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Employment Articles - Salary History
At some point in the job application process, you might find yourself
in a tight spot. What do you do when asked for a salary history?
It's especially harrowing if you are hoping for a significant pay
increase over your last job. You may be gunning for a job with greater
responsibilities than in your last one, or making a transition to
an industry that pays better than the one you're in now. Or you
may even be willing to take a paycut if you believe you've truly
found your dream job. Either way, revealing your salary history
could compromise your position of advantage when it comes time to
negotiate your pay.
Besides, what you've earned in past positions is not the relevant
measure of what you're worth in a new job. The relevant measure
is the fair market value of the open position.
Divulge your worth, not your past
Think of divulging your salary history as akin to underbidding in
a salary negotiation. Just as you wouldn't want to tell a prospective
employer how much you want to make, you wouldn't want to undersell
yourself if your salary history was not indicative of your worth.
(This goes both ways, incidentally. You similarly wouldn't want
to scare off a prospective employer if your previous income was
significantly higher than what you suspect they'll offer you.)
What is relevant here is finding an appropriate job against
which to benchmark the open position. Find a market price for the
job you're applying for, then determine how close to that median
you think you should be paid given your experience and accomplishments.
What you made yesterday doesn't matter - what your colleagues and
peers are making today does.
Once you've found what the job is worth to the market, save the
information until the employer has made you an offer. You will have
a good sense of what they will have to pay to meet the market, and
you'll be on the firmest ground if you negotiate from that informed
position. If the company tries to get you to say what you've been
making at any time before making you an offer, use it as an opportunity
to showcase your diplomatic skills. Then steer the conversation
back to the value of the job to them.
Companies may ask you to disclose your current salary at any time
during the search process, especially at the following stages.
- In the ad for the job. Some advertisements for jobs stipulate
that candidates must disclose a salary history, a current salary,
or a salary expectation in order to be considered for the job.
If you choose to apply anyway, stipulate in your cover letter
that your salary expectation is the market value of the job. You
may or may not get an interview this way, but you won't be forced
to yield the negotiating position to the prospective employer.
- In a telephone screening interview. Before you set foot on
company property, someone from the human resources office might
screen you over the telephone and ask you to disclose your salary
expectations or history. Companies do this to ensure that you
are in the right range for them. But you can set them at ease
without saying a number by saying, "I have researched the
fair market value of this job and, at the appropriate time, provided
that we agree on the appropriate benchmark, I think we could find
common ground."
- During the interview. If the question hasn't come up before
you get to your first in-person interview, that does not necessarily
mean it won't be asked. Many times an employer - it could be a
human resources representative or your potential future boss -
will ask you about your salary history as part of the interview.
You should feel comfortable handling it the same way as you would
in the written or telephone versions. In some respects, it is
easier to handle the question in person because you can read the
interviewer's response to make sure your story is being properly
interpreted.
If the company pushes you harder for a more detailed response,
try to come up with a few variations on the same answer. Tell the
company, with all due respect, that you don't think your salary
history should affect your prospective salary future at a different
company - especially if it's in a different industry. You could
try deflecting the question to focus on what the new job requires
and why the old pay would not be a good match.
Of course, this all means that you have to do some preliminary
homework. Visit Salary.com and research the position in the Salary
Wizard as a good starting point for finding the right job match.
Be sure to benchmark the position you're applying for by job content,
as opposed to the job title.
It is worth noting that some organizations - civil service organizations
are one example - have requirements to disclose pay. But they usually
have more rigid pay structures than other employers, so even when
you show your pay history, you're not risking as much as you might
elsewhere.
Once you've mastered the art of being your own agent, the rest
will follow. Remember that the employer is the only one who benefits
when you say a number first. And your salary history, simply put,
is history.
- Brian Braiker, Salary.com contributor
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