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Let’s assume your employment
interview went well, and there’s sincere and mutual interest
on both sides.
Now you need to decide two things:
first, whether the new position is right for you; and if so,
what sort of offer you’d be willing to accept.
To evaluate the pros and cons, ask
yourself the following: Does the new job meet the criteria you
spelled out when you first began your search? Will the new job
improve your level of personal and professional satisfaction? Or
will it simply offer you a rehash of what you already have?
Hopefully, the unique qualities you’re seeking will be within
your grasp.
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Keeping Score
If you’re not sure about the new
job, or need help in being more objective, take the following
test as a way to compare the two positions. You should be able
to get a feel for how the job you interviewed for stacks up
against your current position by selecting which considerations
best suit your needs.
The position comparison test can be
"scored" two different ways. You can either tally the
totals (the best job has the highest score); or you can use the
test as a way to examine your priorities.
Let’s suppose your score was 15 to
seven, in favor of the new company. Does that mean you should
change jobs?
Well, not necessarily. It depends on
which considerations are most important to you. If an increase
in travel will ruin your marriage, then it won’t matter how
many positive considerations point to the new job. (This is
assuming you want to stay married.)
However, a simple tallying of the
score can be very helpful when the decision is a tough one, and
no single consideration acts as a "knockout" factor.
Besides, mathematical "logic" can always be used to
justify what you already feel to be the right decision.
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The Economic Factor
Compensation, of course, will be a
key factor in your decision whether to accept a new position.
Oddly, few people take the time to
really understand their economic choices, mostly because there
are so many hidden factors, such as cost of living, benefits,
relocation expenses, and so forth.
Regardless of where compensation
ranks on your list of priorities, it’s a good idea to know
what you may be getting into when faced with a career decision.
To help you put your economic choices
into perspective, use this compensation comparison to evaluate
both your prospective compensation package and what you’re
currently earning.
The best time to make your
calculations is before an offer is made. That way, you can form
a clear idea of what you’ll need, without having to dicker (or
experience shock) later on.
If you’re looking at an opportunity
that’s in a different geographic location, you might want to
do some investigating before you even interview. For example, if
you live in a nice suburban community in Lawrence, Kansas, what
would it cost you to maintain your current lifestyle in an area
like San Francisco? Your answer (and your willingness to make
the necessary trade-offs) will help determine your level of
interest when considering the new position.
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Figuring the Bottom Line
The best approach to putting the deal
together is to decide whether you want the job before an offer
is extended. This allows you to clarify whether the job suits
your needs. Unless you’re motivated solely by money, it’s
doubtful a few extra dollars will turn a bad job into a good
one.
If the job interests you, then
determine the conditions under which you’ll accept. These fall
into two categories: Bottom Lines and Porcupines.
The term bottom line refers to the
amount of compensation you feel is absolutely necessary to
accept the job offer. If, for example, you really want $46,000
but would think about $45,000 or settle for $44,000, then you
haven’t established your bottom line. The bottom line is one
dollar more than the figure you would positively walk away from.
Setting a bottom line clarifies your sense of worth, and helps
avoid an unpredictable bargaining session.
I recommend against
"negotiating" an offer in the classic sense, where the
company makes a proposal, you counter it, they counter your
counter, and so on. While this type of tit for tat format may be
customary for negotiating a residential real estate deal, job
offers should be handled in a more straightforward manner.
Here’s how: Determine your bottom line in advance,
and wait for the offer. If the company offers you more than your
bottom line, great. If they offer you less, then you have the
option of turning the offer down or revealing to them your
bottom line as a condition of acceptance. At that point, they
can raise the ante or walk away.
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Lay Your Cards on the Table
Once the bottom line is known, you
can avoid the haggling that so often causes aggravation,
disappointment, or hurt feelings.
My experience has shown that it’s
much better to lay your cards on the table in the beginning than
to barter to get what you want. An employer can get very
irritable when a candidate says, "I’ll think it
over," or keeps coming back with new demands again and
again. Even if you get what you want, you’ve created a
negative impression with the company which will carry over after
you’ve been hired. In effect, you may win the battle, but lose
the war.
By determining your own acceptance
conditions in advance, you’ll never be accused of negotiating
in bad faith or of being indecisive. Whether you’re
representing yourself or working with a recruiter, learning to
differentiate between financial fact and fantasy will facilitate
the job changing process.
You may want to itemize your bottom
line, and, if it’s appropriate, show it to the company (or
your recruiter) as a means to justify your salary request.
