How do you deal with employees' unrealistic pay expectations?
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I have someone who came into an entry level trial position. They do not (yet) have the normal qualifications expected for the job, though they are working on this. We put them through a probation period to see how they got on and we were happy there could be a good fit for the role so we offered a permanent position. The problem is, when we offered the position, they responded they wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting the salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is.
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
Update to clarify my concern:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for anywhere around here with their current level of skills & qualifications
Secondly, another reason I think I can't give what they are asking for is: if they did get what they wanted and it became known to the other more experienced team members (there's no way to guarantee people won't talk about their salaries), I fear it could cause those other team members to become disgruntled that someone so relatively junior is earning close to their level.
But how do you negotiate/discuss in a way that will avoid them becoming disgruntled? The last thing I want is for them to reluctantly accept our offer only to become a disgruntled team member.
salary negotiation
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up vote
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I have someone who came into an entry level trial position. They do not (yet) have the normal qualifications expected for the job, though they are working on this. We put them through a probation period to see how they got on and we were happy there could be a good fit for the role so we offered a permanent position. The problem is, when we offered the position, they responded they wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting the salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is.
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
Update to clarify my concern:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for anywhere around here with their current level of skills & qualifications
Secondly, another reason I think I can't give what they are asking for is: if they did get what they wanted and it became known to the other more experienced team members (there's no way to guarantee people won't talk about their salaries), I fear it could cause those other team members to become disgruntled that someone so relatively junior is earning close to their level.
But how do you negotiate/discuss in a way that will avoid them becoming disgruntled? The last thing I want is for them to reluctantly accept our offer only to become a disgruntled team member.
salary negotiation
44
Also, you are usually paid what you can negotiate, not what you deserve.
– user1220
Dec 2 '14 at 14:28
20
At this point we don't know if the OP's company pays low wages, or if the candidate has unrealistic expectations for the market salary. Moreover the actual gap is important as well, are we talking a few thousand dollars more, or 10's of thousands? It all makes a difference.
– teego1967
Dec 2 '14 at 16:49
2
@abc123 This employee of yours is a woman? Is the equality issue a concern?
– Renae Lider
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
6
@Huangism Also, the friend could be in a more expensive market. Personally, I could easily make 1.5x what I'm making or more in other places (and have friends with nearly identical qualifications / experience who are doing so,) but the difference in cost of living would make it a wash at best financially (housing/property costs 4-5x, for instance.)
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:19
Friend's salary is completely irrelevant. Do you talk about other employers who pay their staff much less than you for similar work?
– A. I. Breveleri
Aug 16 '16 at 6:38
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up vote
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down vote
favorite
I have someone who came into an entry level trial position. They do not (yet) have the normal qualifications expected for the job, though they are working on this. We put them through a probation period to see how they got on and we were happy there could be a good fit for the role so we offered a permanent position. The problem is, when we offered the position, they responded they wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting the salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is.
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
Update to clarify my concern:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for anywhere around here with their current level of skills & qualifications
Secondly, another reason I think I can't give what they are asking for is: if they did get what they wanted and it became known to the other more experienced team members (there's no way to guarantee people won't talk about their salaries), I fear it could cause those other team members to become disgruntled that someone so relatively junior is earning close to their level.
But how do you negotiate/discuss in a way that will avoid them becoming disgruntled? The last thing I want is for them to reluctantly accept our offer only to become a disgruntled team member.
salary negotiation
I have someone who came into an entry level trial position. They do not (yet) have the normal qualifications expected for the job, though they are working on this. We put them through a probation period to see how they got on and we were happy there could be a good fit for the role so we offered a permanent position. The problem is, when we offered the position, they responded they wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting the salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is.
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
Update to clarify my concern:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for anywhere around here with their current level of skills & qualifications
Secondly, another reason I think I can't give what they are asking for is: if they did get what they wanted and it became known to the other more experienced team members (there's no way to guarantee people won't talk about their salaries), I fear it could cause those other team members to become disgruntled that someone so relatively junior is earning close to their level.
But how do you negotiate/discuss in a way that will avoid them becoming disgruntled? The last thing I want is for them to reluctantly accept our offer only to become a disgruntled team member.
salary negotiation
edited Aug 15 '16 at 17:08


Joe Strazzere
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asked Dec 2 '14 at 13:25
abc123
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44
Also, you are usually paid what you can negotiate, not what you deserve.
– user1220
Dec 2 '14 at 14:28
20
At this point we don't know if the OP's company pays low wages, or if the candidate has unrealistic expectations for the market salary. Moreover the actual gap is important as well, are we talking a few thousand dollars more, or 10's of thousands? It all makes a difference.
– teego1967
Dec 2 '14 at 16:49
2
@abc123 This employee of yours is a woman? Is the equality issue a concern?
– Renae Lider
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
6
@Huangism Also, the friend could be in a more expensive market. Personally, I could easily make 1.5x what I'm making or more in other places (and have friends with nearly identical qualifications / experience who are doing so,) but the difference in cost of living would make it a wash at best financially (housing/property costs 4-5x, for instance.)
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:19
Friend's salary is completely irrelevant. Do you talk about other employers who pay their staff much less than you for similar work?
– A. I. Breveleri
Aug 16 '16 at 6:38
suggest improvements |Â
44
Also, you are usually paid what you can negotiate, not what you deserve.
– user1220
Dec 2 '14 at 14:28
20
At this point we don't know if the OP's company pays low wages, or if the candidate has unrealistic expectations for the market salary. Moreover the actual gap is important as well, are we talking a few thousand dollars more, or 10's of thousands? It all makes a difference.
– teego1967
Dec 2 '14 at 16:49
2
@abc123 This employee of yours is a woman? Is the equality issue a concern?
– Renae Lider
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
6
@Huangism Also, the friend could be in a more expensive market. Personally, I could easily make 1.5x what I'm making or more in other places (and have friends with nearly identical qualifications / experience who are doing so,) but the difference in cost of living would make it a wash at best financially (housing/property costs 4-5x, for instance.)
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:19
Friend's salary is completely irrelevant. Do you talk about other employers who pay their staff much less than you for similar work?
