately, I wanted to reaffirm my interests in National Accounts and express my hope that we can come to terms on this matter and begin our happy association as soon as possible.

I eagerly await your response.

Sincerely,

Richard Anderson,
Senior Student, Accounts,
ISC, Manhattan.


Source :

Monday, July 9, 2007

Seputar penulisan cv, surat lamaran kerja

Follow-Up Interview

Ada baiknya setelah interview, Anda membiasakan diri untuk segera membuat surat ucapan terima kasih. Cara seperti ini akan membuat Anda lebih menonjol daripada kandidat-kandidat lain yang telah diinterview. Sebab, tidak banyak orang yang mau berepot-repot membuat surat untuk mengucapkan terima kasih. Atau bisa juga mereka merasa sungkan atau janggal melakukan ini.

Yang perlu disampaikan dalam surat ini, pertama, tentunya Anda berterimakasih kepada orang-orang yang meluangkan waktunya untuk mewawancarai Anda. Selain itu, secara singkat Anda ingatkan kembali kemampuan Anda yang bisa menjawab kebutuhan perusahaan atau yang bisa memberi kontribusi bagi perusahaan. Anda juga bisa memberi info tambahan yang belum Anda sampaikan dalam interview, atau solusi untuk mengatasi kesulitan yang dihadapi perusahaan.


Apa Yang Anda Ketahui Tentang Perusahaan Kami?

Jika Anda tidak bisa menjawab pertanyaan ini, Anda sebenarnya belum siap menghadapi wawancara kerja.

Demi kebaikan Anda sendiri, carilah informasi sebanyak-banyaknya tentang perusahaan/organisasi yang akan Anda datangi untuk wawancara kerja. Yang perlu Anda ingat, dalam wawancara nanti, Anda harus bisa mempertimbangkan dengan bijak informasi mana yang perlu Anda ungkapkan dan mana yang Anda simpan sendiri. Jika Anda mengetahui keburukan-keburukan perusahaan itu, tidak perlu Anda katakan di sini. Misalnya pada wawancara kerja untuk sebuah stasiun televisi, Anda tidak perlu mengatakan tentang rendahnya kualitas program untuk anak-anak di stasiun televisi tersebut saat ini.

Jawaban yang Anda berikan bisa tentang ringkasan profil perusahaan yang menunjukkan bahwa Anda tahu bidang yang dijalankan, serta besarnya perusahaan/organisasi itu.
Dear or Sir Madam … Itu Biasa!

Surat lamaran kerja Anda sebaiknya ditujukan kepada orang yang akan membaca surat itu. Oleh karena itu nama orang tersebut harus dicantumkan. Cara seperti ini akan membuat surat Anda berbeda dengan setumpuk surat lainnya, sehingga ada kemungkinan mendapat perhatian khusus.

Selain itu, dengan mencatumkan nama orang yang Anda tuju pada surat lamaran, Anda menunjukkan kepada pembuat keputusan bahwa Anda punya inisiatif dan motivasi yang kuat untuk bekerja di perusahaan tersebut. Mengapa demikian? Karena untuk mendapatkan nama itu, Anda mungkin harus berusaha misalnya mencari melalui internet, menelepon perusahaan tersebut, datang ke perusahaan untuk melihat di laporan tahunannya atau usaha-usaha kreatif lainnya.

Karena itu, sebisa mungkin hindari “Dear Sir or Madam” atau “Yth. HRD” dan hal semacam ini. Kata-kata ini kesannya biasa, sementara untuk bersaing dengan ratusan pelamar, surat lamaran Anda harus luar biasa agar menonjol dari yang lain.
Alasan Meninggalkan Pekerjaan

Saat ini masih ada orang yang berpikiran bahwa yang normal adalah bekerja di satu tempat sampai pensiun tiba. Mungkin pola pikir ini peninggalan jaman dulu ketika sekali seseorang bekerja sebuah perusahaan, berarti ia bisa bekerja di sana selamanya. Pada masa itu, berganti-ganti pekerjaan, seperti yang sering dilakukan sekarang, dianggap tidak baik karena menandakan ketidakloyalan.

Meskipun jaman sudah berganti, kenyataannya masih ada orang yang berpandangan seperti ini. Karena itu, sebaiknya jika Anda sering berganti-ganti pekerjaan, surat lamaran kerja dan CV Anda tidak perlu mencantumkan alasan meninggalkan pekerjaan yang terdahulu. Ingat, Andalah yang memegang kendali, bukan calon atasan Anda. Lagipula, sebenarnya hanya ada empat alasan dasar mengapa orang ingin pindah kerja: prospek yang lebih baik, gaji yang lebih tinggi, mutasi, atau PHK. Yang manapun alasan Anda, Anda tetap akan dipandang sebagai pekerja yang berisiko bagi perusahaan. Karena itu, lebih baik Anda menerangkan hal semacam ini saat wawancara kerja, itupun kalau Anda ditanya.
Hilangkan Informasi Negatif dalam CV Anda

CV Anda adalah brosur yang berisi profil Anda, bukan otobiografi Anda. Pernahkah Anda membaca brosur sebuah produk yang mencantumkan kelebihan dan kekurangan produk tersebut? Nah, sama halnya dengan brosur produk, CV Anda harus menunjukkan Anda layak dipertimbangkan. Tidak lebih, tidak kurang.

Tidak ada aturan pasti mengenai jumlah halaman. Tetapi biasanya minimal satu halaman kalau Anda seorang Senior Executive, dua halaman jikabukan. Sebaiknya, CV Anda tidak lebih dari empat halaman.

CV sering digunakan sebagai panduan wawancara. Kegunaan ini sering tidak dihiraukan atau diremehkan oleh pelamar. Apabila CV menunjukkan kegagalan studi Anda, itulah yang akan dibicarakan saat wawancara. Karena itu, sebaiknya Anda hanya mencantumkan informasi positif, Jangan yang negatif. Andalah yang memegang kendali atas isi CV Anda. Jadi Anda bebas menghilangkan beberapa informasi. Yang mana yang Anda hilangkan? Yang pasti hilangkan informasi negatif. Informasi negatif hanya cocok diungkapkan saat wawancara ketika Anda mempunyai kesempatan untuk memberi penjelasan. Misalnya, Anda dipecat lima tahun yang lalu karena Anda tidak setuju dengan atasan Anda, tetapi Anda memiliki karir yang sukses setelah itu, maka Anda tidak harus mencantumkan riwayat pemutusan kerja tersebut dalam CV Anda.
Tampilkan CV yang Menarik

Kadangkala CV yang tampilan isinya mendekati garis tepi kertas terlihat sesak. Mungkin saja isinya bagus, tapi penampilannya tidak menarik. Di restoran yang bergengsi, makanan ditata dengan menarik untuk mencerminkan kelezatan rasanya. CV pun harus diatur dengan prinsip yang sama – tampilannya harus semenarik mungkin.

Kelihatannya memang tidak masuk akal bila seorang perekrut menilai Anda dari tampilan CV Anda dan bukan isinya. Isi CV tetap merupakan aspek terpenting, tapi aspek lainnya juga harus diperhatikan. Misalnya, ketika perekrut dihadapkan dengan enam atau tujuh ratus CV, dan setelah sekitar satu jam ia berkutat dengan CV yang kacau-balau dan tampilannya tidak menarik, pastilah godaan untuk menyingkirkan CV tersebut sangat besar. Untuk apa menghabiskan waktu membaca CV yang semacam itu bila CV berikutnya tampak jauh lebih menarik?

Jangan biarkan jerih payah menyusun isi CV Anda jadi sia-sia hanya karena tampilannya tidak menarik.Ingat, jika CV Anda memberi kesan bahwa Anda menulisnya dengan sungguh-sungguh, CV Anda akan diluluskan ke tahap selanjutnya. Anda tentunya pernah mengalami hal seperti ini. Kalau Anda lewat sebuah toko yang pajangannya di etase tidak menarik, Anda mungkin tidak memperhatikan toko itu. CV Anda adalah etalase yang menampilkan karir Anda. Jangan biarkan perekrut melewatinya begitu saja.
Menjawab Pertanyaan Interview dengan Humor

Beberapa pertanyaan bisa dijawab dengan humor, terutama jika jawaban yang rasional tidak akan mampu menghilangkan kecemasan pewawancara. Jika Anda terjebak dalam keadaan seperti ini, tunjukan bahwa pertanyaan yang diajukan (dan kekhawatiran yang terkandung di balik pertanyaan itu) tidak jadi masalah buat Anda, dan dengan demikian juga tidak jadi masalah bagi pewawancara dan perusahaan.

Meski penggunaan humor dalam interview sebenarnya cukup berisiko, dan juga tidak mudah untuk mengaplikasikannya secara tepat, namun humor bisa menjadi alat yang tepat untuk mengatasi pertanyaan sulit. Yang harus diingat adalah jangan menggunakan humor jika hubungan Anda dengan pewawancara masih sangat formal dan kaku. Jika hubungan sudah mulai mencair Anda boleh menggunakan humor sedikit-sedikit dan dengan sangat hati-hati. Penggunaan humor yang tepat bisa membuat pewawancara terkesan pada Anda.

