Got job offer, counteroffered, asked to prove current salary, can't due to confidentiality, then no reply

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I received a job offer on 12th May. While I was pretty much 100% ready to accept, I decided to reply with a counteroffer as the offered salary was actually in the lower range for the position and there is only medical cover (no other benefits) and annual leave will be 10 days less than my current job. I was polite and respectful in my counteroffer and persuaded that I worth more and asked for the higher range salary. I think I was asking quite high but I stated that we can come to a mutual agreement.



I've never negotiated salary before, so this was very stressful for me. I was offered 56k and I countered with 66k and extra 3 days AL, expecting them to come back with a much lower number, which I'd almost definitely be fine with. On 18th May, the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof. On 19th May, I replied that salary is confidential due to Data Privacy. Since then, there is no reply. I am terrified that they'd simply revoke the offer instead of negotiating.



Of course, I understand that HR needs time, which has calmed me somewhat, but the fact that it's now 23rd May (three working days since I counteroffered) and I've still heard no response is freaking me out. I really want that job and would accept even if they are firm with the initial offer.



Should I e-mail back and what to say in the email? Should I restate my flexibility on the number? Should I say I would accept the initial offer? Should I give it one more day? (There is no deadline written.)







share|improve this question















  • 3




    Whenever you negotiate something be ready to lose the original offer. If everyone would be able to just get higher or same salary after negotiation, everyone would have negotiated.
    – Salvador Dali
    May 23 '16 at 8:02






  • 8




    Data Privacy?? What are you talking about? if you want to disclose your salary then go ahead.
    – TheMathemagician
    May 23 '16 at 8:33






  • 1




    "the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof" - When you were negotiating did you use your "current salary" as a means to negotiate the higher number?
    – Brandin
    May 23 '16 at 11:02






  • 4




    Data privacy? Is that even a thing in your jurisdiction? Where are you located? Would you have given them that number even after you had signed a contract with them? Or would that "data privacy" even extend after that point?
    – Stephan Branczyk
    May 23 '16 at 11:53






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How do I properly follow-up with a hiring manager, to check on the status of a position?
    – gnat
    May 24 '16 at 1:42
















up vote
4
down vote

favorite












I received a job offer on 12th May. While I was pretty much 100% ready to accept, I decided to reply with a counteroffer as the offered salary was actually in the lower range for the position and there is only medical cover (no other benefits) and annual leave will be 10 days less than my current job. I was polite and respectful in my counteroffer and persuaded that I worth more and asked for the higher range salary. I think I was asking quite high but I stated that we can come to a mutual agreement.



I've never negotiated salary before, so this was very stressful for me. I was offered 56k and I countered with 66k and extra 3 days AL, expecting them to come back with a much lower number, which I'd almost definitely be fine with. On 18th May, the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof. On 19th May, I replied that salary is confidential due to Data Privacy. Since then, there is no reply. I am terrified that they'd simply revoke the offer instead of negotiating.



Of course, I understand that HR needs time, which has calmed me somewhat, but the fact that it's now 23rd May (three working days since I counteroffered) and I've still heard no response is freaking me out. I really want that job and would accept even if they are firm with the initial offer.



Should I e-mail back and what to say in the email? Should I restate my flexibility on the number? Should I say I would accept the initial offer? Should I give it one more day? (There is no deadline written.)







share|improve this question















  • 3




    Whenever you negotiate something be ready to lose the original offer. If everyone would be able to just get higher or same salary after negotiation, everyone would have negotiated.
    – Salvador Dali
    May 23 '16 at 8:02






  • 8




    Data Privacy?? What are you talking about? if you want to disclose your salary then go ahead.
    – TheMathemagician
    May 23 '16 at 8:33






  • 1




    "the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof" - When you were negotiating did you use your "current salary" as a means to negotiate the higher number?
    – Brandin
    May 23 '16 at 11:02






  • 4




    Data privacy? Is that even a thing in your jurisdiction? Where are you located? Would you have given them that number even after you had signed a contract with them? Or would that "data privacy" even extend after that point?
    – Stephan Branczyk
    May 23 '16 at 11:53






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How do I properly follow-up with a hiring manager, to check on the status of a position?
    – gnat
    May 24 '16 at 1:42












up vote
4
down vote

favorite









up vote
4
down vote

favorite











I received a job offer on 12th May. While I was pretty much 100% ready to accept, I decided to reply with a counteroffer as the offered salary was actually in the lower range for the position and there is only medical cover (no other benefits) and annual leave will be 10 days less than my current job. I was polite and respectful in my counteroffer and persuaded that I worth more and asked for the higher range salary. I think I was asking quite high but I stated that we can come to a mutual agreement.