– A. I. Breveleri
Aug 16 '16 at 6:38
44
44
Also, you are usually paid what you can negotiate, not what you deserve.
– user1220
Dec 2 '14 at 14:28
Also, you are usually paid what you can negotiate, not what you deserve.
– user1220
Dec 2 '14 at 14:28
20
20
At this point we don't know if the OP's company pays low wages, or if the candidate has unrealistic expectations for the market salary. Moreover the actual gap is important as well, are we talking a few thousand dollars more, or 10's of thousands? It all makes a difference.
– teego1967
Dec 2 '14 at 16:49
At this point we don't know if the OP's company pays low wages, or if the candidate has unrealistic expectations for the market salary. Moreover the actual gap is important as well, are we talking a few thousand dollars more, or 10's of thousands? It all makes a difference.
– teego1967
Dec 2 '14 at 16:49
2
2
@abc123 This employee of yours is a woman? Is the equality issue a concern?
– Renae Lider
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
@abc123 This employee of yours is a woman? Is the equality issue a concern?
– Renae Lider
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
6
6
@Huangism Also, the friend could be in a more expensive market. Personally, I could easily make 1.5x what I'm making or more in other places (and have friends with nearly identical qualifications / experience who are doing so,) but the difference in cost of living would make it a wash at best financially (housing/property costs 4-5x, for instance.)
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:19
@Huangism Also, the friend could be in a more expensive market. Personally, I could easily make 1.5x what I'm making or more in other places (and have friends with nearly identical qualifications / experience who are doing so,) but the difference in cost of living would make it a wash at best financially (housing/property costs 4-5x, for instance.)
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:19
Friend's salary is completely irrelevant. Do you talk about other employers who pay their staff much less than you for similar work?
– A. I. Breveleri
Aug 16 '16 at 6:38
Friend's salary is completely irrelevant. Do you talk about other employers who pay their staff much less than you for similar work?
– A. I. Breveleri
Aug 16 '16 at 6:38
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10 Answers
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They wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for
their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a
salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully
qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel
is in a similar role.
a) I have no idea or way of knowing if the quoted friends salary is
real or if the friend is really at the same level this person is and
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in
either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few
years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
I have always felt that being direct, honest, and open avoids most hard feelings.
Your offer was based on the value you place on the position, and the potential you see in the individual to (eventually) fill the requirements of the position.
Don't get into a comparison war with a friend's salary. Unless this friend currently works for you in an identical position, what some friend makes at some other company isn't relevant for what you want to pay for the position, so don't bother discussing it.
Point out that you value this individual based on his/her performance so far, and that you believe eventually she/he will grow into the position, but that right now they don't have the qualifications and experience that would warrant the salary he/she is seeking.
Talk about the kind of career growth you see in this position, and the benefits your company provides.
Finally, decide if you can offer any more than you already have, or if your offer is firm. Then be ready to deal with the response.
Thoughtful honesty should never hurt people's feelings.
26
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
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@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
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@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
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@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
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If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
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Personal anecdotes and then answer.
Anecdote 1
When I graduated college, I had an internship that offered me a permanent position. When my boss called me into the office, and offered my a rate that was lower than I expected, I told him I'd have to think about it (not what he was expecting).
I did some research and talked with a career counselor, and came back with a counter 10% higher than the original offer, with market rates to back it up.
My boss accepted my counter and I started at the higher rate.
Anecdote 2
A few years later, I interviewed with another company and they offered me a position that was essentially a lateral move compensation-wise. I countered with a higher requested salary, and they noted that their offer was firm based on my experience. They didn't budge and I didn't take the job.
Answer
You need to determine if your rate is low, or if your offer is firm, and communicate that. You as the boss don't have to offer any proof or reasoning, it's a take-it-or-leave-it situation.
I suggest researching glassdoor.com to find the market rate for your area. If the potential employee's counter is valid and within the range for the market rate, I don't see why agreeing to it, or meeting that person somewhere in the middle between their rate and yours, would be a bad step to take.
If their counter is too high, all you have to say is that the offer is firm. You can't blame a person for trying to get more--that's what negotiation is about.
At the same time, if you have no intention of being able to reach that person's desired salary within a reasonable timeframe, please don't lie and say "accept this rate and we can work towards your desired salary after you prove yourself". If the range is outlandish, say so.
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+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
1
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
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Of course he's asking for more money, that's how negotiations work. Focus on how you determine someone's salary. He asked for a raise, so he needs to be prepared for some level of disappointment. You can't control his feelings getting hurt if you decline his offer.
This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either
ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to
get there.
Be honest and direct about where this person is, but also, let him know what is required to get to the salary level he suggested. He may disagree with your assessment, so make sure you've looked into this carefully.
Using one other person's salary as a data point, is not a valid argument. You could probably look through job postings with lower salaries than what you're offering (If not, maybe you do not offer competitive wages?).
2
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
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@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
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The friends may be in a place with higher cost of living, and starting salaries may have been adjusted to reflect that. Or the company they're joining may be less stable -- a startup, for example -- and they're being paid more because they're taking the risk that they may be looking for a job again relatively soon. Or they may be more experienced, or that employer may simply be more desperate for the skills, or... No two jobs are identical, no two humans are identical.
You aren't obligated to change your offer because they want more, and there shouldn't be hurt feelings if your offer wasn't insultingly below market rates. If this really is your best offer before you'd decide they're too expensive and go looking for someone else, say so. Of course, if they feel it isn't good enough, they may go looking somewhere else. So you do need to look at both what you can afford to offer and what's being offered elsewhere. Unfortunately, I don't know how to get current competitive salary information except to try numbers and see how many people take the offer. There may be industry salary surveys you can track down, but those are likely to be half a year out of date on average.
It may be sufficient to explain to the employee/candidate exactly how they need to improve, and how they can improve, to get to the next pay grade. You should be providing that kind of feedback and direction in any case, to build your employees' skills and their value to you.
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how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
2
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
1
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
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@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
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Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
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I worked with an individual like this in a previous job, let's call him Simon M.
While Simon initially wanted the same salary as the programmers etc, despite not having the same skillset, our employer at the time was able to appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors.
I imagine the same thing may work in your situation as well, ie offer alternative perks instead of a higher salary.