Contohnya, jika Anda diberi pertanyaan, “Apakah Anda ingin duduk di kursi saya suatu hari nanti?” Anda bisa memberi jawaban, “Ya, jika Anda mendapatkan kursi yang lebih nyaman!”
Empat Kekhawatiran Pewawancara

Sebelum belajar cara menjawab pertanyaan wawancara kerja, kita perlu tahu empat hal yang menjadi kekhawatiran pewawancara. Kalau kita paham ini, kita jadi tahu bahwa di balik setiap pertanyaan wawancara sebenarnya ada suatu kekhawatiran dari orang yang menanyakan itu. Dengan memahami keempat kekhawatiran tersebut, kita dapat memberi jawaban untuk menangkis kekhawatiran itu.

Selanjutanya bisa di baca di :
http://mojora.wordpress.com/2006/08/04/seputar-penulisan-cv-surat-lamaran-kerja/

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Tips Menentukan Gaji dalam Interview

Setelah berhasil melewati beberapa tahapan wawancara kerja, besar kemungkinan anda akan diterima di perusahaan tersebut. Maka yang harus anda lakukan adalah mempersiapkan diri untuk menerima pertanyaan, "Berapa gaji yang anda inginkan ?"

Negoisasi gaji adalah salah satu bagian tersulit dalam mendapatkan pekerjaan. Jika meminta jumlah yang terlalu besar, perusahaan mungkin akan mengurungkan niatnya merekrut anda. Sebaliknya, jika jumlah yang anda minta terlalu rendah, mungkin anda akan diterima, namun gaji yang didapatkan dibawah standar yang seharusnya dibayarkan perusahaan tersebut.

Setelah bekerja selama beberapa waktu, alu anda mengetahui fakta tersebut, pastilah anda akan merasa kecewa. Dan solusinya adalah meminta kenaikan gaji, dan hal ini bukanlah proses yang mudah. Untuk "memenangkan" negosisasi gaji pada saat interview, ikuti petunjuk berikut :


PERATURAN NO. 1 : Dapatkan Informasi

Sebelum wawancara, manfaatkan networking anda. Anda bisa mendapatkan informasi dari teman atau senior anda yang bekerja di perusahaan tersebut/industri serupa, terutama untuk divisi atau posisi yang sama. Sumber lain adalah internet atau tabloid yang memuat mengenai survey/informasi gaji.

PERATURAN NO. 2 : Mendengarkan

Di awal wawancara, jangan pernah langsung menyebutkan berapa gaji yang anda inginkan. Semakin lama anda "menunda", maka semakin banyak informasi yang bisa didapatkan untuk "memenangkan" negoisasi gaji.

Langkah awal, pada saat wawacara, anda sebaiknya "mencari tahu" dari sang pewawancara, ada berapa banyak kandidat untuk posisi tersebut, dan telah berapa lama lowongan tersebut dibuka. Jika lowongan tersebut telah dibuka dalam waktu yang lama, ada kemungkinan perusahaan kesulitan untuk mendapatkan kandidat yang memenuhi kualifikasi. Jika anda high qualified, mungkin anda bisa mendaptkan nominal yang dinginkan.

PERATURAN KE 3 : Berlatih

Anda boleh menyebutkan sejumlah angka pada saat bernegoisasi. Tetapi jangan terlalu tinggi dari standar gaji yang berlaku untuk industri/perusahaan tersebut. Jika ini terjadi, pewawancara malah menganggap anda tidak serius. Ini berarti anda kehilangan kesempatan.

Jika anda menginginkan sejumlah nominal yang tinggi untuk gaji anda, katakanlah sejumlah gaji pada top range, tunjukkah bahwa kualifikasi anda memang pantas untuk itu. Sebelum hari wawancara, anda bisa mempersiapkan "pidato" selama 1-2 menit yang mendeskrisikan apa yang anda bisa berikan untuk perusahaan jika anda diterima bekerja di tempat tersebut.

Satu hal yang harus dingat, pada saat perusahaan memberikan penawaran, anda tidak harus memberikan jawaban saat itu juga. Anda bisa minta waktu untuk mempertimbangkan semuanya dalam mengambil keputusan. Jika tawaran perusahaan lebih rendah dari yang anda harapkan, anda bisa saja menolak.

Apalagi pada saat bersamaan, ada tawaran yang lebih menggiurkan dari perusahan lain. Namun, ada hal lain yang patut dipertimbangkan, apakah posisi yang ditawarkan nerupakan langkah strategis untuk perkembangan karir anda.

BEBERAPA SITUASI DALAM NEGOSISASI GAJI

--- . Perusahaan melakukan "secreening phobe call"

Yang harus anda lakukan adalah bertanya dengan sopan mengenai kisaran gaji untuk posisi tersebut.

Jika si penelpon tidak memberikan informasi untuk hal tersebut, anda sebaiknya merespon dengan mengatakan, "Berdasarkan informasi yang saya dapatkan mengenai standar gaji untuk industri ini, mencakup gaji pokok, lembur, training, dan fasilitas yang ada, asuransi kesehatan, biaya perjalanan, jenjang karir, bonus, komisi, dan jenis profit sharing lainnya, gaji yang saya inginkan berkisar Rp xxx,- sampai dengan Rp yyy,- (berikan kisaran yang luas). Saya bersedia datang untuk wawancara pada hari X jam Y. Apakah Bapak/ibu bersedia mempertimbangkan ?.

-- . Jika pewawancara mengajukan pertanyaan mengenai gaji pada saat awal wawancara, anda punya 3 pilihan :

* Berusaha menunda negoisasi dengan mengatakan, "Saya melamar untuk posisi ini karena sangat tertarik akan bidang ini dan perusahaan anda. Tetapi saya rasa saya baru bisa membahas masalah gaji dengan anda setelah kita berdua "yakin" bahwa saya memang memenuhi kualifikasi untuk posisi ini."

* Memberikan respon yang tidak spesifik dengan mengatakan, "Selama saya dibayar sesuai standar perusahaan anda dan tanggung jawab yang harus saya penuhi untuk posisi ini, saya rasa tidak ada masalah."

* "Membalikkan" pertanyaan kepada pewawancara. Jika pewawancara melontarkan pertanyaan di awal wawancara , "Jika anda diterima bekerja di sini, berapa gaji yang anda inginkan ?". Maka anda bisa menjawab seperti ini, "Saya sangat tertarik untuk berkerja di sini, menjadi bagian dari perusahaan ini. Tetapi sebelumnya saya ingin mengetahui, untuk kualifikasi kandidat dengan latar pendidikan dan keahlian seperti saya, berapakah standar gaji di perusahaan ini ?".

-- Negoisasi gaji di pertengahan wawancara --

* Perusahaan menawarkan gaji dalam kisaran yang sesuai/bisa anda terima. Pewawancara mengatakan, "Gaji untuk posisi ini berkisar dari Rp xxx,- sampai dengan Rp yyy,- Apakah anda bersedia menerima tawaran ini ?. Yang harus anda katakan, "Saya sangat menghargai tawaran ini.

Saya sangat tertarik untuk mengaplikasikan yang telah saya pelajari selama kuliah di perusahaan ini. Jumlah yang anda sebutkan tadi adalah yang seperti saya harapkan untuk gaji pokok, ditambah dengan beberapa aspek lainnya seperti asuransi, uang lembur, dan fasilitas lainnya.

* Anda hanya tertarik pada top range dari gaji yang di tawarkan. Yang harus anda katakan, "Terimakasih atas tawaran anda untuk bergabung dengan perusahaan ini. Saya yakin berbagai keahlian yang saya miliki merupakan benefit bagi perusahaan ini. Berdasarkan apa yang saya ketahui mengenai standar gaji dan penawaran dari perusahaan lain, saya harus mengatakan bahwa saya hanya bisa mengatakan "ya" untuk kisaran atas dari jumlah yang Bapak/Ibu sebutkan tadi.

* Jika anda sama sekali tidak tertarik dengan gaji yang ditawarkan. Yang harus anda katakan, "Terimakasih atas tawaran Bapak/Ibu untuk bergabung dengan perusahaan ini. Saya sangat tertarik untuk mengaplikasikan yang telah saya pelajari selama kuliah di perusahaan ini.

Namun ada beberapa perusahaan lain yang juga memberikan tawaran kepada saya, untuk posisi yang sama dan gaji yang lebih tinggi. Tentu saja, uang bukan faktor penentu utama, saya juga mempertimbangkan faktor-faktor lain seperti training, jenjang karir,dan sebagainya.

* Pewawancara tidak menyebutkan jumlah kisaran gaji. Yang harus anda katakan, "Dari apa yang saya ketahui, berdasarkan standar industri, gaji pokok untuk posisi ini adalah sebesar Rp xxx. Dan berdasarkan pendidikan dan keahlian yang saya miliki, saya mengharapkan gaji pada middle range, katakanlah Rp yyy. Baagimana menurut Bapak/Ibu ?".

* Jika pewawancara memberikan penawaran di akhir wawancara. Ini berarti pewawancara sangat tertarik untuk merekrut anda. Yang harus anda katakan, "Saya siap untuk menerima penawaran terbaik dari perusahaan ini." Dan jika gaji ditawarkan memang seperti apa yang anda inginkan, katakan, "Hal terpenting bagi saya adalah kesempatan untuk bergabung di perusahaan ini, dan saya yakin gaji yang ditawarkan sangat kompetitif."