Carefully figure your total package, and document any loss of
income that may result from a differential in benefits,
geographic location, car expenses, and the like.
If a recruiter asks for your bottom
line, he or she isn’t trying to manipulate you or conspire
with an employer that plans to "lowball " its
candidates. The recruiter is simply making a good faith effort
to discover what makes you happy, and put together two
interested parties.
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The Porcupine Category
Of course, there are considerations
aside from money that usually need to be satisfied before an
offer can be accepted. Factors such as your new position title,
review periods, work schedule, vacation allotment, and promotion
opportunities are important, and should be looked at carefully.
To understand the candidate’s
needs, I use the porcupine approach to quantify each
consideration or "point" made by the candidate as a
condition for acceptance. Once I understand each point, I can
work with the company to put the deal together, without having
to go back later to get "one more thing."
Once you know your bottom line and
each condition, or point on the porcupine, you’re in a better
position to get what you want, since you’ve established
quantifiable goals to shoot for.
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How an Offer Is Staged
Every company makes hiring decisions
differently. Some will encourage shoot-from-the-hip managers to
make job offers on the spot. Other companies will limit the
decision maker’s ability to act quickly and unilaterally, and
require a drawn-out series of staff meetings, subsequent
interviews, corporate signatures, and so on.
These days, it’s not uncommon for
the hiring cycle to last weeks or even months, regardless of how
"critical" the position might be. The best approach is
to maintain contact with the company, allowing for the fact that
there’ll probably be some delay. Presumably, you asked what
the hiring procedure was when you first interviewed. Their
answer should give you some indication as to when a decision
will be made.
Offers can be extended by either a
letter, or verbally from a hiring manager. They can also be made
through a third party, such as a recruiter. In either case, be
careful. An offer needs to include these three components before
it can be considered official:
[1] Your position title;
[2] Your starting salary; and
[3] Your start date.
Before you resign from your present
job, make sure you nail down each of these components from a
company official, either verbally or in writing (in the form of
an offer letter). Even if the offer comes through a recruiter,
you should always contact the employer directly, and if
possible, get a letter of offer or acceptance to verify the deal
(although a verbal offer and acceptance will act as a legal
contract).
Not long ago, I was working with a
candidate who interviewed for a position with one of my client
companies. The interview went extremely well; so well that the
VP of the company called the candidate at his home that evening
to discuss the offer.
"Well, Paul, we really like
you," the employer told the candidate. "The job is
yours if you want it."
"I want it," said Paul.
"When do I start?"
"Well, I’ll call Bill tomorrow
and work out the details," replied the employer.
Understandably, Paul got excited.
Filled with pride, he drove his ailing grandmother by the new
company the next day, so he could show off his new place of
work.
But guess what? The employer never
called me, and never called Paul, either. For some reason he
changed his mind, and didn’t have the decency to let anyone
know.
The reason I tell this story is to
warn you that even when the cat seems to be in the bag, it ain’t
over ’til the fat lady sings. An offer has to include a
position title, a starting salary, and a date of start to be
official; just telling you the job is yours isn’t enough.
Here’s another word of caution:
Offers sometimes have strings, or contingencies attached. Don’t
be surprised if the fine print requires you to:
• Pass a physical examination;
• Document your citizenship or
immigration status;
• Obtain a security clearance;
• Undergo a thorough background
investigation, in which your credit history, police records,
and travel history might be examined;
• Verify your academic
credentials; or
• Provide proof of your past
employment, salary, or military service.
Very often, these contingencies must
be satisfied before you can to report to work or receive a
paycheck.
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Accepting the Offer
If everything about the new position
is satisfactory, go ahead and accept the offer. If you’re
expecting an offer from a second company, you should let the
second company know about your offer right away, so they can
speed up their decision. That way, you’ll avoid jeopardizing
one deal for the sake of another.
Once an offer’s on the table, it
makes common sense to accept or reject it within a day or so.
Otherwise, your inability to commit will reflect poorly on the
way you make decisions; or it will telegraph your lack of
enthusiasm to the new employer. In either case, you’re likely
to be bruised by waiting too long.
If you have legitimate concerns, or
you still have questions that need to be answered, now is the
time to bring them up. Rather than tell the employer, "I’ll
have to think it over," use the following script:
"Mr. Employer, this job looks
very good to me, and I’m enthusiastic about coming to work for
your company. I’ll be in a position to accept your offer and
start in two weeks if I can just clarify a couple of
things..."
The answers you get will make your
decision for you, and you’ll either accept or reject the
company’s offer.