13
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
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You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
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I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
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@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
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@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
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Negotiations can be a tricky thing, and sometimes people have entirely unrealistic expectations that you simply can't fix. Typically this comes from people just starting off their career and go... programmers entry level make... and completely miss that location, market, etc are all HUGE factors in what "average" is.
I know someone like me who gets paid more
What someone else gets paid has little to no relevance to the negotiation at hand. Did this person apply to that company, get an offer, waiting to accept that offer based on your choice here... if not than how is their friend's success relevant?
The average pay is higher
This has "some" relevance, but only in two primary factors.
First, in your market, in your region, at their experience level what is average? If you're simply below that likely your employees will eventually figure it out and as spots open up in those companies you'll lose people to those companies.
Second, if other companies hiring for that role offer significantly more, retention will be very challenging as people figure that out. Sometimes you really have no choice but to accept retention issues if the role isn't worth as much to you, but if you low ball employee retention gets messy.
I can get a better offer elsewhere
Fine, go do it. No seriously if I'm offering you 50K and someone else is offering 75K for the same work you'd be stupid to take my offer. (we're assuming all things equal here)
I've actually said almost those exact words to people. "Oh, you could get paid more at Name of company? Then you should go do that. Unfortunately this role just isn't worth that much to us here."
What is reasonable and "fair"
This is ultimately what should be the driving result of negotiations. Both sides need to do their homework here.
You need to know well in advance what sort of return you'll expect having this person in your office. This gets extremely tricky to calculate in some industries but the short version is what revenue does this person generate, what expenses does this person mitigate, and ultimately at the end of the day how much of your profit would this person generate? (It get's WAY more complicated than that with nuances)
Once you know where all the money works you can safely say, this role will make me ~amount of money you can only justify paying the person less than this amount by a fair margin. (because as a company I hire people to make more money, otherwise my money can be put to better use else where)
If you figure this all out and what they are asking falls within the "profitable by a fair margin" range than what they are asking is realistic and fair. (of coarse many companies will pay as low as they can get away with) but we're talking maximums here not minimums.
My other employees only get paid...
This also is only partly relevant... it's relevant only if what's being asked is fair and reasonable when considering the return on investment of hiring this person is significantly more than you're paying your people. If that's the case than you are paying below what is fair and that's good for your company, but sooner or later others will offer more and your retention will suffer.
On the other hand paying this person more isn't a good idea since it'll upset the others and potentially cost you jobs as well. (same reason, just different triggering event)
How to tackle reality
Ultimately we have one of two possibilities here.
A. what this person is asking is technically fair and reasonable based on expected return on investment.
B. what this person is asking is not fair or is unreasonable based on the expected return on investment.
and ultimately which of these two scenarios it is winds up being irrelevant in your current negotiations... In both cases your best bet is to stick to the ranges common at your employer and accept there is a strong possibility you'll fail to retain this person. If you're lowballing them they are perfectly justified going else where, if you're not lowballing them they'll either accept it or they'll move on.
Long term negotiations
This is not a one time occurrence, there will be many others like this person in your future. You need to have a good idea what people are REALLY worth to you. You should make sure your people are paid / treated well enough to maintain a reasonable employee retention, without exceeding your cap. (where the sweet spot between good retention and the cap is varies greatly based on company, location, your employees, etc.) If you go too low you risk possible running loss. (one person leaves which leads to others leaving, chain reaction) if you go too high that's lost profits. (which is good for the economy but bad for the company)
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
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@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
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The main point is: you FEEL their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location. It may not be the case. Maybe the other company will not find that money unrealistic.
The point is, your company do. And your company won't pay him that money. Be honest about it, because it's actually the case. Just say your company won't offer him more than XYZ, because she won't pay him more than XYZ.
Then it's his decision: either to accept XYZ, or try luck somewhere else.
It's better not to say "you're not worth that money" because if he gets offered that money, he can blame your company for using 'psycho tricks to lower self esteem to trick people to accept low wages'. If you just say "we can pay XYZ", it's the objective fact and should actually not hurt anyone's feelings. The person involved is free to interpret it as he wish, either as "I'm not yet worth that money" or "That company is not worth me". Or to accept that offer.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You provided the answer within your initial question:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this
location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for
anywhere around here with their current level of skills &
qualifications
There is a fundamental economic dynamic at play here that almost everyone can "feel" but most people don't quite understand. What you are reaching at is the (Subjective) Marginal Revenue Productivity Theory of Wages, developed by Carl Menger and Eugen Böhm von Bawerk during the period of thought known as the "Marginal Revolution" (~1850-1900ish) where the Marxian Labor Theory of Value was proven fallacious (The LTV is fallacious because it attempts to explain the human concept of value and failed do so)
At any rate, there is a very robust explanation of the theory in Walter Block's "Labor Economics From a Free Market Perspective: Employing the Unemployable"
The loose definition of the theory is
The marginal revenue product of labour MRPL is the increase in revenue
per unit increase in the variable input
To provide my own paraphrasing to the theory (sticking to the currently relevant parts), there is nothing 'special' about labor. It is a service provided by the laborer with the businesses he works for as the purchaser of that labor. As such, the price for all labor is subject to the same clearing process as any product and the natural focus for any consumer(in this case, the business) is to maximize the return on their budget dollars. As is the natural course of things, the only truly acceptable price for any product is "zero" but negotiating with free actors means that with everyone trying to optimize their costs to "zero", the only way to effect a trade is for each party to pull away from their optimal expectations and give up something of value in exchange for something of greater perceived value.
As part of that negotiating process for a business, the "perceived value" of adding an additional worker to the production process is known as the marginal revenue product. If you generate $10,000/day revenue with 100 workers, and you expect that adding a 101st worker will result in $10,400/day revenue, the marginal revenue product of the 101st worker is $400/day and his labor must be purchased for less than this number in order to justify the expense of hiring him. Again, this is trading something of value (his wage) for something of greater perceived value (that $400/day of additional revenue)
All wages tend towards this number, because if someone is capable of contributing $400/day of revenue productivity to a production process and his pay for this productivity is below this value, competitors have free margin to burn to draw him away and add to their own production process. And note that it is the competitor offers that actually determine one's wage. In a market where the second best offer does not rise to match a laborer's Revenue Productivity, the "winner" of the auction for that laborer's productivity need only provide a modicum above the second offer to price them out of the contest.