Petunjuk untuk "FRESH GRADUATES".

- Perusahaan memilih anda karena kualifikasi yang dimiliki, bukan gaji yang anda sebutkan. Perusahaan menerima anda bekerja adalah untuk meningkatkan profit mereka.

- Dalam wawancara, anda harus meyakinkan bahwa anda mampu mengerjakan tugas/tanggung jawab untuk posisi tersebut. Jika tidak, mereka tidak akan memberikan penawaran apapun bagi anda.

- Jika anda belum memiliki pengalaman kerja, ingat akan kualitas anda yaitu pendidikan dan keahlian. Dua hal itulah yang akan membuat anda sukses di dunia kerja.

- Apa yang membuat perusahaan memutuskan menerima anda ?. 95% nya berdasarkan kepribadian, antusiasme, dan keahlian anda. 5% nya adalah karena keahlian khusus yang anda miliki.

PERATURAN NO. 4 : Jika Penawaran Resmi Telah Dibuat

Jika penawaran resmi telah dibuat, ajukan pertanyaan sebagai berikut :

- Apakah ada kesempatan promosi untuk posisi ini ?. Untuk posisi atau level apa ?.

- Kapan dan bagaimanakah penilaian kinerja pegawai untuk posisi ini ?.

- Apakah penilaian tersebut termasuk untuk review gaji ?.

- Seperti apakah peningkatan gaji yang ditawarkan untuk 3-5 tahun mendatang ?.

- PASTIKAN BAHWA PENAWARAN GAJI TELAH MENCAKUP KESELURUHAN DAN DALAM BENTUK TERTULIS.

- PASTIKAN ANDA TELAH MENGEVALUASI KESELURUHAN KOMPENSASI YANG DITAWARKAN, BUKAN HANYA GAJI.

Selain gaji, biasanya perusahaan juga memberikan kompensasi dalam bentuk :

* Asuransi kesehatan (dengan atau tanpa mencakup perawatan gigi & mata) .Walaupun perusahaan tidak meng-cover semua biaya, fasilitas ini akan membuat anda membayar lebih murah.

* Asuransi jiwa.

* Asuransi kecelakaan, terutama untuk pegawai yang sering bepergian/jenis pekerjaan dengan risiko tinggi.

* Peningkatan gaji untuk 3-5 tahun pertama. Apakah hanya peningkatan pertahun ?. Atau ada peningkatan gaji/pemberian bonus berdasarkan prestasi kinerja ?.

* Fasilitas cuti.

* Biaya pensiun (berlaku untuk perusahaan tertentu).

* Profit sharing.

* Stock option. Beberapa perusahaan menerapkan sistem pembagian saham kepada karyawan.

* Training atau pendidikan tertentu.

* Uang lembur & transportasi.

* Fasilitas kredit kendaraan/rumah.

PERATURAN NO. 5 : Hal lain yang harus diperhatikan

- Ucapkan terimakasih atas penawaran yang diberikan.

- Jangan langsung bernegoisasi pada saat pewawancara menyebutkan penawaran. Mintalah waktu untuk mempertimbangkan kompensasi secara keseluruhan, bukan hanya gaji.

- Pada saat bernegoisasi, jangan katakan, "Saya meminta …". Yang terbaik anda harus mengatakan, "Saya mengharapkan..,".

- Terkadang gaji yang ditawarkan mungkin lebih rendah dari yang anda inginkan. Sebelum meng-iya-kan atau menolak, pertimbangkanlah faktor lain seperti reputasi perusahaan, budaya perusahaan, suasana kerja, macam asuransi yang ada, training dan pendidikan, dan sebagainya. (mil/tu2t)

Monday, June 18, 2007

What salary do you expect?

'What salary do you expect' is a question that you want to hear but never want to answer. Most of the times because you will be scared you may undersell yourself; and your fears are well founded. Many employers who ask about the last salary taken, offer about 10-30% above your last salary even if their company generally pays more for the job. There are many ways to beat this problem:

* Be prepared for the question: Best way to handle any problem in life is to be prepared. Interviews too are difficulties that one has to prepare for. In order to be prepared with a good answer you need to know what type of salary the position you are applying for entails. First find out about the salary in the market. You can also find out about the salary offered in the same company either thought the net, or by asking some of the employees - directly or indirectly. Whatever may be your sources, be sure you have a good idea of what the job pays before you face the interview.

* Be prepared to negotiate: The interviewer more often than not will follow the 'what salary do you expect' question with 'what was your last salary'. When asked this be truthful as much as possible. In case you feel the salary you were earning was too low and might make a wrong impression or fix the negotiating platform too low, emphasize why the past salary was not the right remuneration for the job you were doing while at the same time comparing positively to the added value you would give the present job. You should come across as deserving the higher bracket, and not only hankering for a higher pay.
* Be prepared to redirect: The question can very diplomatically passed back with, 'that depends on what is the going remuneration for the job here' or 'what have you earmarked for the job' or 'what is the salary you offer for the job'. Then wait for the answer - if you find it adequate accept it saying it is the same thing you had in mind. If not negotiate for a higher salary based upon your experience, qualifications and extra capabilities.
* Be open: You may say that you were expecting x amount. Be careful though, the interviewer will definitely want to find out why you named that amount - and you should be ready to say why - such as, it is the market rate for the job; it is a reasonable increase on the past job remuneration; the job responsibilities and time would entail it, etc. You need to back up your answer not only with apt reasoning, but also with confidence.
* Be prepared for a lower offer: Whatever you say, unless you are dealing with a highly established company/organization where positions and pays are fixed, you will be offered a slightly lower offer that you name. At that time, if you think it is worthy to jump on the wagon even if it is at a lightly lower salary than expected, then say so. If not, state clearly the minimum salary you would require and why. However, sometimes it is worthy to gain entry into a good company even if the beginning pay is lower than expected, provided the growth prospects are good and the brand of the company looks good on your resume.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Salary Negotiation Tips

Source : http://www.businessballs.com/payrise.htm

tips and techniques for salary negotiation for employees, and salary negotiation tips for managers - and tips for job promotions and improving conditions

Salary negotiation (asking for a salary increase, a pay rise, or simply more money) affects everyone from time to time. Salary negotiation can be difficult, and many people handle it poorly, causing frustration and ill-feeling. There are constructive ways to approach salary negotiation, and techniques to achieve good outcomes. If you are a manager, you will need to handle salary negotiation positively. If you encourage people to adopt a constructive approach to salary negotiation, you will help to minimise upset and to achieve a positive outcome. As a manager dealing with salary negotiation or a pay increase request, it's important to encourage a grown-up, objective, emotionally mature approach. These ideas and techniques will help achieve this whether you are giving or receiving the salary increase request.

There is no 'proper' or standard way to ask for a raise or salary increase. It's not something that people are trained to do, and little is written about it. People use various approaches: they can write; discuss informally; discuss with colleagues and hope the boss gets to hear; they drop hints to test the water; they ask the boss politely; demand firmly; go over the boss's head, or maybe even threaten to resign, secure another job offer, or simply resign.

Largely people do not look before they leap; they are often under pressure, and they feel uncomfortable and stressed asking, so they fail to plan and control the situation, which makes achieving anything difficult. Simple planning and keeping control makes a big difference. The techniques here might not secure a salary increase immediately - there are usually very good reasons why this is not possible anyway - but these ideas will eventually bring a better reward and outcome than doing nothing, or doing something the wrong way. As a manager receiving a request for a salary increase, encourage people to follow this approach, and then respond fairly sensitively and openly. Only make promises you can be sure to deliver, and always try to understand the person's needs and feelings before you explain the company's position.

It is important always to recognise the difference between the value of the role that you perform (or any employee's role if looking at this from a manager's perspective), and your value as an individual (or the employee's value). The two are not the same.

If you continually feel frustrated about your pay levels despite trying all of the techniques and ideas for achieving a pay rise, it could be that your boss or employer has simply reached the limit of the value that they can place on your role, which is different to your value as an individual. You could have a very high potential value, but if your role does not enable you to perform to your fullest extent then your reward level will be suppressed. For example does a professor who sweeps the street deserve a street sweeper's salary or a professor's salary?

Salary levels are largely dictated by market forces (notably the cost of replacing the employee), and the contribution that the employee makes to organisational performance (which is particularly relevant for roles which directly impact on profitability). When you acknowledge this principle you begin to take control of your earnings.

Aside from issues of exploitation and unfairness, if you find that the gap between your expectations and your employer's salary limit is too great to bridge, then look to find or develop a role which commands a higher value, and therefore salary. You can do this either and both with your present employer by agreeing wider responsibilities and opportunities for you to contribute to organisational performance and profit, and/or perhaps with a new employer.

Focus on developing your value to the employer and the market-place, rather than simply trying to achieve higher reward for what you are already doing.


salary, pay and contract negotiation for a new job

If you are changing jobs, the best time to negotiate salary is after receiving a job offer, and before you accept it - at the point when the employer clearly wants you for the job, and is keen to have your acceptance of the job offer. Your bargaining power in real terms, and psychologically, is strongest at this point, and is stronger still if you have (or can say that you have) at least one other job offer or option (see the tips on negotiation). A strong stance at this stage is your best chance to provide the recruiting manager the justification to pay you something outside the employer's normal scale. The chances of renegotiating salary after accepting, and certainly starting, the job are remote - once you accept the offer you've effectively made the contract, including salary, and thereafter you are subject to the organization's policies, process and inertia.