If you decide to reject an offer,
remember that it’s almost impossible to resurrect the deal at
a later date, since the position will be offered to someone
else, or the employer will feel insulted, and close the door on
your candidacy. Whatever you do, make certain your decision is
final.
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New Angles and Unusual Deals
Most deals come together quite
cleanly, with little need for haggling or creative financing.
Sometimes, though, it takes a little imagination to satisfy both
parties.
Money can present a problem for
employers when your salary requirements exceed the published
range for the position, or create an inequity within the
department. In fact, internal equity issues (in which your
expected salary might be greater than someone on the staff who
has more professional or company seniority) are the cause of
most deals that fail to close for financial reasons.
To satisfy money matters, look for
ways to increase your overall yearly compensation, rather than
your annual salary. Here are a few added goodies you can shoot
for to boost your earnings without ruffling too many feathers:
• A sign-on bonus to be paid in
cash on your date of start;
• A performance bonus to be
paid after thirty, sixty, or ninety days, assuming your
clearly defined goals are met;
• A discretionary bonus to be
paid in a lump sum, or over a specified period;
• A generous relocation bonus
to be paid on your date of start to cover expenses (but
which can be spent at your discretion);
• An accelerated review which
would occur after three or six months, rather than on your
first anniversary of employment, in which your salary would
be increased; or
• An early participation in the
company’s bonus, stock purchase, or pension plan; or other
employee benefit program.
When required, companies will
sometimes serve up these tasty morsels to hungry candidates who
recognize that overall compensation consists of more than salary
alone.
The craziest deal I ever put together
involved a candidate who’d just purchased a home and was
beyond commuting distance to the interested company. Since the
candidate wouldn’t sell his home and relocate, the company
president agreed to buy the candidate (who had a pilot’s
license) a single engine airplane so he could fly to work each
day. It just goes to show, where there’s a will, there’s a
way.
Careful evaluation mixed with a little
bit of creativity will help you get the deal you want.
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Position
Comparison Guide
Candidate
___________________________________________
Current position ______________________________________
Current employer _____________________________________
Prospective employer __________________________________
Old position __________________________________________
New position _________________________________________
Today’s date __________________________________________
Prospective start
date __________________________________
•
Directions: Compare the position you have now with the one you
are considering, according to the following elements:
Current job New job Element
under consideration
[ ] [ ] Position title
[ ] [ ] Supervisory responsibility
[ ] [ ] Project authority
[ ] [ ] Decision-making
autonomy
[ ] [ ] Freedom to implement
ideas
[ ] [ ] Freedom to affect
change
[ ] [ ] Promotion potential
[ ] [ ] Challenge of tasks
[ ] [ ] Ability to meet
expectations
[ ] [ ] Access to skill
training
[ ] [ ] Professional growth
potential
[ ] [ ] Company/industry
growth
[ ] [ ] Company/industry
stability
[ ] [ ] Starting salary
[ ] [ ] Future compensation
[ ] [ ] Company benefits,
perks
[ ] [ ] Commuting distance
[ ] [ ] Travel requirements
[ ] [ ] Working environment
[ ] [ ] Rapport with
co-workers
[ ] [ ] Rapport with
management
[ ] [ ] Comfort with
corporate culture
[ ] [ ] Other considerations
(specify)
• Score: ____________ Current job ____________
New job New job
differential (+/-) ______________
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Position
Compensation Guide
Candidate
___________________________________
Current position
________________________________
Current employer
_______________________________
Prospective employer
____________________________
Old position
___________________________________
New position
___________________________________
Today’s date
___________________________________
Prospective start date
____________________________
• Directions: Compare the position you have now with the
one you are considering, according to the following elements:
Current job New job Element
under consideration
$________________
$________________ Base salary
$________________
$________________ Bonus, perks
$________________
$________________ Profit sharing potential
$________________
$________________ Value of stock or equity
$________________
$________________ Pension
$________________
$________________ 401(k) contribution, tax savings
$________________
$________________ Reimbursed expenses
$________________
$________________ Cost of living differential (+/-)
$________________
$________________ Non-reimbursed moving expenses
$________________
$________________ Job-related travel expenses
$________________
$________________ Insurance premiums
$________________
$________________ Property taxes
$________________
$________________ State taxes
$________________
$________________ Sales taxes
$________________
$________________ Other expenses (specify)
Current job $________________ New job
$________________ New job differential (+/-) $___________
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Staff Resources Inc.
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P.O. Box 4557
Rock Hill, SC
29732-6557
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803-366-0500
Fax: 803-366-1021
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