If the sklll supplier attempting to negotiate with you has a second offer (or you believe he is capable of getting an offer from a competitor in the range that he expects) then the decision is on you whether or not to attempt to retain him.
If you feel (as you have expressed) that this individual is incapable of gaining a competing offer to his expectations, then you really are working from within your own budget expectations, risk assessment, and future outlook for their growth potential...which are things that only you can place an adequate value upon; they are your values.
There is no such thing as a "pay scale."
There is no such thing as a "pay range."
There is ∆MRP and there is an auction process for labor, just as there is with every product.
With this grounding, you merely have to be honest.
1) Analyze the comps he provided for his justification
2) point out the cost of living adjustment between the locations
3) point out the skill differential between your organization's expectations of ability and his current status
and then decide if you're willing to put out a carrot for him to chase.
Perhaps lay out a plan for him to get where it is that you expect someone to be at to be able to issue the demands he has made. Then, simply make a counter offer as high as you're willing to go, and make that an honest maximum.
I hope that helps clarify your concerns.
1
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
1
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
1
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
3
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
This is completely irrelevant, since the friend could have more experience than the interviewee.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is
Companies usually pay salaries that are relevant to the job and area/location. For my field: Silicon Valley pays mobile app developers around $150k anually. For Chicago this is $80-$100k. In my country it's around $55k. This is based on supply, demand, experience, but also on expenses. Some areas are more expensive to live in than others, so you will get paid more there (i.e., average Manhattan salary for i.e. lawyers and bankers is 500k anually).
Unless the person is so experienced and valuable to the company, he has no reason to ask for an unreasonable amount. If he can provide offers from other companies that are higher, you could compete with them by raising your initial offer. While a person works at a certain position for a longer period, he/she gets more experience and therefore can ask for a higher salary. Since this is not the case, he's probably bluffing in order to get paid more.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
I once hooked up a friend with a job interview, and upon consulting with the interviewer afterwards learned that my friend - in response to the compensation question - said "Look up what the average salary is for this position in our state. That's what I want." This person was entry level and in no way qualified to be making as much as they were asking for (and were going to require 3 months of training in order to really be able to do that job).
My other friend (the interviewer) came back and offered what they asked for -20%, knowing that this person was currently making less than half of that offer amount. Of course my friend took the job because they aren't an idiot and recognize that the opportunity to be paid to learn is going to get them much further than sticking it out for that extra 20%, which they were never going to earn without it.
I would take the emotion out of the entire scenario and offer this person what you genuinely feel they should be paid while in the scope of your budget. Expect to negotiate up about 5% if you have to. If they really aren't qualified and need the experience, they probably already know that and are just hoping you'll offer them more.
Also, isn't it kind of inappropriate to be like "Well, I know that X employee makes _______ a year." Honestly I might be against hiring this person if they were asking for way more than they were worth and already digging around the salaries of other employees. Seems like a potential red flag for other not so great behavior to come.
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10 Answers
10
active
oldest
votes
10 Answers
10
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
89
down vote
accepted
They wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for
their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a
salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully
qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel
is in a similar role.
a) I have no idea or way of knowing if the quoted friends salary is
real or if the friend is really at the same level this person is and
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in
either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few
years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
I have always felt that being direct, honest, and open avoids most hard feelings.
Your offer was based on the value you place on the position, and the potential you see in the individual to (eventually) fill the requirements of the position.
Don't get into a comparison war with a friend's salary. Unless this friend currently works for you in an identical position, what some friend makes at some other company isn't relevant for what you want to pay for the position, so don't bother discussing it.
Point out that you value this individual based on his/her performance so far, and that you believe eventually she/he will grow into the position, but that right now they don't have the qualifications and experience that would warrant the salary he/she is seeking.
Talk about the kind of career growth you see in this position, and the benefits your company provides.
Finally, decide if you can offer any more than you already have, or if your offer is firm. Then be ready to deal with the response.
Thoughtful honesty should never hurt people's feelings.
26
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
3
@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
3
@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
2
@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
4
If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
 |Â
show 5 more comments
up vote
89
down vote
accepted
They wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for
their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a
salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully
qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel
is in a similar role.
a) I have no idea or way of knowing if the quoted friends salary is
real or if the friend is really at the same level this person is and
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in
either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few
years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
I have always felt that being direct, honest, and open avoids most hard feelings.
Your offer was based on the value you place on the position, and the potential you see in the individual to (eventually) fill the requirements of the position.
Don't get into a comparison war with a friend's salary. Unless this friend currently works for you in an identical position, what some friend makes at some other company isn't relevant for what you want to pay for the position, so don't bother discussing it.
Point out that you value this individual based on his/her performance so far, and that you believe eventually she/he will grow into the position, but that right now they don't have the qualifications and experience that would warrant the salary he/she is seeking.
Talk about the kind of career growth you see in this position, and the benefits your company provides.
Finally, decide if you can offer any more than you already have, or if your offer is firm. Then be ready to deal with the response.
Thoughtful honesty should never hurt people's feelings.
26
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
3
@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
3
@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
2
@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
4
If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
 |Â
show 5 more comments
up vote
89
down vote
accepted
up vote
89
down vote
accepted
They wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for
their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a
salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully
qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel
is in a similar role.
a) I have no idea or way of knowing if the quoted friends salary is
real or if the friend is really at the same level this person is and
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in
either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few
years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
I have always felt that being direct, honest, and open avoids most hard feelings.
Your offer was based on the value you place on the position, and the potential you see in the individual to (eventually) fill the requirements of the position.
Don't get into a comparison war with a friend's salary. Unless this friend currently works for you in an identical position, what some friend makes at some other company isn't relevant for what you want to pay for the position, so don't bother discussing it.
Point out that you value this individual based on his/her performance so far, and that you believe eventually she/he will grow into the position, but that right now they don't have the qualifications and experience that would warrant the salary he/she is seeking.
Talk about the kind of career growth you see in this position, and the benefits your company provides.