A compromise in the event that the employer cannot initially take you on at the rate you need is to agree (in writing) a guaranteed raise, subject to completing a given period of service, say 3 or 6 months. In which case avoid the insertion of 'satisfactory' (describing the period of service) as this can never actually be measured and therefore fails to provide certainty that the raise will be given.

If you are recruiting a person who needs or demands more money or better terms than you can offer, then deal with the matter properly before the candidate accepts the job - changing pay or terms after this is very much more difficult. If you encourage a person to accept pay and terms that are genuinely lower than they deserve, by giving a vague assurance of a review sometime in the future, then you are raising expectations for something that will be very difficult to deliver, and therefore storing up a big problem for the future.


salary negotiation during and after new job interviews - tips for employees (and managers)

While these tips and techniques are ostensibly for employees, they also serve as a helpful guide to managers who are recruiting staff, and want to ensure that people joining are doing so happily and on a sustainable basis. People who join happy that they've been given a fair deal are more likely to stay, and less likely to harbour grudges or feelings of being 'bought' for less than they deserve.

Employers who recruit people at less than their market worth might think they've done a good deal, whereas in fact such employees are likely to become frustrated and feel 'cheated'. Help employees to make good, right, and fair decisions about their careers, and they will respect you and your organisation for doing so.

That said, from the employee's viewpoint, changing jobs is a very good opportunity to increase your salary level. Critically, to take advantage of this opportunity you must negotiate before you accept the new job offer, whether the job is an internal or external move. Any manager who fails to give this opportunity to a new recruit is likely to be putting a problem into store for the future.

The most important thing from the employee's perspective is to secure the job offer first. There is no point in negotiating until then.

The employer's initial offer will be based on their own budget and internal pay-scale reference points, and what level of reward they feel is necessary to secure you (or a suitable alternative candidate), and this salary/package level is nearly always negotiable.

The stronger you convince the interviewer and employer that you are the best person for the job - in all respects that need to appeal to them - then the more likely you are to do well when it comes to negotiating the package.

If the employer asks you before or during the interview to confirm your salary/package expectations, give them a broad indication at the top of the range that has already been indicated or discussed for the role (plus 10-20 per cent for good measure if you wish), and say that ultimately your decision will be based on comparing your options (think and behave as if you expect to have more than one).

Tell them 'Let's see if you like me first - then we can discuss/agree the detail.'

It's a matter of personal feeling as to where you set your target salary level for a particular job, ie., how much you'll eventually be happy to accept, and how firmly you hold out for it and anything above it. This will be a combination of what you want, need, whether you have another real offer, and generally what your market value is - these are the reference points.

In terms of negotiating salary and package, your best position is always to secure two job offers from two different employers, which gives you the huge advantage of choice. If you can't or don't, (which is normal), then behave as if you have other options, which of course you do, if not right now.

Do not allow the interviewer/negotiator to set, suggest or argue for a salary level based on your previous one (assuming it's lower) - be very firm about this. It's not relevant. What you earned before and why you worked for that wage is not their business and has no bearing on your value to them and the market now (make that point politely not aggressively of course).

What's relevant is your value in the market, and how much the employer wants you compared to other candidates and their respective salary expectations. It's important to give them the feeling that you are entirely confident in being able to go elsewhere if the deal's not right. Bear in mind also that you can always buy some time to 'think about it' whatever they offer you. Time will generally work in your favour if they want you. They will worry that they'll lose you, perhaps even to a competitor, and so will be more likely to increase their offer, and to justify some extra budget if required.

You do not need to give them a rushed answer whether to accept their offer just because they'd like one. Of course they'd like one quickly because they know they'll get a better deal that way, and they'd like to finalise the recruitment ASAP.

Generally a good manager and employer will respect you more, and feel you are more valuable, if they get the impression that you are in demand elsewhere.

During the negotiation be sure to maintain a positive and committed view towards the prospective new company and the job (assuming of course you feel that way about them). This will prevent the risk of their coming to the view that you are wasting their time or stringing them along. It's important to be fair and right with people, even while negotiating.

While acknowledging the appeal of the opportunity, conduct your discussions professionally, firmly, confidently, and at the same time ask for their understanding that you have a responsibility to yourself and your family to achieve the best 'price' for what you can do in your particular job market.

See the job interviews page if you are changing jobs.


asking for a salary negotiation or pay rise in the same job

If you feel the need to ask for a raise, the most positive way to approach this is to ask for extra work and responsibility and link this to a pay rise, if not immediately then in the future. This is a grown-up approach that employers respond to better than simply asking for more pay for doing the same job.

Another positive approach is to ask for a performance related bonus or pay increase subject to achieving more, based on standards or output greater than current or expected levels. This again should be received positively by the employer because you're offering something in return, and not simply asking for more money, which most people tend to do.

If you do not understand the organization's method of awarding pay increases, your first step should generally be to discuss this with your boss. Pay is normally linked to performance, which allows the company to increase your grade, or promote you, or to award a bonus. Discuss with your boss how you can improve your performance and contribution to the organization, in a way that will enable promotion and grading and pay improvement. At times of low inflation any significant annual pay increase is not automatic or a 'right' of the employee - a pay increase will generally be given in return for achieving agreed objectives or standards and an increased contribution to organizational performance. Find out what process exists in your organization to enable this exchange to happen. It's always essential to keep your boss informed of your position, so talk to them first. If your boss doesn't know then you should ask your personnel department, or person responsible for personnel and human resources, but always keep your boss informed, because their opinion will usually be sought before your employer considers improving your job and remuneration package. You need your boss's support.

Ask for a face to face meeting rather than try to present your case in a letter, which is just a one-way communication and doesn't allow you to develop a mutual understanding of the situation and what to do about it. Simply ask your boss for a review meeting to discuss your responsibilities and remuneration. In the meeting ask what the opportunities are and/or process by which you can improve your salary package. Follow the principles described here - the process needs to be two-way discussion. Approach it positively and constructively. Ask what flexibilities exist and what the rationale is for setting and increasing pay levels. Who does your boss have to make a case to? Will he/she support you? What would improve your case? What commitments would the company want from you? What exchanges can be agreed - what you can put in and what can be given in return. It's a discussion, not a demand.

Separately, before the meeting you must get an objective view and measure of your market worth. Look at other similar jobs outside as well as inside the company and compare them to your own responsibilities and rewards. Personal views about reward and job-load can become very subjective and need to be validated or it's difficult for you (or anyone else) to decide how deserved the claim is.

If you are so nervous about asking verbally for a meeting and therefore need to write, keep it very simple, particularly do not include any details of your position or justification or financial claim. Here's a sample letter for a review meeting request:

sample letter asking for a pay review discussion

(Alternatively an email or memo - but make sure it's kept private and discreet.)


Dear.......

Can we meet please to discuss my role and development? I'd appreciate your advice.

Please let me know a time and date that suits you.

Best wishes, etc


Stay positive and constructive - look for opportunities to make your boss's task in dealing with your approach as easy as possible, especially given that resolving salary raise requests are difficult for your boss too.

As an employee, at any grade, it's important to understand the company's position, and to understand your own properly. Taking an instinctive or emotional approach rarely works, and will often lead to conflict and early rejection. Try to avoid thinking and presenting your position in terms of 'I want' or 'I need'. Instead try to present an objective, neutral view, as if you were an observer, which should provide a good platform for sensible discussion, and will also enable you to present a stronger case.

Obviously threats of any kind (resigning or reducing commitment or effort) are likely to provoke the boss and the company.

Achieving a salary increase depends on many factors, and it's important to understand as many of them as possible before you make your move.

factors which affect salary negotiation

  • how well paid you are at the moment compared to the market norms
  • the rate of inflation
  • where you live and work and the costs of living associated with the area, and in relation to other geographical locations where company employs people
  • the company's position concerning staff turn-over, retention, recruitment and head-count (ie increasing, reducing, or static; in accordance with planned levels or not)
  • the company's trading performance (relative to budgeted costs and planned sales and profitability)
  • the available budget your company has for pay rises (which is usually none, apart from annual salary review time)
  • the company's last company-wide salary review, and the range of % increases awarded
  • the company's next company-wide salary review, and the likely range of % increases
  • what precedents would be set for other employees by giving you a rise (this is often a significant issue for the company)
  • how valued you are to your boss and company
  • how easy it would be for them to replace you with someone of similar capability and value at the same or less salary
  • how much extra responsibility and/or you are prepared to take on
  • how much extra effort you are prepared to put into the job and how ambitious you are
  • and, very importantly, what you will do if you don't get a raise or salary increase (ie., how much you want to stay with your present company and how confident you are that you could find a better job elsewhere)

You need to understand all of these factors before you decide how to approach the situation. The stronger your position the more firm you can be in asking for a salary increase.

Ask yourself why, honestly, you want or need a salary increase. Some ask because they feel under-valued. Some people are genuinely are under-paid. Are you being fair and realistic? Stepping back and taking a truly objective view is so important. Put yourself in your boss's shoes. How would they see the situation?