I've never negotiated salary before, so this was very stressful for me. I was offered 56k and I countered with 66k and extra 3 days AL, expecting them to come back with a much lower number, which I'd almost definitely be fine with. On 18th May, the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof. On 19th May, I replied that salary is confidential due to Data Privacy. Since then, there is no reply. I am terrified that they'd simply revoke the offer instead of negotiating.



Of course, I understand that HR needs time, which has calmed me somewhat, but the fact that it's now 23rd May (three working days since I counteroffered) and I've still heard no response is freaking me out. I really want that job and would accept even if they are firm with the initial offer.



Should I e-mail back and what to say in the email? Should I restate my flexibility on the number? Should I say I would accept the initial offer? Should I give it one more day? (There is no deadline written.)







share|improve this question











I received a job offer on 12th May. While I was pretty much 100% ready to accept, I decided to reply with a counteroffer as the offered salary was actually in the lower range for the position and there is only medical cover (no other benefits) and annual leave will be 10 days less than my current job. I was polite and respectful in my counteroffer and persuaded that I worth more and asked for the higher range salary. I think I was asking quite high but I stated that we can come to a mutual agreement.



I've never negotiated salary before, so this was very stressful for me. I was offered 56k and I countered with 66k and extra 3 days AL, expecting them to come back with a much lower number, which I'd almost definitely be fine with. On 18th May, the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof. On 19th May, I replied that salary is confidential due to Data Privacy. Since then, there is no reply. I am terrified that they'd simply revoke the offer instead of negotiating.



Of course, I understand that HR needs time, which has calmed me somewhat, but the fact that it's now 23rd May (three working days since I counteroffered) and I've still heard no response is freaking me out. I really want that job and would accept even if they are firm with the initial offer.



Should I e-mail back and what to say in the email? Should I restate my flexibility on the number? Should I say I would accept the initial offer? Should I give it one more day? (There is no deadline written.)









share|improve this question










share|improve this question




share|improve this question









asked May 23 '16 at 7:04









Worried

272




272







  • 3




    Whenever you negotiate something be ready to lose the original offer. If everyone would be able to just get higher or same salary after negotiation, everyone would have negotiated.
    – Salvador Dali
    May 23 '16 at 8:02






  • 8




    Data Privacy?? What are you talking about? if you want to disclose your salary then go ahead.
    – TheMathemagician
    May 23 '16 at 8:33






  • 1




    "the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof" - When you were negotiating did you use your "current salary" as a means to negotiate the higher number?
    – Brandin
    May 23 '16 at 11:02






  • 4




    Data privacy? Is that even a thing in your jurisdiction? Where are you located? Would you have given them that number even after you had signed a contract with them? Or would that "data privacy" even extend after that point?
    – Stephan Branczyk
    May 23 '16 at 11:53






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How do I properly follow-up with a hiring manager, to check on the status of a position?
    – gnat
    May 24 '16 at 1:42












  • 3




    Whenever you negotiate something be ready to lose the original offer. If everyone would be able to just get higher or same salary after negotiation, everyone would have negotiated.
    – Salvador Dali
    May 23 '16 at 8:02






  • 8




    Data Privacy?? What are you talking about? if you want to disclose your salary then go ahead.
    – TheMathemagician
    May 23 '16 at 8:33






  • 1




    "the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof" - When you were negotiating did you use your "current salary" as a means to negotiate the higher number?
    – Brandin
    May 23 '16 at 11:02






  • 4




    Data privacy? Is that even a thing in your jurisdiction? Where are you located? Would you have given them that number even after you had signed a contract with them? Or would that "data privacy" even extend after that point?
    – Stephan Branczyk
    May 23 '16 at 11:53






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How do I properly follow-up with a hiring manager, to check on the status of a position?
    – gnat
    May 24 '16 at 1:42







3




3




Whenever you negotiate something be ready to lose the original offer. If everyone would be able to just get higher or same salary after negotiation, everyone would have negotiated.
– Salvador Dali
May 23 '16 at 8:02




Whenever you negotiate something be ready to lose the original offer. If everyone would be able to just get higher or same salary after negotiation, everyone would have negotiated.
– Salvador Dali
May 23 '16 at 8:02