Finally, decide if you can offer any more than you already have, or if your offer is firm. Then be ready to deal with the response.
Thoughtful honesty should never hurt people's feelings.
They wanted a higher salary figure that I feel is unrealistic for
their current experience and qualifications. They are expecting a
salary that is only marginally lower than other people who are fully
qualified and have many years experience.
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel
is in a similar role.
a) I have no idea or way of knowing if the quoted friends salary is
real or if the friend is really at the same level this person is and
b) This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in
either ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few
years to get there.
How do you best negotiate on this without hurting their feelings?
I have always felt that being direct, honest, and open avoids most hard feelings.
Your offer was based on the value you place on the position, and the potential you see in the individual to (eventually) fill the requirements of the position.
Don't get into a comparison war with a friend's salary. Unless this friend currently works for you in an identical position, what some friend makes at some other company isn't relevant for what you want to pay for the position, so don't bother discussing it.
Point out that you value this individual based on his/her performance so far, and that you believe eventually she/he will grow into the position, but that right now they don't have the qualifications and experience that would warrant the salary he/she is seeking.
Talk about the kind of career growth you see in this position, and the benefits your company provides.
Finally, decide if you can offer any more than you already have, or if your offer is firm. Then be ready to deal with the response.
Thoughtful honesty should never hurt people's feelings.
edited Mar 20 '15 at 12:03
answered Dec 2 '14 at 14:59


Joe Strazzere
223k106657923
223k106657923
26
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
3
@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
3
@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
2
@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
4
If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
 |Â
show 5 more comments
26
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
3
@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
3
@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
2
@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
4
If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
26
26
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
I agree here. "We are not willing to pay that much for this position." Its not that you are saying the candidate is not worth that much just that the position he is being offered does not pay that much.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 17:24
3
3
@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
@ReallyTiredOfThisGame - Positions are not some uniform, immutable set of tasks, and people are not their roles. And I'm not sure that's even what Joe is advocating.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 21:18
3
3
@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
@Telastyn - The position is a role with the company that may be loosely or very strictly defined. That position may have a flat rate that is offered to anyone or the rate that is flexible and offered per individual. Usually these are ranges. But the position the OP is offering has the rate being offered. This is not saying the candidate does not have a greater value, but that is what the OP is willing to commit for that position.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 2 '14 at 21:33
2
2
@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
@JoeStrazzere - sure, there's always the "we love your skillset, but can't afford it (or don't need it) right now". And certainly, there's the scenario where you don't think the person's that valuable to your company. But it seems shortsighted to turn away a good candidate just because their (useful, appropriately priced, within budget) abilities don't fit within their "position". As an employee that would rub me the wrong way if you told me that.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 23:36
4
4
If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
If you find out that the friend's quoted salary is real and that he's at the same exact level as this candidate are you willing to go back and pay your more senior people more? If the answer is "no" I'd get out from under this one as soon as possible! I'm not trying to be unhelpful but I am surprised you don't have this information...
– Dave Kanter
Dec 3 '14 at 22:18
 |Â
show 5 more comments
up vote
34
down vote
Personal anecdotes and then answer.
Anecdote 1
When I graduated college, I had an internship that offered me a permanent position. When my boss called me into the office, and offered my a rate that was lower than I expected, I told him I'd have to think about it (not what he was expecting).
I did some research and talked with a career counselor, and came back with a counter 10% higher than the original offer, with market rates to back it up.
My boss accepted my counter and I started at the higher rate.
Anecdote 2
A few years later, I interviewed with another company and they offered me a position that was essentially a lateral move compensation-wise. I countered with a higher requested salary, and they noted that their offer was firm based on my experience. They didn't budge and I didn't take the job.
Answer
You need to determine if your rate is low, or if your offer is firm, and communicate that. You as the boss don't have to offer any proof or reasoning, it's a take-it-or-leave-it situation.
I suggest researching glassdoor.com to find the market rate for your area. If the potential employee's counter is valid and within the range for the market rate, I don't see why agreeing to it, or meeting that person somewhere in the middle between their rate and yours, would be a bad step to take.
If their counter is too high, all you have to say is that the offer is firm. You can't blame a person for trying to get more--that's what negotiation is about.
At the same time, if you have no intention of being able to reach that person's desired salary within a reasonable timeframe, please don't lie and say "accept this rate and we can work towards your desired salary after you prove yourself". If the range is outlandish, say so.
6
+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
1
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
34
down vote
Personal anecdotes and then answer.
Anecdote 1
When I graduated college, I had an internship that offered me a permanent position. When my boss called me into the office, and offered my a rate that was lower than I expected, I told him I'd have to think about it (not what he was expecting).
I did some research and talked with a career counselor, and came back with a counter 10% higher than the original offer, with market rates to back it up.
My boss accepted my counter and I started at the higher rate.
Anecdote 2
A few years later, I interviewed with another company and they offered me a position that was essentially a lateral move compensation-wise. I countered with a higher requested salary, and they noted that their offer was firm based on my experience. They didn't budge and I didn't take the job.
Answer
You need to determine if your rate is low, or if your offer is firm, and communicate that. You as the boss don't have to offer any proof or reasoning, it's a take-it-or-leave-it situation.
I suggest researching glassdoor.com to find the market rate for your area. If the potential employee's counter is valid and within the range for the market rate, I don't see why agreeing to it, or meeting that person somewhere in the middle between their rate and yours, would be a bad step to take.
If their counter is too high, all you have to say is that the offer is firm. You can't blame a person for trying to get more--that's what negotiation is about.
At the same time, if you have no intention of being able to reach that person's desired salary within a reasonable timeframe, please don't lie and say "accept this rate and we can work towards your desired salary after you prove yourself". If the range is outlandish, say so.
6
+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
1
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
34
down vote
up vote
34
down vote
Personal anecdotes and then answer.
Anecdote 1
When I graduated college, I had an internship that offered me a permanent position. When my boss called me into the office, and offered my a rate that was lower than I expected, I told him I'd have to think about it (not what he was expecting).
I did some research and talked with a career counselor, and came back with a counter 10% higher than the original offer, with market rates to back it up.
My boss accepted my counter and I started at the higher rate.
