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"Sorry boring one…. But if you are asked as you submit your application: ‘What is your expected salary for this position’ How do you answer? " Answer: “More than what you're prepared to offer.” As someone else has said, it's a terrible question to ask a potential employee, and I think it would be a bit of a red flag, in my humble opinion. | |||
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"Check Glassdoor before you go to the interview then reply with what is commensurate salary for this position and the benefits please. I’m sure you will be offering the going rate to secure me in the position won’t you? Never failed yet " I'd secure you in position | |||
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"I’ll always be honest with it. Usually it’s market rate in my area for similar roles at other companies. Then I tell my existing company I’ve been offered X then wait for them to counter offer and take that back to the new company to match or increase " Ooo playing them Off …. | |||
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"I usually go with what I am on now plus a bit…never failed me yet…the plus a bit is usually 10-20% " That’s not a bad increase | |||
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"Check Glassdoor before you go to the interview then reply with what is commensurate salary for this position and the benefits please. I’m sure you will be offering the going rate to secure me in the position won’t you? Never failed yet " Research research …. It was as I applied online… a question to progress to next step kind of thing | |||
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"I’m in HR happy to help. Yes please " If it’s an application form it’ll require numbers or free text. Numbers add 30% on your current. Free text just write market rate or happy to discuss. 30% gives you room to negotiate while considering other benefits. When considering the money look at everything. If they can’t meet your salary ask then ask what else they can offer to close the gap (holidays, bonus, wfh, travel expenses whatever). The HR isn’t trying to get the lowest cost they are trying to get the person hired within a budget, but non salary bens won’t be in that budget they sit elsewhere and are an opportunity to negotiate around the edges. | |||
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"Check Glassdoor before you go to the interview then reply with what is commensurate salary for this position and the benefits please. I’m sure you will be offering the going rate to secure me in the position won’t you? Never failed yet Research research …. It was as I applied online… a question to progress to next step kind of thing " Glassdoor is your friend here… | |||
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"I’m in HR happy to help. Yes please If it’s an application form it’ll require numbers or free text. Numbers add 30% on your current. Free text just write market rate or happy to discuss. 30% gives you room to negotiate while considering other benefits. When considering the money look at everything. If they can’t meet your salary ask then ask what else they can offer to close the gap (holidays, bonus, wfh, travel expenses whatever). The HR isn’t trying to get the lowest cost they are trying to get the person hired within a budget, but non salary bens won’t be in that budget they sit elsewhere and are an opportunity to negotiate around the edges. " That is great to know …weirdly sounds like the housing market… can’t give me ‘money off’ but can throw in perks upgraded kitchen /fully tiled bathrooms etc Thank you very much for that insight | |||
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"Check Glassdoor before you go to the interview then reply with what is commensurate salary for this position and the benefits please. I’m sure you will be offering the going rate to secure me in the position won’t you? Never failed yet Research research …. It was as I applied online… a question to progress to next step kind of thing Glassdoor is your friend here… " I’ll go check it out… thank you | |||
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"I’m in HR happy to help. Yes please If it’s an application form it’ll require numbers or free text. Numbers add 30% on your current. Free text just write market rate or happy to discuss. 30% gives you room to negotiate while considering other benefits. When considering the money look at everything. If they can’t meet your salary ask then ask what else they can offer to close the gap (holidays, bonus, wfh, travel expenses whatever). The HR isn’t trying to get the lowest cost they are trying to get the person hired within a budget, but non salary bens won’t be in that budget they sit elsewhere and are an opportunity to negotiate around the edges. That is great to know …weirdly sounds like the housing market… can’t give me ‘money off’ but can throw in perks upgraded kitchen /fully tiled bathrooms etc Thank you very much for that insight " That’s a brilliant analogy. Exactly the same principle. | |||
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"Sorry boring one…. But if you are asked as you submit your application: ‘What is your expected salary for this position’ How do you answer? " Hiya, I'd just go for the average for that position in that area. Good luck! | |||
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"Sorry boring one…. But if you are asked as you submit your application: ‘What is your expected salary for this position’ How do you answer? Answer: “More than what you're prepared to offer.” As someone else has said, it's a terrible question to ask a potential employee, and I think it would be a bit of a red flag, in my humble opinion. " As someone who asks that question when hiring, I almost always end up paying what they ask for or more (plus benefits). I suggest you understand your market value, that of the role, and what you need to thrive financially in order to answer it. And don't settle for less. | |||
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"Sorry boring one…. But if you are asked as you submit your application: ‘What is your expected salary for this position’ How do you answer? " I would say "To be discussed at interview" but tbh, I wouldn't recommend that you apply. They should say what they can afford to pay for the person they want | |||
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