8




8




Data Privacy?? What are you talking about? if you want to disclose your salary then go ahead.
– TheMathemagician
May 23 '16 at 8:33




Data Privacy?? What are you talking about? if you want to disclose your salary then go ahead.
– TheMathemagician
May 23 '16 at 8:33




1




1




"the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof" - When you were negotiating did you use your "current salary" as a means to negotiate the higher number?
– Brandin
May 23 '16 at 11:02




"the HR asked me to provide them the current salary with payment proof" - When you were negotiating did you use your "current salary" as a means to negotiate the higher number?
– Brandin
May 23 '16 at 11:02




4




4




Data privacy? Is that even a thing in your jurisdiction? Where are you located? Would you have given them that number even after you had signed a contract with them? Or would that "data privacy" even extend after that point?
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 11:53




Data privacy? Is that even a thing in your jurisdiction? Where are you located? Would you have given them that number even after you had signed a contract with them? Or would that "data privacy" even extend after that point?
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 11:53




3




3




Possible duplicate of How do I properly follow-up with a hiring manager, to check on the status of a position?
– gnat
May 24 '16 at 1:42




Possible duplicate of How do I properly follow-up with a hiring manager, to check on the status of a position?
– gnat
May 24 '16 at 1:42










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
12
down vote













In general, keeping salary data private helps the employer avoid tricky conversations about imbalances. While I'm not sure what "Data Privacy" is, it's curious that this particular employer would be so cavalier to ask you to prove your current salary. I wonder if they would mind if you got the job and published your new salary.



Now then, on to the matter at hand. This company can either afford you, or they can't. They either want you, or they don't. (They already made an offer, so they seem to want you.) Your current salary at this point would mostly be a tool for them to judge how low they can go.



My advice to you is to stop worrying and let them take their time. If they take your offer, great. If not, particularly on the (alleged) basis that you wouldn't prove your current salary, something's fishy. In the meantime, you're free to continue interviewing elsewhere. You may find a bigger fish.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    5
    down vote













    It's a negotiation you can only wait for their response without weakening your position. At the moment there is nothing to worry about, they will be reviewing their information and making up their minds whether to counter offer or not. It was a big jump you were asking for more than 20% more, and that would probably need approval just to consider you as a reasonable candidate.



    I have advertised jobs and found people who I think are worth X amount, but the job itself is only worth Y amount to me... so if they're not happy with Y, then too bad. I don't care what the pay grade is normally, I only care with what works for me.



    Nothing positive will come out of trying to work out what they're doing with no information to go on. Keep job hunting and keep patient and don't sell yourself short.






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      If you really wanted the Job you should've taken the Initial offer.



      What you can do is:



      • Wait a full work week and ask for the Status (add a Response data).

      • Prepare an answer on why the data is confidential.

      • Start looking for other Jobs.

      Don't take the Initial offer unless they state it is not of the table.

      Also start adding expected Response Dates, this not only gives you an early excuse to ask for a Status.



      I would also like to stress that we can only give you Options to take.

      What you do with that is and will be your choice.






      share|improve this answer





















      • Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
        – goto
        May 24 '16 at 7:34










      • @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
        – Raoul Mensink
        May 24 '16 at 7:56

















      up vote
      0
      down vote













      You made your bed, and now you have to sleep in it. You said you replied this on May 19th. The time in between that and today was a weekend, so HR is probably slow on the uptake.



      What you can do:



      • Wait a week and then send an email asking for a status update. They may reply and require you to prove that the salary data is confidential. Have the proof for this ready.


      • Wait a week and then accept this opportunity as lost, and move on.


      • Start looking for new jobs now and don't wait.


      Essentially, this is one of the risks that can happen when you ask for a higher salary then they initially offer. They might decide to drop the offer alltogether. Wether or not thats the case will take some time to find out, I'd say a week is fair to wait for them to respond.






      share|improve this answer




























        up vote
        0
        down vote













        Perhaps reply back with a range that your salary is in? (You have the option to choose this...)



        It shows you are still interested but I think you should stick to your guns on this one.



        If HR are just slow, perhaps get in touch with the Hiring Manager/interviewer? Explain the predicament but stick to your data privacy guns.






        share|improve this answer





















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          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes








          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          12
          down vote













          In general, keeping salary data private helps the employer avoid tricky conversations about imbalances. While I'm not sure what "Data Privacy" is, it's curious that this particular employer would be so cavalier to ask you to prove your current salary. I wonder if they would mind if you got the job and published your new salary.