Anecdote 2
A few years later, I interviewed with another company and they offered me a position that was essentially a lateral move compensation-wise. I countered with a higher requested salary, and they noted that their offer was firm based on my experience. They didn't budge and I didn't take the job.
Answer
You need to determine if your rate is low, or if your offer is firm, and communicate that. You as the boss don't have to offer any proof or reasoning, it's a take-it-or-leave-it situation.
I suggest researching glassdoor.com to find the market rate for your area. If the potential employee's counter is valid and within the range for the market rate, I don't see why agreeing to it, or meeting that person somewhere in the middle between their rate and yours, would be a bad step to take.
If their counter is too high, all you have to say is that the offer is firm. You can't blame a person for trying to get more--that's what negotiation is about.
At the same time, if you have no intention of being able to reach that person's desired salary within a reasonable timeframe, please don't lie and say "accept this rate and we can work towards your desired salary after you prove yourself". If the range is outlandish, say so.
Personal anecdotes and then answer.
Anecdote 1
When I graduated college, I had an internship that offered me a permanent position. When my boss called me into the office, and offered my a rate that was lower than I expected, I told him I'd have to think about it (not what he was expecting).
I did some research and talked with a career counselor, and came back with a counter 10% higher than the original offer, with market rates to back it up.
My boss accepted my counter and I started at the higher rate.
Anecdote 2
A few years later, I interviewed with another company and they offered me a position that was essentially a lateral move compensation-wise. I countered with a higher requested salary, and they noted that their offer was firm based on my experience. They didn't budge and I didn't take the job.
Answer
You need to determine if your rate is low, or if your offer is firm, and communicate that. You as the boss don't have to offer any proof or reasoning, it's a take-it-or-leave-it situation.
I suggest researching glassdoor.com to find the market rate for your area. If the potential employee's counter is valid and within the range for the market rate, I don't see why agreeing to it, or meeting that person somewhere in the middle between their rate and yours, would be a bad step to take.
If their counter is too high, all you have to say is that the offer is firm. You can't blame a person for trying to get more--that's what negotiation is about.
At the same time, if you have no intention of being able to reach that person's desired salary within a reasonable timeframe, please don't lie and say "accept this rate and we can work towards your desired salary after you prove yourself". If the range is outlandish, say so.
edited Nov 18 '15 at 10:22


Lilienthal♦
54k36183218
54k36183218
answered Dec 2 '14 at 15:20
Garrison Neely
6,21512735
6,21512735
6
+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
1
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
suggest improvements |Â
6
+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
1
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
6
6
+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
+1 For "Do the research". A 'feeling' that your offer is reasonable for their level of experience at their position is not the same as knowing that you're making a reasonable offer. And, if you are, then it is their decision whether or not they accept it.
– Zibbobz
Dec 4 '14 at 14:23
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
Anecdote - a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
– ediblecode
Aug 6 '15 at 16:16
1
1
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
Also, if the more experienced folks are unhappy with their compensation in light of your offer to the new hire, then it's up to them to negotiate a raise. This advice applies to those negotiations as well.
– ColleenV
Nov 18 '15 at 17:31
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
20
down vote
Of course he's asking for more money, that's how negotiations work. Focus on how you determine someone's salary. He asked for a raise, so he needs to be prepared for some level of disappointment. You can't control his feelings getting hurt if you decline his offer.
This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either
ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to
get there.
Be honest and direct about where this person is, but also, let him know what is required to get to the salary level he suggested. He may disagree with your assessment, so make sure you've looked into this carefully.
Using one other person's salary as a data point, is not a valid argument. You could probably look through job postings with lower salaries than what you're offering (If not, maybe you do not offer competitive wages?).
2
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
18
@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
20
down vote
Of course he's asking for more money, that's how negotiations work. Focus on how you determine someone's salary. He asked for a raise, so he needs to be prepared for some level of disappointment. You can't control his feelings getting hurt if you decline his offer.
This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either
ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to
get there.
Be honest and direct about where this person is, but also, let him know what is required to get to the salary level he suggested. He may disagree with your assessment, so make sure you've looked into this carefully.
Using one other person's salary as a data point, is not a valid argument. You could probably look through job postings with lower salaries than what you're offering (If not, maybe you do not offer competitive wages?).
2
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
18
@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
20
down vote
up vote
20
down vote
Of course he's asking for more money, that's how negotiations work. Focus on how you determine someone's salary. He asked for a raise, so he needs to be prepared for some level of disappointment. You can't control his feelings getting hurt if you decline his offer.
This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either
ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to
get there.
Be honest and direct about where this person is, but also, let him know what is required to get to the salary level he suggested. He may disagree with your assessment, so make sure you've looked into this carefully.
Using one other person's salary as a data point, is not a valid argument. You could probably look through job postings with lower salaries than what you're offering (If not, maybe you do not offer competitive wages?).
Of course he's asking for more money, that's how negotiations work. Focus on how you determine someone's salary. He asked for a raise, so he needs to be prepared for some level of disappointment. You can't control his feelings getting hurt if you decline his offer.
This person is nowhere near the experienced people we have in either
ability or qualifications and it will likely take them a few years to
get there.
Be honest and direct about where this person is, but also, let him know what is required to get to the salary level he suggested. He may disagree with your assessment, so make sure you've looked into this carefully.
Using one other person's salary as a data point, is not a valid argument. You could probably look through job postings with lower salaries than what you're offering (If not, maybe you do not offer competitive wages?).
answered Dec 2 '14 at 14:18
user8365
2
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
18
@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
 |Â
show 1 more comment
2
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
18
@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
2
2
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
To expand on this; I started with (too) little experience, they told me "this is your salary now, with room for promotion when your skills grow". I found this acceptable, I am aware that I'm not a senior programmer. And they kept their word, they're rewarding (personal) improvement, confirmation on development is nice.
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 14:31
18
18
@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
@Martijn - Not every company keeps their word. Alas, I don't think that there's stats for it, but in my experience, you're more likely to hear "that promise was made by Bob, who is no longer here" or "circumstances have changed" or "I'd love to give you what you deserve, but...". If someone has unrealistic expectations, sure - explain why you think they're unrealistic. But verbal promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:11
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
Which should make you wonder wether or not you want to stay. But, the question in from the perspective of the employer, he could write it on paper if he/she wishes
– Martijn
Dec 2 '14 at 15:15
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
@Martijn - I didn't stay. And depending on your jurisdiction (and who's doing the writing), writing it down provides no better promise.