If you believe that you have a strong deserving case, then write it down, which will help you to see things objectively, and will provide you with a prepared position, enabling you to keep control and present your case fairly and professionally. Find out what you can about the company's position, referring to the above factors. If you can find references from the market that indicate you are paid less than the norm then prepare to use them.

Always remember that you are one of several or many hundreds or thousands of employees. Each one would take more money if offered it. The company has had to plan and budget for employee head count and salary along with all other costs and revenues, and it's not easy for a manager or director to change things outside of the normal time to review these budgets.

Nevertheless, if you present a strong case the worst you will do is increase your chances of receiving a more favourable review when the next review time comes around. At best, if the company has sufficient flexibility and reason, you may be able to achieve a pay rise before then.

Having prepared your case, ask for a meeting with your boss, but don't state the precise reason for the meeting. Say it's to discuss a personal matter, or to discuss your development, or to present a proposition. If you say you want to ask for more money your boss is likely to say no there and then, or to warn you that the answer will be no, and you've lost the chance to present your position properly. You need instead to keep control of the situation and that includes crucially controlling the timing and basis of the decision.

Present your case, unemotionally, and try to understand your boss's and the company's perspective. The case you present should emphasise what you are prepared to do for the company - what's in it for them (see WIIFM). Avoid making a case that's wholly centred around what you want. Present as much objective information (ie., not your own opinion) and evidence that you can - you are trying to build a case, not merely make a request. It may be that if the decision has to be referred upwards by your boss that your boss will agree to present your case on your behalf, in which the clearer and stronger it is the easier this is and the greater the chance of success.

Ask your boss to explain the company's position if you do not understand it. Try to understand your boss's own role within this and how decisions are made. This information may give you ideas about how best to progress the situation from here on.

It is unlikely that your boss will be able to agree to your request at this meeting. The bigger the company and the further removed your boss is from the CEO the less likely a quick answer will be.

Often your immediate boss will not be empowered to agree salary increases for anyone. In this case it's important to gain agreement in principle from your boss to the case you are presenting. Try to secure your boss's agreement that they will pursue the matter and they they will support your claim.

If your boss is the CEO or a director with suitable authority to agree to your request, the process is more straight-forward. This situation is more likely to apply in smaller companies and/or if you hold a senior position with the company.

If the company is not able to agree to your request ask for reasons why, and consider them carefully. Try to see things from your boss's and company's point of view - they may have no option but to refuse your request. If your request is denied for reasons of budget and timing you should seek a commitment that the increase will be given or at least considered at the next suitable opportunity for the company. This will normally be at the next annual salary review for all staff, at which time you would obviously be expecting to receive an increase greater than the general level or range for all employees.

There may be circumstances that prevent the company from offering any performance related increase, or linking an increase to greater responsibility. You must decide if you think the company's position is right and fair.

If, despite your your best efforts at presenting a reasonable case objectively, and discussing it professionally, the company will not consider or agree any way for you to achieve an increase in pay, you have no option other than to conclude that they do not value you as much as you value yourself.

This happens sometimes. It's not the end of the world, and this may be the time to seriously think about moving on. If you decide to look for another job don't do it with a bitter heart - aside from anything else it will show in your discussions with new prospective employers and you will not be offered the jobs you want. If you decide to move on do so with a glad heart and with the minimum of fuss. Certainly avoid telling your employer that this is what you intend to do. Some, not all, employers can become defensive or even aggressive towards people whom they consider have become disaffected. This is particularly so for anyone working in a sensitive role who could damage their employer or waste resources while continuing to work while seeking another job.

Retain your dignity. Integrity has an immense value and you never know whose paths from your past you will cross in the future. Falling out with a boss or employer over salary rarely profits anyone.

If you find yourself looking for another job in response to being undervalued by your current employer, you are very vulnerable to being seduced by what's on the other side of the fence, simply because it provides an escape and a chance to prove certain people wrong. The grass will appear greener on the other side of the hill, but often it's not. Some people embark on a bad marriage on the rebound, and the same thing happens with job changes. Think carefully about the new opportunities you find, and consider everything properly. Write things down so as to evaluate the pro's and con's objectively. Often you will find that after really thinking properly about things that your current position compares very favourably with everything else available out there.

When and if the time comes to leave, you should ensure you have a written job offer before you resign. Discuss your intentions and reasons with your boss in a grown-up, professional and polite manner. You must also give written notice. It is very important to behave with dignity.

Do not be surprised if your boss responds to your resignation with an offer to increase your salary. You may even be offered a promotion. It's the way that a lot of companies work - they don't do anything until and unless they absolutely have to; it's simply the way a lot business is - decisions and activities are all based on priorities. A salary request is regarded as relatively low priority by most organizations - they simply dare not give any other impression or they'd be deluged with requests every day. A resignation of a valued employee is potentially very high priority -it has implications of job coverage, productivity, continuity, recruitment and selection time and costs, induction and training costs - all very expensive and disruptive, which is why people resigning are often suddenly asked to stay and offered suitable incentive. If this happens think carefully about it. Don't say no for pride's sake alone. Don't say no for fear of letting down your prospective new employer (they'll get over it). It is after all what you were seeking in the first place.

It is often said that the only true way to find out how much your company values you is to resign, and this may be so. Some have even gone so far to say that if you think you are underpaid, resign and re-apply for your own job when you see it advertised at the higher salary you were requesting. I'd never advocate such a risky tactic, not only because most times life goes on without you and they'll find somebody who can do your job acceptably well for the same or less money, but really for this reason:

If you are unhappy about your salary, and you feel underpaid and undervalued, you will do your reputation and future a lot of good by approaching the matter in a professional, well-prepared and objective way. People that can handle their own difficult situations are seen by their employers as people who can handle other difficult situations well too, and as such your value and potential increases.


increased responsibility with no increase in pay

Good managers in good companies respond well to people who are prepared to take on more responsibility for little no extra pay - typically helping with supervisory duties or standing in during the boss's absence; but this is usually on the understanding that within a few months or a year at most, the new grade is formalised with a resulting increased package.

Such an an arrangement (increased responsibility with a conditional future increase in pay) would normally be recorded as part of an individual's career path development, so there's a meeting of minds and a mutual commitment.

Companies do sometimes (deliberately or unintentionally - the former needs dealing with very cautiously by employees) exploit staff who agree to take on more (work, hours, responsibility, etc), and employees who refuse such 'promotions' cannot really be criticised for saying no and protecting themselves from this risk of exploitation.

A manager or company which offers an unpaid promotion without any guarantee of review or increase in reward demonstrates a concerning lack of proper process, both in substance and style. Such poor management is not unusual, particularly in small companies, where financial pressures can cause proper process to be sacrificed. If a big company does this I'd be even more concerned because they should know better, and should have safeguards and policies in place to prevent it.

As ever the challenge is to turn the opportunity of unpaid promotion into a positive:

Ideally, assuming you want advancement and you like the job and the company etc., you should be trying to find a way of accepting the opportunity, because that's what it is, irrespective of the fact that the company might be asking you to do more for no extra money.

Increased responsibility is always an opportunity - to learn and develop and grow - in this respect an unpaid promotion is no different from a paid one; there are many benefits outside of the financial reward.

However, bills have to be paid, and no employee is a charity.

The best way to handle anyone (an employer, supplier, customer, friend, whatever) asking you to agree to give a major concession like this is to make your acceptance conditional. This is an important aspect of negotiating (effectively you are in a negotiating situation with your employer, even though they won't have positioned it as such). See negotiation technique.

For instance, in this situation you might say "okay, subject to your guaranteeing me an increase/performance bonus/proper review in 3/6/9 months time" - whatever you feel is suitable and reasonable given the company's circumstances.

Do this even if the company has offered no guarantees. You have to encourage them to think about this - it's called managing upwards. If they can't agree even to a review in 6 months time (which I think would be a reasonable minimum expectation on your part), ask what they can do for you in return for your commitment and trust in them, and decide accordingly.

If initially you've said no a day or two ago, it's not too late to re-open discussions with them - just say you've been giving it some thought and you'd like to try to help arrive at a way for them and you to be able to move forward constructively. This way you are seen to be both positive and professional, and you put a stake in the ground as to how long you'll do the higher grade job before getting something in return.

If they won't play ball you may very well be working for the wrong company. If they will play, plan your contingency accordingly - if you agree to take the management job with a review in 3/6 months, look around for another job as the review approaches - you'll be able to secure a far better new job offer by taking on the management role than if you'd stayed in your current role, and most new employers will respond well to the positive way you've approached the situation.

Obviously make sure any agreement has a written record.

If you can't agree any way forward and the management team is there to stay, then it may be time to start looking for another job - you are likely to be ready for promotion or they wouldn't have offered it, so seek it elsewhere.

If you end up staying with the same company in the same role for whatever reason, as to whether you'll be asked again will depend on how grown-up the management is - if not, they could take your refusal or negotiation stance personally and regard it as a challenge to their authority - then you'll not be asked again for a while or never, (again, good reason to find another company which places more value in you).

Aside from all that, 'the company' is the board and to a lesser extent the management. You need to judge how permanent the board and senior managers are - if they leave, then policy it likely to change. New brooms and all that, which is another reason to stick around, particularly if you really like the job, your workmates and the business environment.