          Now then, on to the matter at hand. This company can either afford you, or they can't. They either want you, or they don't. (They already made an offer, so they seem to want you.) Your current salary at this point would mostly be a tool for them to judge how low they can go.



          My advice to you is to stop worrying and let them take their time. If they take your offer, great. If not, particularly on the (alleged) basis that you wouldn't prove your current salary, something's fishy. In the meantime, you're free to continue interviewing elsewhere. You may find a bigger fish.






          share|improve this answer

























            up vote
            12
            down vote













            In general, keeping salary data private helps the employer avoid tricky conversations about imbalances. While I'm not sure what "Data Privacy" is, it's curious that this particular employer would be so cavalier to ask you to prove your current salary. I wonder if they would mind if you got the job and published your new salary.



            Now then, on to the matter at hand. This company can either afford you, or they can't. They either want you, or they don't. (They already made an offer, so they seem to want you.) Your current salary at this point would mostly be a tool for them to judge how low they can go.



            My advice to you is to stop worrying and let them take their time. If they take your offer, great. If not, particularly on the (alleged) basis that you wouldn't prove your current salary, something's fishy. In the meantime, you're free to continue interviewing elsewhere. You may find a bigger fish.






            share|improve this answer























              up vote
              12
              down vote










              up vote
              12
              down vote









              In general, keeping salary data private helps the employer avoid tricky conversations about imbalances. While I'm not sure what "Data Privacy" is, it's curious that this particular employer would be so cavalier to ask you to prove your current salary. I wonder if they would mind if you got the job and published your new salary.



              Now then, on to the matter at hand. This company can either afford you, or they can't. They either want you, or they don't. (They already made an offer, so they seem to want you.) Your current salary at this point would mostly be a tool for them to judge how low they can go.



              My advice to you is to stop worrying and let them take their time. If they take your offer, great. If not, particularly on the (alleged) basis that you wouldn't prove your current salary, something's fishy. In the meantime, you're free to continue interviewing elsewhere. You may find a bigger fish.






              share|improve this answer













              In general, keeping salary data private helps the employer avoid tricky conversations about imbalances. While I'm not sure what "Data Privacy" is, it's curious that this particular employer would be so cavalier to ask you to prove your current salary. I wonder if they would mind if you got the job and published your new salary.



              Now then, on to the matter at hand. This company can either afford you, or they can't. They either want you, or they don't. (They already made an offer, so they seem to want you.) Your current salary at this point would mostly be a tool for them to judge how low they can go.



              My advice to you is to stop worrying and let them take their time. If they take your offer, great. If not, particularly on the (alleged) basis that you wouldn't prove your current salary, something's fishy. In the meantime, you're free to continue interviewing elsewhere. You may find a bigger fish.







              share|improve this answer













              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer











              answered May 23 '16 at 11:06









              kojiro

              38618




              38618






















                  up vote
                  5
                  down vote













                  It's a negotiation you can only wait for their response without weakening your position. At the moment there is nothing to worry about, they will be reviewing their information and making up their minds whether to counter offer or not. It was a big jump you were asking for more than 20% more, and that would probably need approval just to consider you as a reasonable candidate.



                  I have advertised jobs and found people who I think are worth X amount, but the job itself is only worth Y amount to me... so if they're not happy with Y, then too bad. I don't care what the pay grade is normally, I only care with what works for me.



                  Nothing positive will come out of trying to work out what they're doing with no information to go on. Keep job hunting and keep patient and don't sell yourself short.






                  share|improve this answer

























                    up vote
                    5
                    down vote













                    It's a negotiation you can only wait for their response without weakening your position. At the moment there is nothing to worry about, they will be reviewing their information and making up their minds whether to counter offer or not. It was a big jump you were asking for more than 20% more, and that would probably need approval just to consider you as a reasonable candidate.



                    I have advertised jobs and found people who I think are worth X amount, but the job itself is only worth Y amount to me... so if they're not happy with Y, then too bad. I don't care what the pay grade is normally, I only care with what works for me.



                    Nothing positive will come out of trying to work out what they're doing with no information to go on. Keep job hunting and keep patient and don't sell yourself short.






                    share|improve this answer























                      up vote
                      5
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      5
                      down vote









                      It's a negotiation you can only wait for their response without weakening your position. At the moment there is nothing to worry about, they will be reviewing their information and making up their minds whether to counter offer or not. It was a big jump you were asking for more than 20% more, and that would probably need approval just to consider you as a reasonable candidate.