– Telastyn
Dec 2 '14 at 16:04
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
It's also difficult to quantify what constitutes a sufficient level of development to earn a given level, so it would be hard to put in writing even if they wanted to. Having said that, at least in the case of things that are quantifiable, actual contracts carry quite a bit of force in many jurisdictions. This would vary significantly by global region, but, at least here in the U.S., breach of contract is enforced relatively tightly by the courts, though you'd generally have to sue to recover any damages if the other party decides to breach. Most won't, though, because they know they'd lose.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:36
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
6
down vote
The friends may be in a place with higher cost of living, and starting salaries may have been adjusted to reflect that. Or the company they're joining may be less stable -- a startup, for example -- and they're being paid more because they're taking the risk that they may be looking for a job again relatively soon. Or they may be more experienced, or that employer may simply be more desperate for the skills, or... No two jobs are identical, no two humans are identical.
You aren't obligated to change your offer because they want more, and there shouldn't be hurt feelings if your offer wasn't insultingly below market rates. If this really is your best offer before you'd decide they're too expensive and go looking for someone else, say so. Of course, if they feel it isn't good enough, they may go looking somewhere else. So you do need to look at both what you can afford to offer and what's being offered elsewhere. Unfortunately, I don't know how to get current competitive salary information except to try numbers and see how many people take the offer. There may be industry salary surveys you can track down, but those are likely to be half a year out of date on average.
It may be sufficient to explain to the employee/candidate exactly how they need to improve, and how they can improve, to get to the next pay grade. You should be providing that kind of feedback and direction in any case, to build your employees' skills and their value to you.
2
how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
2
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
1
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
2
@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
1
Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
6
down vote
The friends may be in a place with higher cost of living, and starting salaries may have been adjusted to reflect that. Or the company they're joining may be less stable -- a startup, for example -- and they're being paid more because they're taking the risk that they may be looking for a job again relatively soon. Or they may be more experienced, or that employer may simply be more desperate for the skills, or... No two jobs are identical, no two humans are identical.
You aren't obligated to change your offer because they want more, and there shouldn't be hurt feelings if your offer wasn't insultingly below market rates. If this really is your best offer before you'd decide they're too expensive and go looking for someone else, say so. Of course, if they feel it isn't good enough, they may go looking somewhere else. So you do need to look at both what you can afford to offer and what's being offered elsewhere. Unfortunately, I don't know how to get current competitive salary information except to try numbers and see how many people take the offer. There may be industry salary surveys you can track down, but those are likely to be half a year out of date on average.
It may be sufficient to explain to the employee/candidate exactly how they need to improve, and how they can improve, to get to the next pay grade. You should be providing that kind of feedback and direction in any case, to build your employees' skills and their value to you.
2
how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
2
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
1
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
2
@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
1
Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
The friends may be in a place with higher cost of living, and starting salaries may have been adjusted to reflect that. Or the company they're joining may be less stable -- a startup, for example -- and they're being paid more because they're taking the risk that they may be looking for a job again relatively soon. Or they may be more experienced, or that employer may simply be more desperate for the skills, or... No two jobs are identical, no two humans are identical.
You aren't obligated to change your offer because they want more, and there shouldn't be hurt feelings if your offer wasn't insultingly below market rates. If this really is your best offer before you'd decide they're too expensive and go looking for someone else, say so. Of course, if they feel it isn't good enough, they may go looking somewhere else. So you do need to look at both what you can afford to offer and what's being offered elsewhere. Unfortunately, I don't know how to get current competitive salary information except to try numbers and see how many people take the offer. There may be industry salary surveys you can track down, but those are likely to be half a year out of date on average.
It may be sufficient to explain to the employee/candidate exactly how they need to improve, and how they can improve, to get to the next pay grade. You should be providing that kind of feedback and direction in any case, to build your employees' skills and their value to you.
The friends may be in a place with higher cost of living, and starting salaries may have been adjusted to reflect that. Or the company they're joining may be less stable -- a startup, for example -- and they're being paid more because they're taking the risk that they may be looking for a job again relatively soon. Or they may be more experienced, or that employer may simply be more desperate for the skills, or... No two jobs are identical, no two humans are identical.
You aren't obligated to change your offer because they want more, and there shouldn't be hurt feelings if your offer wasn't insultingly below market rates. If this really is your best offer before you'd decide they're too expensive and go looking for someone else, say so. Of course, if they feel it isn't good enough, they may go looking somewhere else. So you do need to look at both what you can afford to offer and what's being offered elsewhere. Unfortunately, I don't know how to get current competitive salary information except to try numbers and see how many people take the offer. There may be industry salary surveys you can track down, but those are likely to be half a year out of date on average.
It may be sufficient to explain to the employee/candidate exactly how they need to improve, and how they can improve, to get to the next pay grade. You should be providing that kind of feedback and direction in any case, to build your employees' skills and their value to you.
edited Dec 2 '14 at 16:03
answered Dec 2 '14 at 13:47
keshlam
41.5k1267144
41.5k1267144
2
how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
2
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
1
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
2
@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
1
Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
 |Â
show 1 more comment
2
how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
2
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
1
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
2
@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
1
Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
2
2
how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
how to get current competitive salary information
- Checking from online sources, such as Glassdoor.com, is always a good bet for ballpark figures. In some countries, you can get figures from the applicable unions, or even the national statistics department, or public tax records.– Juha Untinen
Dec 2 '14 at 13:52
2
2
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
Small businesses may not have HR departments as such... and I presumed that was the case here, given that the OP was asking us rather than HR. "Go not to the web for counsel, for it shall answer both 'mu' and 'ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'"
– keshlam
Dec 2 '14 at 19:17
1
1
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
@JuhaUntinen At least in the case of the U.S., glassdoor might work, but there are no unions in most white-collar professions (aviation industry aside) and national data tell you very little about the local situation in a given place. Cost of living varies dramatically from one part of the U.S. to another. Housing costs in particular can literally vary by more than 1000% (no, not a type-o) depending on location.