It's not unusual - in sales particularly - to receive a pay cut when moving from a well-paid performance-linked sales job into management for the first time. In some companies the best sales-person earns more than any manager maybe two or three levels up the ladder. So pay isn't everything, especially if you see management as a stepping stone to more important things, like being your own boss, or moving into consultancy, or becoming the CEO one day.

You need to weigh it up - then act professionally and with integrity.

sample letter asking for a pay rise or salary review

Always try to discuss the situation first, face-to-face, with your boss - you need their help and guidance. When and if you decide that you need to write a letter to request a pay rise or salary review, keep it short and simple, and positive, with a suggestion of give and take. Here's sample letter asking for a salary review. Adapt it or use it as is.


Dear........

I'd appreciate a review of my responsibilities/role and salary/remuneration.

I'm very positive about my job and the organization, and would like to discuss how to increase my contribution, and the reward I receive.

I'd be grateful for your advice on this.

Best wishes etc.


asking for a pay rise/raise after being given extra responsibilities or duties

In many situations people are given extra responsibilities or duties, with no offer of pay increase or a raise. Sometimes a raise is warranted, sometimes it's not - it depends on the circumstances. Whatever the case, it is wrong for any manager or organization to impose extra duties or responsibilities on an employee without discussing and clarifying expectations on both sides with the employee concerned. Failing to do so usually creates a feeling of unease, or even resentment, in the employee. If, as an employee, you find yourself in this situation and feel that you deserve a raise (again, sometimes a raise is warranted, sometimes it's not - it depends on the circumstances) you should ask for a review meeting. Ideally do not try to make your case for a raise in a letter or email - save it for a two-way review discussion, when you should discuss your manager's (and your employer's) expectations for your performance (ie., your objectives and standards) as well as your own expectations (salary, reward, and development).

To arrange a review discussion, write something very simple, in an email or letter, or ask face-to-face verbally:


Dear....

Thank you for increasing my responsibility recently. This is something that I welcome. I think it would help us if we meet up to review my objectives, my future development and reward, and any opportunities for me to contribute more to the team effort.

Please let me know a suitable time.

Yours, etc.


What you say at the review (especially how long you are prepared to wait for an increase, and how much you are seeking) will depend on how strongly you feel about your situation, in which case you need to think and decide about your position.

It's rare for organizations to give more pay or reward to anyone unless the organization (or a suitably powerful manager) sees the need, (ie., they are placed under pressure for one reason or another).

As an employee you will only generally place your employer under pressure if you are valued by them, and feel strongly about deserving a pay increase (or any other rise in reward or benefits). Conversely, if you do not feel strongly about it (strong enough to start looking for another job), then at the review don't bother asking for an immediate extra raise, ask for some commitment to pay more in the future subject to performance or achievement of certain objectives, or maybe to add a performance-linked element now (although from the organization's point of view the extra reward would have to be based on extra performance).

Bear in mind that it is easier for an organization to agree to give a raise when it is planning the next trading year. Giving a raise during the trading year is difficult if no budget exists for it, which is generally the case in most organizations. Many employees fail to realise that manager's hands are tied in this respect - your manager may be supportive, but if the budget isn't there, then usually nothing can be done immediately. It is often a good tactic to show that you understand this and that you will wait a while for your raise, provided a clear commitment can be agreed. This also gives the organization time to see you prove that you are worthy of the raise (that you can adequately perform the extra duties).


sample letter when asked by your employer to write a letter justifying a salary increase

Sometimes your employer or boss will ask you to write a letter giving reasons why you believe you deserve a salary increase or pay rise or other improvement to your reward package. If so this is an opportunity for you to present a clear commercial case for giving you a raise. Always bear in mind that your employer needs to see a commercial justification above all else - personal feelings are not a strong justification for a raise. So think about and explain what you have contributed to the organization's effectiveness and profitability, whether saving costs, increasing sales, improving efficiency, etc., and where possible calculate and show an annual value benefit for the organization for each item.

letter example structure - reasons for a pay rise


Dear....

You have asked for justification as to why I should receive a pay rise/ improved remuneration/salary arrangements.

Here are the reasons:

(List the reasons, presented as 3-7 concise clear bullet points. Where you attach values show them rounded to nearest 100 or 1,000 or 5,000 depending on scale, or shorten using the k symbol, eg $50,000 looks tidier when shown as $50k) in a column ranged right margin one above the other, and you can even show a total value bottom right if appropriate - see the examples of reasons below, and tailor to reflect your own situation).

(Then add) I'm happy to provide more detail on any of the above if you need it.

(End with something positive like) I thank you for this opportunity to present this information. I greatly enjoy working with the company, I am pleased to give my loyalty and commitment, and to take on extra work and responsibility. I am keen to be trained, to progress, to learn new things, and I want to contribute as much as possible to the company's success in the future.

I look forward to your response.

Yours etc..


examples of reasons for a salary raise

Here are some examples of reasons that you might use to justify a raise - tailor to your own situation:

  1. Refer to objectives you've achieved in the past year - attach values per annum (cost saved or extra profit or revenue achieved) to the company.
  2. Refer to examples of your achievements outside of your objectives above, which have contributed to profit by increasing turnover, efficiency, solving problems, training others, saving time, saving costs, etc - the more examples of your achievements in these areas the better - try to attach estimates of value per annum (profit, cost saving) each example has produced for the employer.
  3. State the extra responsibility/ies you have taken on since your last raise, either officially or informally - make reference to your basic job description and the additional responsibilities you now fulfil beyond these duties - attach values or person/days/per year equivalent of this extra work you do - ie., it's saving them having to employ someone else to do this extra work.
  4. Refer to any supervisory or management responsibility that you have taken on informally or formally since your last raise and attach values as in the items for point 3.
  5. If you produce or retain sales/customers, quantify the value of any business per year that has not already or fully been compensated via bonus or commission - it is reasonable for you to be compensated for this contribution.
  6. Refer to any qualifications earned since your last raise or that your employer may not be aware that you possess - employee qualifications often increase the competitive strength and/or customer accreditations of a supplier organization.
  7. Identify extra opportunities, responsibilities or activities that you would be happy to take on in the future if suitably rewarded, which would benefit the company (increase sales, profit, reduce costs or save time) - especially if these items are not being attended to currently.

And optionally, depending on the situation and whether you think this will be received positively, (because these items can be seen as threatening by some bosses and employers):

  1. Compare your package with market norms (eg., other advertised rates for similar jobs - this often provides good justification for a boos arguing on your behalf).
  2. Suggest that companies who pay more than market average tend to secure the services and loyalty of the best people available (this is relevant if you work for an employer who aspires to be a high quality company as high quality companies need high quality, and therefore more expensive, people).
  3. Suggest that you may have to consider your position if your remuneration fails to match the level that you could find with another employer (obviously this is a threat - use only if you have had to resort to such tactics, eg., if you have an extremely hard-headed boss who likes to play hardball).

tips on how to handle pay rise request discussions

This is from the employee's standpoint, for example when a boss or decision-maker has agreed to discuss salary, when you believe you are not being paid fairly, and are due a raise.

Generally the best way to discuss a pay rise situation like this is to look at the situation objectively together with the boss or decision-maker, rather than approach the discussion head-to-head.

Discussing the situation as if you were a neutral outsider, both looking at the situation, rather than it becoming a face-to-face argument or justification struggle, is the best way to avoid emotional reactions and obstacles. (This 'detached positioning' incidentally is the best way to avoid emotional distractions and provocations for any sensitive discussion between two people or factions, even disagreements with neighbours, disputes with the authorities, complaints about suppliers or products or services, negotiating with children and teenagers, etc.)

In this way, in a discussion about salary level or an overdue pay rise, it would be reasonable to suggest (which you could do as a sort of neutral commentator) that anyone doing the job concerned for this level of pay concerned is likely at some stage to look for and secure a better package with another employer. Moreover typically before doing so, employees who feel undervalued (because they are underpaid) find if difficult to maintain enthusiasm and effort - it's only natural.

This would be a waste for the current employer who had invested so many years in developing the knowledge, experience, mutual relationship, trust, loyalty, etc in and with the disillusioned and later departing employee, which would be a shame.

The employer would then be forced to recruit, train and invest again in the replacement person, which is expensive in cost and management time, not to mention disruptive to the service activities involved and related or dependent.

It's a shame also for employees who are forced to leave jobs they love because they simply cannot afford to stay for financial reasons, or for reasons of frustration and/or stress (feeling undervalued is a big cause of stress).

The ideal outcome to these situations is for the employer to make the employee a sensible improved pay offer, based on market norms and the true value of the employee.

Employees normally aren't greedy - they just want to be valued and treated fairly.

Paying employees what they are worth doesn't generally open the floodgates to lots of ridiculous wage demands - it simply maintains a fair balance of effort and reward that's essential for any successful and sustainable enterprise.

Employers who intentionally or unintentionally take advantage of the goodwill and tolerance of any employee, by paying them less than is fair, generally end up losing the employee and never knowing why - here is an opportunity (you can suggest, if you are the employee) to act before matters become difficult.

An optional extra suggestion is that the best companies generally pay slightly higher than market norms - this ensures they attract and keep the best people, which enables the company to perform better than its competitors. It follows that the employers who pay less than market norms will eventually end up with the least able employees, because the best ones are all working for the competition.