                      I have advertised jobs and found people who I think are worth X amount, but the job itself is only worth Y amount to me... so if they're not happy with Y, then too bad. I don't care what the pay grade is normally, I only care with what works for me.



                      Nothing positive will come out of trying to work out what they're doing with no information to go on. Keep job hunting and keep patient and don't sell yourself short.






                      share|improve this answer













                      It's a negotiation you can only wait for their response without weakening your position. At the moment there is nothing to worry about, they will be reviewing their information and making up their minds whether to counter offer or not. It was a big jump you were asking for more than 20% more, and that would probably need approval just to consider you as a reasonable candidate.



                      I have advertised jobs and found people who I think are worth X amount, but the job itself is only worth Y amount to me... so if they're not happy with Y, then too bad. I don't care what the pay grade is normally, I only care with what works for me.



                      Nothing positive will come out of trying to work out what they're doing with no information to go on. Keep job hunting and keep patient and don't sell yourself short.







                      share|improve this answer













                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer











                      answered May 23 '16 at 8:12









                      Kilisi

                      94.5k50216376




                      94.5k50216376




















                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          If you really wanted the Job you should've taken the Initial offer.



                          What you can do is:



                          • Wait a full work week and ask for the Status (add a Response data).

                          • Prepare an answer on why the data is confidential.

                          • Start looking for other Jobs.

                          Don't take the Initial offer unless they state it is not of the table.

                          Also start adding expected Response Dates, this not only gives you an early excuse to ask for a Status.



                          I would also like to stress that we can only give you Options to take.

                          What you do with that is and will be your choice.






                          share|improve this answer





















                          • Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
                            – goto
                            May 24 '16 at 7:34










                          • @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
                            – Raoul Mensink
                            May 24 '16 at 7:56














                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          If you really wanted the Job you should've taken the Initial offer.



                          What you can do is:



                          • Wait a full work week and ask for the Status (add a Response data).

                          • Prepare an answer on why the data is confidential.

                          • Start looking for other Jobs.

                          Don't take the Initial offer unless they state it is not of the table.

                          Also start adding expected Response Dates, this not only gives you an early excuse to ask for a Status.



                          I would also like to stress that we can only give you Options to take.

                          What you do with that is and will be your choice.






                          share|improve this answer





















                          • Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
                            – goto
                            May 24 '16 at 7:34










                          • @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
                            – Raoul Mensink
                            May 24 '16 at 7:56












                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote









                          If you really wanted the Job you should've taken the Initial offer.



                          What you can do is:



                          • Wait a full work week and ask for the Status (add a Response data).

                          • Prepare an answer on why the data is confidential.

                          • Start looking for other Jobs.

                          Don't take the Initial offer unless they state it is not of the table.

                          Also start adding expected Response Dates, this not only gives you an early excuse to ask for a Status.



                          I would also like to stress that we can only give you Options to take.

                          What you do with that is and will be your choice.






                          share|improve this answer













                          If you really wanted the Job you should've taken the Initial offer.



                          What you can do is:



                          • Wait a full work week and ask for the Status (add a Response data).

                          • Prepare an answer on why the data is confidential.

                          • Start looking for other Jobs.

                          Don't take the Initial offer unless they state it is not of the table.

                          Also start adding expected Response Dates, this not only gives you an early excuse to ask for a Status.



                          I would also like to stress that we can only give you Options to take.

                          What you do with that is and will be your choice.







                          share|improve this answer













                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer











                          answered May 23 '16 at 7:36









                          Raoul Mensink

                          1,267317




                          1,267317











                          • Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
                            – goto
                            May 24 '16 at 7:34










                          • @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
                            – Raoul Mensink
                            May 24 '16 at 7:56
















                          • Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
                            – goto
                            May 24 '16 at 7:34










                          • @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
                            – Raoul Mensink
                            May 24 '16 at 7:56















                          Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
                          – goto
                          May 24 '16 at 7:34




                          Even for a job you like on the paper, feeling underpaid is not a good situation. I totally disagree with your first sentence
                          – goto
                          May 24 '16 at 7:34












                          @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
                          – Raoul Mensink
                          May 24 '16 at 7:56




                          @goto the op wants the Job and as kilisi mentioned he isnt just asking for a small Change 20% is a lot, but the op literly said he was willing to take it but decided to demand better pay. I doubt Feeling underpaid is the Problem here.
                          – Raoul Mensink
                          May 24 '16 at 7:56










                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          You made your bed, and now you have to sleep in it. You said you replied this on May 19th. The time in between that and today was a weekend, so HR is probably slow on the uptake.



