Broaching the Salary Issue
By Liz Ryan
Everyone has heard that you don’t ask about
salary on the first interview for a job.
In the best case, you don’t ask about it
at all, because the interviewer brings it
up, on the second interview. He or she will
most likely say, "We should make sure
we're in the same ballpark compensation-wise."
But what if that doesn’t happen?
If you have interviewed twice - the
interviews are done, and you’ve left the
building - and no one has said a word
about what the job is paying, that’s not
great. It means that the company is happy
to use up your time without bothering
to check in to see whether you’ll be interested
in taking the job if you get an offer.
What if you spend all this time interviewing,
and the job pays ten thousand dollars
less per year than you’d be willing to
take?
When you get a phone call, inviting you
back for a third interview (meaning that
you’ve been to two interviews already
and salary hasn’t come up - and I’m talking
about two separate visits to the company,
not including a previous headhunter interviewer),
speak up.
When the hiring manager, internal recruiter,
or search consultant calls, or emails
you, to say "We’d love to schedule a third
interview," say this (or write it in a
return email message):
"That sounds great! I am very interested
in the position - or, I should say, I
think I am interested. I realized after
the last meeting that we hadn’t talked
about compensation yet. Shall we do that
now?"
If the person who calls you, or writes
you, isn’t a person who has the authority
to talk with you about compensation (or
if he or she simply chooses not to), suggest
that this person get in touch with someone
who can clarify the position’s salary
range with you. Without delivering an
ultimatum, you want to communicate this:
You’ve had me in to your building for
two separate interviews already. Before
we do a third one, I need to know whether
pursuing this job is worth my time. Before
I come in for a third visit, what’s the
salary range?
It may happen that the person who’s trying
to schedule Interview Number Three says
to you, "that topic is on the agenda for
the meeting we’re scheduling now." You
can suggest that you'd hate to waste the
company's time, and ask to have the hiring
manager call you to chat further before
scheduling another interview. Or, you
can say, "Terrific. Who will be covering
that topic with me?" Get a name. Then
go ahead and schedule that third interview,
and when you meet the person who's supposed
to cover the compensation issue with you,
politely bring up the subject within the
first ten minutes.
It’s unprofessional of an employer to
you to assume that you’ll stay in the
process indefinitely, without knowing
whether the compensation the company is
offering is anywhere near what you require.
And while you don't want to broach the
subject before it's time, you also don't
want to go too far down the pike without
determining whether you and the employer
are on the same page.
Liz Ryan is a former Fortune 500 HR executive,
a workplace expert and the CEO of WorldWIT,
the global online community for professional
women. Liz lives in Boulder, Colorado.
(http://www.worldwit.org)
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