As an employee embarking on discussions about a pay rise, you might also find it helps to empathise with the employer as to how the situation has developed - it's no-one's fault - it's just the way that things happen sometimes. This will demonstrate your maturity, remove any perceived threat of your holding the employer personally responsible for your mental anguish, and should hopefully ensure that the compromise is relatively easy for the employer to agree.

Big arguments involve big climb-down for someone, and that someone is rarely the employer, so don't have an argument, have a mature objective discussion.


negotiation of salary increases and pay rises - frequently asked questions, and answers


Q: When is a good time to discuss salary rises?

A: When the organisation is reviewing performance-related salary increases for all staff (prior to finalisation of the coming trading year's budgets). Or when you have secured another job offer. Or when your boss is asking you to take on significant extra responsibility which you have a choice whether to accept or not.

Q: What is the best way to approach your boss about this subject?

A: Ask for a face-to-face discussion about your responsibilities, reward and career direction. Then at the meeting ask for help in formulating and timing an approach and justification for an increase in salary that meets (rather than conflicts with) your organisation's processes, protocols, policies and timing.

Q: How can you prepare yourself for a salary negotiation meeting?

A: Understand the policies, timings, protocols, criteria, etc., within your organization. Have quantifiable evidence of your value and contribution to organizational performance and profit. Be positive and constructive. 'Facilitate' the process. Help your boss to help you. Avoid being a pain in the ass. If you are really up against it ideally secure an alternative job offer beforehand; this is the only thing that will give you sufficient power and choice necessary to apply real pressure (and more particularly to provide the management with justification for breaking policy to meet your demands).
Q: Where can you find out information like the average salary for your field, so you are prepared and have fair expectations?

A: Local, national and trade newspaper job adverts. Online job adverts. Competitors job vacancy adverts especially. Also paywizard.co.uk.

Q: What other things are good to negotiate at a time like this, why, and how do you best approach the subject? (ie holiday, bonuses, work hours etc)

A: Keep the whole package in mind all the time. Think about it all beforehand and be able to provide market-norm examples and reference points as justification and evidence. You will make things difficult if you try add new demands and after-thoughts in later. Ask for things that are usual in your organization, and for which some precedent exists and can be referenced. Strange requests will meet with far greater resistance.

Q: What should (and shouldn't) you use as leverage in a salary negotiation meeting?

A: Use evidence of your value to the organisation, directly linked to cost saving, profit improvement, and other KPI's (key performance indictors), eg customers gained, retained, problems solved, efficiencies achieved, initiatives started, positive effect on colleagues/team-members, customer feedback, business generated. Use alternative job offers, especially (if your employer is very stubborn and unfair) from competitors. Avoid using anything that is not fair, honest, right and proper as this will undermine your integrity and credibility.

Q: What factors affect salary negotiation?

A: Your boss's feelings about your value to the organisation and his/her level of influence in the organisation. Timing, and how this fits with the organisation's salary reviews and budgeting. The value the organisation places on you to the organisation, which is partly contribution-related, and partly reputation/attitude/influence-related, ie., your standing in the organisation. Simply - try to be a person that is well-regarded by your boss, his/her boss, and the senior managers/executives who can recommend and approve salary increases, especially if what/when you seek is outside policy norms. Your value to the organisation also depends on their organizational priorities, and relevant capabilities and resources are at the time. Be aware of whether market forces are on your side or not: essentially the extent to which the organisation sees you as being vital to the achievement of corporate aims and targets, and extending this, how easy is it to replace you (or to choose an alternative applicant). No-one is indispensable, but some people are less dispensable than others, and these people will always have more leverage when it comes to salary renegotiation.

In summary:

Be aware that when you attempt to negotiate a salary that is outside normal policy or timing, then you are attempting to control or at least influence the behaviour of a very big and complex system, ie., your organisation. The more you can understand what this system needs, and how it operates in terms of making these decisions, including all the personal factors affecting managers and upline executives, then the better chance you have to achieve an improvement.

The 1st law of cybernetics states:

"The unit within the system with the most behavioural responses available to it controls the system."

This is also known as the the law of requisite variety. It is also central to the concepts of neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), which are helpful in all matters of relationships and communications, not least for salary negotiations with your boss.

Your career is a marathon not a sprint. Consider the longer term and have a faith in yourself that you will eventually get what you deserve.

Finally, if you achieve a salary increase, especially one that is outside of normal policy, ensure you deliver your side of the bargain. This will stand you in good stead the next time.


tips for job promotions

These tips for getting job promotions are ostensibly written for employees, but they are helpful also for managers and employers 'on the receiving end' of promotion requests, because the principles described indicate how to approach these issues of promotion and career advancement positively and constructively - by which employees can be encouraged to be more self-reliant, proactive and aspirational.

Getting promoted is an aim of many employees in organisations. But there there are far fewer vacancies than people who'd like to fill them.

So take a different approach.

While you are waiting for your dream vacancy to appear, make something happen for yourself.

Don't wait for a dead-man's shoes opportunity or vacancy to arise - applying for an internal advertised vacancy is often no more than a lottery - similar to getting a job in the first place. So why compete with lots of other people, all going after the same single vacancy, if you can instead make your own opportunities and build your own bigger area of responsibility?

Pay and position and job promotions are driven and defined by scale and effectiveness. The first three - pay, position, promotion - are very difficult to change for yourself in isolation. The latter two - scale and effectiveness - you can influence all you want by what you do and how you work. Raise the scale and effectiveness of what you do, and all else will fall into place quite naturally in time.

Rather than wait to be given the new job and new responsibilities, start looking for ways to become more valuable and effective in your organisation while performing your current role. In so doing you will almost inevitably create a promotion for yourself - in a job that you love, because you'll have defined it for yourself.

This means of course that you need to invest some time and effort. Most people don't do this because they don't want their employer to get something for nothing, but think about it:

It's an investment you'll be making mainly for yourself, for the increased experience and value you'll derive - which will make you more valuable to your employer - and any other employer as well.

Of course when choosing new additional areas to develop for yourself it makes sense to tell your boss what you are doing and why you are doing it. Not least so that when you've achieved some great things, and demonstrated that you work better at a higher level, you can ask for suitable recognition, promotion, reward - whatever - you've set your stall out, and now you've presented an irresistible case. Employers fight hard to keep people who do this sort of thing. They'll almost always offer you improved terms and promotion before you ask for it, because they'll worry about losing you.

So don't wait for a vacancy, carve out your own niche - irrespective of having formal responsibility or position to do so - develop your activities and level of operation into higher, bigger, more strategic, more productive areas. Anyone can do it, and you don't need a promotion or new job title first.

Let your boss know what you are doing - especially if you need permission or approval for new project ideas - and be open to advice, guidance and support, but (most bosses love to help people develop - you'll be a breath of fresh air).

If you see opportunity laying around pick it up

If you see a responsibility vacuum fill it.

Be mindful that most job promotions entail managing people. So ensure you start working on and demonstrating great capabilities in that area: develop a reputation as someone who helps others - in whatever way you can. Coach, encourage, thank, recognise, praise, give credit, listen to, and always be good to others. Essential responsibilities of good management are coaching and developing others, and helping them to do a better job. You can start doing that tomorrow if you are not doing it already. Now you have begun to promote yourself.

If you are in selling or account management, or buying, or any other role that directly relates to increasing revenues or saving costs - grow your activities and effectiveness (and results) to the point that you need assistance, and then it's easy to make a case for bringing a trainee in to work under your wing - now you are managing and training someone else - and you've created your own promotion where no opportunity 'apparently' existed, because the scale of what you are managing has increased beyond your original job responsibility.

Invest your own time, energy, commitment, enthusiasm in building your reputation as someone who is proactive, self-reliant, mature, tolerant, productive and self-motivating. Be the promoted person you want to become, and the formal recognition and reward will follow.

On which point, although financial reward and promotion generally follow good achievement, your biggest reward for doing great work and achieving good things is actually your increased experience and value as a person, not the pay or the promotion. It might not seem like it at the time, but this is a fact.

Think about how you can help the organisation to be better, in ways that you enjoy and are good at:

Identify activities which produce a high yield or great results from your effort - you are an expensive resource within your organisation - use yourself wisely.

Demonstrate that you have good strategic judgment by the way you manage your own time and priorities - if you demonstrate this it follows that you will be able to manage a larger scale of activities, and you will be seen by others as capable of doing so.

Act like the promoted person you want to be - start doing the things, and behaving in the way, that (good) higher level people do.

Where necessary seek approval of course for new initiatives that are technically outside your remit. Consider the implications carefully and help your boss to understand and agree with what you want to do.

Discuss other new ideas and projects with your boss. Agree aims and parameters. Offer to check back at key stages.

Seek approval for starting initiatives and projects - and choose things which demonstrate your ability to make good things happen for the organisation.

I repeat - you do not need to have the formal responsibility or title to simply get on with doing higher level things.

Imagine you are an external provider, who is contracted to take on new tasks wherever a significant and relevant opportunity arises - this gives you the attitude that the organisation is your customer - give them your best - more than they expect - and they will do almost anything to keep you.

Always be positive and constructive - become valuable to the team - coach and help others - lead by example.

Get involved in new things and initially do not seek additional reward - tell your boss what you are doing and that you are happy to do this because you are investing in your own future, and that you have a confidence that formal promotion will inevitably follow higher level achievements (or words to that effect), hopefully with your current employer, but if not, no hard feelings, with another employer.