                          What you can do:



                          • Wait a week and then send an email asking for a status update. They may reply and require you to prove that the salary data is confidential. Have the proof for this ready.


                          • Wait a week and then accept this opportunity as lost, and move on.


                          • Start looking for new jobs now and don't wait.


                          Essentially, this is one of the risks that can happen when you ask for a higher salary then they initially offer. They might decide to drop the offer alltogether. Wether or not thats the case will take some time to find out, I'd say a week is fair to wait for them to respond.






                          share|improve this answer

























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote













                            You made your bed, and now you have to sleep in it. You said you replied this on May 19th. The time in between that and today was a weekend, so HR is probably slow on the uptake.



                            What you can do:



                            • Wait a week and then send an email asking for a status update. They may reply and require you to prove that the salary data is confidential. Have the proof for this ready.


                            • Wait a week and then accept this opportunity as lost, and move on.


                            • Start looking for new jobs now and don't wait.


                            Essentially, this is one of the risks that can happen when you ask for a higher salary then they initially offer. They might decide to drop the offer alltogether. Wether or not thats the case will take some time to find out, I'd say a week is fair to wait for them to respond.






                            share|improve this answer























                              up vote
                              0
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              0
                              down vote









                              You made your bed, and now you have to sleep in it. You said you replied this on May 19th. The time in between that and today was a weekend, so HR is probably slow on the uptake.



                              What you can do:



                              • Wait a week and then send an email asking for a status update. They may reply and require you to prove that the salary data is confidential. Have the proof for this ready.


                              • Wait a week and then accept this opportunity as lost, and move on.


                              • Start looking for new jobs now and don't wait.


                              Essentially, this is one of the risks that can happen when you ask for a higher salary then they initially offer. They might decide to drop the offer alltogether. Wether or not thats the case will take some time to find out, I'd say a week is fair to wait for them to respond.






                              share|improve this answer













                              You made your bed, and now you have to sleep in it. You said you replied this on May 19th. The time in between that and today was a weekend, so HR is probably slow on the uptake.



                              What you can do:



                              • Wait a week and then send an email asking for a status update. They may reply and require you to prove that the salary data is confidential. Have the proof for this ready.


                              • Wait a week and then accept this opportunity as lost, and move on.


                              • Start looking for new jobs now and don't wait.


                              Essentially, this is one of the risks that can happen when you ask for a higher salary then they initially offer. They might decide to drop the offer alltogether. Wether or not thats the case will take some time to find out, I'd say a week is fair to wait for them to respond.







                              share|improve this answer













                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer











                              answered May 23 '16 at 7:55









                              Magisch

                              16.5k134776




                              16.5k134776




















                                  up vote
                                  0
                                  down vote













                                  Perhaps reply back with a range that your salary is in? (You have the option to choose this...)



                                  It shows you are still interested but I think you should stick to your guns on this one.



                                  If HR are just slow, perhaps get in touch with the Hiring Manager/interviewer? Explain the predicament but stick to your data privacy guns.






                                  share|improve this answer

























                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote













                                    Perhaps reply back with a range that your salary is in? (You have the option to choose this...)



                                    It shows you are still interested but I think you should stick to your guns on this one.



                                    If HR are just slow, perhaps get in touch with the Hiring Manager/interviewer? Explain the predicament but stick to your data privacy guns.






                                    share|improve this answer























                                      up vote
                                      0
                                      down vote










                                      up vote
                                      0
                                      down vote









                                      Perhaps reply back with a range that your salary is in? (You have the option to choose this...)



                                      It shows you are still interested but I think you should stick to your guns on this one.



                                      If HR are just slow, perhaps get in touch with the Hiring Manager/interviewer? Explain the predicament but stick to your data privacy guns.






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      Perhaps reply back with a range that your salary is in? (You have the option to choose this...)



                                      It shows you are still interested but I think you should stick to your guns on this one.



                                      If HR are just slow, perhaps get in touch with the Hiring Manager/interviewer? Explain the predicament but stick to your data privacy guns.







                                      share|improve this answer













                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer











                                      answered May 23 '16 at 22:32









                                      fey

                                      41849




                                      41849






















                                           

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