Have the faith that reward and promotion always follow people who perform above their formal responsibility.

Expose yourself to greater responsibility, new learning, and higher level experiences because this will develop you for life, not just for your current employer - if your employer does not recognise and reward you for your increasing contribution and potential to manage a wider scale, then someone else out there will.

Make a difference - become indispensable - help to develop and encourage others.

Doing all this will generally create a pressure on your employer to promote you sooner or later- whether or not there is a vacancy.

As already mentioned above, your working life is a marathon not a sprint. Invest in yourself. By becoming more valuable you will irresistibly command a bigger reward and greater formal responsibility.

And what if your employer does not allow you to make a bigger contribution? Find one who does.

Or if your employer isn't interested in your coming up with creative ideas for making improvements? Find one who does.

Or if after achieving great things and carving out your own niche your employer refuses eventually to reward and recognise you for your achievements and value to the organisation?...

Are you not now in a much better position to go find one who will? You betcha.

So start acting promoted now. Seek greater responsibility. Help others. Improve the organisation. Make a difference.

And one way or another, promotion will follow.


tips on agreeing or negotiating new working hours and conditions

These tips on negotiating working hours and conditions are written from the employee's perspective, but the principles described - of cooperation and creative exploration of change and improvement - are just as relevant for managers and organisations.

First, consistent with the tips on pay rises, understand your organisation's policies, reasons, decision-making and flexibilities relating to hours and conditions - ask your boss, the HR department, anyone who can help you understand.

Organisations are complex and changing things isn't easy, so what helps is understanding what kind of change might offer an improvement to the way the organisation works, as well as you.

Then think creatively about ways to change and achieve what you want that will also benefit your manager, colleagues, the organisation and customers, suppliers, etc.

Organisations (and bosses) often benefit from positive suggestions for change from their people (because the need or opportunity hasn't been recognised yet, or if it has they don't know how to achieve a change) and there can often be be a good fit between what you need and what they will find helpful.

Be creative and facilitative in your approach - remember that people need a WIIFM (what's in it for me).

If your idea contains no WIIFM for the other person and the organisation then it won't get off the ground.

Approach the situation with an attitude of enabling and facilitating rather than negotiating, which can be seen as confrontational.

Instead, help your boss. See things from his/her point of view. It's in their interest to have happy people with fair and appropriate working conditions. Be creative; enable, cooperate - don't impose or go head-to-head.

Look for changes that contain benefits and improvements for all - they are there if you look for them.

Be mindful that your boss is likely to have to sell or justify the change to the system behind him/her.

Ask yourself and understand: what are the systemic implications? How can the change be managed?

Organisations don't want problems and cap-in-hand requests - they want positive constructive thoughtful solutions, recommendations and ideas.

All this links to other aspects of pay and reward, career advancement and job promotion:

Anyone can complain or raise problems and awkward requests. Kids do it to their parents. Victorian factory workers used to do it to their masters. But now the world is changing - more and more employers are opening up to the idea that their people have great potential, and can achieve great things, can identify and solve problems, can help to change the organisation (often where the bosses have failed to).

The paternalistic management style is dead. Because people can look after themselves.

So take responsibility for yourself, and the organisation, in seeking change and improvement.

Look for ways to improve the organisation and its activities around you, and you will improve yourself, your opportunities, and your value at work and beyond.


pay and reward for 'in-job growth' development of role and responsibilities

For the purposes of these notes, 'in-job growth' is defined as development of an employee's responsibilities and capabilities within a role or job that clearly and positively exceed the basic remit (or job description) of the job or function concerned.

In today's fast-changing world, if you stay in a job for a few years it is highly likely that the role, and your effectiveness, capabilities, range, responsibilities, etc, will grow considerably. You might also find that you are doing a lot of your boss's job.

This creates a challenge and an opportunity, especially if you begin to feel that your growth and extra contributions are not being recognised and rewarded.

In-job growth creates obvious challenges and opportunities for organisations and employers too, especially since the situations often lead to tricky discussions about pay rises, extra rewards, bonus payments, job-grades, and promotions, etc.

That said, employees and employers always should encourage, welcome and react positively to in-job growth.

From the employee's perspective if you are seeking reward (pay rise, bonus, grade, advancement, etc) then you yourself - the employee - are normally the determining factor:

As already discussed, it is rare for employers to offer extra pay or grade unless they are forced to one way or another. The notion of rewarding people without being pressurised by the employee to do so, clearly undermines the over-riding focus on cost or profit that most employers, and therefore management, see as their main priority.

Therefore passive loyal employees who do not aggressively put themselves forward for pay rises and promotions can find that they become victims of their own loyalty and tolerance, which is a shame.

If you find yourself in this situation here are some ideas to help you decide what to do, and some thoughts for employers too.

What you do about finding yourself with a role far bigger than originally contracted depends on your need to stay with the same employer and how much you want to help them, versus your personal need to develop, grow and maximise your rewards and opportunities.

Your strength of response (ultimately being prepared to leave) will determine the employer's reaction.

I'm not advising either way - it's up to you - you must decide what's best for your and yours.

Stay or move is the real question.

Staying = acceptance. Moving = improvement (almost always, and especially after many years in the same job since often 'familiarity breeds contempt' and employers tend to take passive loyal employees for granted).

In this respect the principles elsewhere on this page apply about seeking a pay rises.

Ultimately how you are treated by an employer is dependent on your strength of feelings about improving your situation, versus your loyalty to and love of the job.

It's normal for good people achieve a lot of 'in-job growth', simply by doing the job in a positive committed way over a few years.

Thus people naturally develop their responsibilities and range beyond their formal job descriptions, which can also extend progressively to taking over some or many of their boss's responsibilities.

Good bosses should be encouraging this (it's called succession planning..) but of course many fear it, and most employers are slow to react to this sort of 'in-job growth' because of general organisational inertia.

Good organisations should encourage the whole process of 'moving into the space above' (and to the side as well, wherever, as long as people are growing), because that's how everyone becomes more productive, strategic, and fulfilled as individuals.

First, employees must accept that some in-job role growth is inevitable, is a good thing to be strived for, and doesn't necessarily produce extra reward or grade. This is the way organisational systems develop (civilisations too): functions and job roles continuously become more informed, capable and effective over time. Compare a basic clerk's effectiveness and capabilities now with twenty years ago - a clerk performs many duties today that would have been senior management or expert responsibilities a generation ago - and yet the pay rate and grade for a clerk's job in real terms is not any different today than in the past.

Second, however, employers need to recognise and respond when a good employee's growth does warrant increased pay, grade, promotion, reward, etc., which it does in many cases.

How the employee responds to having achieved significant in-job growth largely determines whether the growth does actually result in extra pay, grade, etc., or not. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy.

If the employee accept things (no improvement to pay or grade - even after a review and a fuss) then the organisation automatically sees no need to pay no more for the role. The inertia survives intact.

If the employee leaves (or secures another job offer and resigns) then the organisation clearly sees that the role is being insufficiently valued and rewarded. Good employers will try to keep good employees in such circumstances (usually by offering the requested pay-raise or promotion); bad employers will probably not, and probably won't know the difference anyway between a good employee and an average one; never mind understanding and being able to manage in-job growth and succession planning, etc.

Therefore what typically determines where the line is drawn between role growth that attracts better grade and pay, and role growth that does not, is you - the employee. The employee is the 'market force'.

Where employers fail to recognise and reward good employees, particularly those who achieve significant in-job growth, the good people (even the passive loyal ones) eventually leave to find the growth path and reward elsewhere. Many do so without a fuss and the employer hasn't a clue what's happening because all they are worrying about is saving money and making profit. Market forces kick in when a neglectful inertia-bound organisation starts losing too many good people, who move on because they are not fairly recognised, rewarded and developed, etc. The neglectful organisation saves money in the short-term, and maybe some management time too, but then eventually succumbs to market forces when they realise all their great people have buggered off to better employers, upon which the dumb employer then has to start paying more money and offering better development and career progression, etc., in order to attract and keep any people at all.

Employers should recognise and support as much in-job growth as people want, and where warranted should formally increase grade, give promotion, reward, etc., without passive loyal employees having to agonise and worry about pleading for fair reward and advancement.

Some organisations, strangely, find it difficult to judge whether someone's growth warrants recognition or reward or advancement. More likely it's the inertia thing again - leave sleeping dogs to lie, etc., - "If we ignore it they might forget about it and go away..." You betcha - they'll go all the way to your competitors and you'll be left with the resource gap and the headache of recruitment and training.

So let's be clear, (and this is for employees and employers): appropriate reward for in-job growth is 'warranted' when the employee's additional contribution can be clearly seen to add value to organisational performance beyond the originally agreed job description and pay and grade, etc., - and at the same time, the organisation can genuinely afford to increase reward levels, whether attached to job grade increase or promotion, or any other method as would enable fair reward.

By addressing these issues organisations can begin to break the inertia that commonly prevents proper and fair response to in-job growth, especially when it's achieved over several years by passive loyal workers.

Finally, realise that you - the employee - are actually the market force that determines the visibility of this issue for the employer - you can determine how you are treated. There's a big wide world out there - if your employer is not fair and ethical, find one that is.