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:53
2
2
@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
@reirab: very minor quibble: "typo", not "type-o". Yes, I know the Free Dictionary accepts the latter. It's wrong. :-)
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 4:18
1
1
Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
Speaking as a past operator of letterpresses, I'd consider it a word. Technical jargon specific to text-related professions, perhaps, but a word.
– keshlam
Dec 3 '14 at 6:09
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
6
down vote
I worked with an individual like this in a previous job, let's call him Simon M.
While Simon initially wanted the same salary as the programmers etc, despite not having the same skillset, our employer at the time was able to appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors.
I imagine the same thing may work in your situation as well, ie offer alternative perks instead of a higher salary.
13
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
2
You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
4
I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
1
@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
3
@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
 |Â
show 2 more comments
up vote
6
down vote
I worked with an individual like this in a previous job, let's call him Simon M.
While Simon initially wanted the same salary as the programmers etc, despite not having the same skillset, our employer at the time was able to appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors.
I imagine the same thing may work in your situation as well, ie offer alternative perks instead of a higher salary.
13
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
2
You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
4
I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
1
@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
3
@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
 |Â
show 2 more comments
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
I worked with an individual like this in a previous job, let's call him Simon M.
While Simon initially wanted the same salary as the programmers etc, despite not having the same skillset, our employer at the time was able to appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors.
I imagine the same thing may work in your situation as well, ie offer alternative perks instead of a higher salary.
I worked with an individual like this in a previous job, let's call him Simon M.
While Simon initially wanted the same salary as the programmers etc, despite not having the same skillset, our employer at the time was able to appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors.
I imagine the same thing may work in your situation as well, ie offer alternative perks instead of a higher salary.
edited Dec 2 '14 at 17:38
answered Dec 2 '14 at 15:32


JMK
728614
728614
13
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
2
You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
4
I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
1
@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
3
@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
 |Â
show 2 more comments
13
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
2
You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
4
I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
1
@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
3
@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
13
13
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
"appease him by appealing to his ego and giving him two big monitors" -- AHAHAHAHAHAHA. That is awesome !!
– amphibient
Dec 2 '14 at 16:05
2
2
You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
You could give him a Lego Desk.
– Pete Becker
Dec 2 '14 at 16:29
4
4
I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
I have to say, if I had two big monitors, it would have the additional benefit of making me more productive. Less trips to the printer to print out documents I need to flick through while typing (only to find out that it's out of paper/toner/broken down/being used by someone else to print a 1000-page document.) I've even jokingly suggested that we request this as an alternative to improving the printing facilities, so that common sense will prevail and they finally do something about the printers.
– Level River St
Dec 2 '14 at 17:27
1
1
@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
@steveverrill: I think it can safely be said that most employers under-budget for tech, compared with the possible gains. On the other hand, employees over-estimate how wonderful life would be if only they had another monitor / two more monitors / a massaging chair / a hot tub in the office / a pony. I've gained more and bigger monitors, and beyond a certain point you realise it's still the same job afterwards and that last purchase didn't improve it any ;-) But crucially you shouldn't ever let yourself be fobbed off with stuff to make you do your job better in lieu of pay.
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 19:30
3
3
@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
@RualStorge: sure, if it's stuff that the employee wants to improve their life while they're at work (the hot tub and the pony). If it's basic productivity equipment ((big) enough monitors, a working printer, tablets/phones) then it's just dishonest for the employer to present that as quality of life, even if employees do occasionally fall for it :-) The employee shouldn't be sacrificing salary in order to handle their workload efficiently. I'd love to go to bankers in the City of London, though, and ask them at what point they'd no longer be motivated by more money. Maybe 10-20 million?
– Steve Jessop
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
 |Â
show 2 more comments
up vote
4
down vote
Negotiations can be a tricky thing, and sometimes people have entirely unrealistic expectations that you simply can't fix. Typically this comes from people just starting off their career and go... programmers entry level make... and completely miss that location, market, etc are all HUGE factors in what "average" is.
I know someone like me who gets paid more
What someone else gets paid has little to no relevance to the negotiation at hand. Did this person apply to that company, get an offer, waiting to accept that offer based on your choice here... if not than how is their friend's success relevant?
The average pay is higher
This has "some" relevance, but only in two primary factors.
First, in your market, in your region, at their experience level what is average? If you're simply below that likely your employees will eventually figure it out and as spots open up in those companies you'll lose people to those companies.
Second, if other companies hiring for that role offer significantly more, retention will be very challenging as people figure that out. Sometimes you really have no choice but to accept retention issues if the role isn't worth as much to you, but if you low ball employee retention gets messy.
I can get a better offer elsewhere
Fine, go do it. No seriously if I'm offering you 50K and someone else is offering 75K for the same work you'd be stupid to take my offer. (we're assuming all things equal here)
I've actually said almost those exact words to people. "Oh, you could get paid more at Name of company? Then you should go do that. Unfortunately this role just isn't worth that much to us here."
What is reasonable and "fair"
This is ultimately what should be the driving result of negotiations. Both sides need to do their homework here.
You need to know well in advance what sort of return you'll expect having this person in your office. This gets extremely tricky to calculate in some industries but the short version is what revenue does this person generate, what expenses does this person mitigate, and ultimately at the end of the day how much of your profit would this person generate? (It get's WAY more complicated than that with nuances)
Once you know where all the money works you can safely say, this role will make me ~amount of money you can only justify paying the person less than this amount by a fair margin. (because as a company I hire people to make more money, otherwise my money can be put to better use else where)
If you figure this all out and what they are asking falls within the "profitable by a fair margin" range than what they are asking is realistic and fair. (of coarse many companies will pay as low as they can get away with) but we're talking maximums here not minimums.
My other employees only get paid...
This also is only partly relevant... it's relevant only if what's being asked is fair and reasonable when considering the return on investment of hiring this person is significantly more than you're paying your people. If that's the case than you are paying below what is fair and that's good for your company, but sooner or later others will offer more and your retention will suffer.
On the other hand paying this person more isn't a good idea since it'll upset the others and potentially cost you jobs as well. (same reason, just different triggering event)
How to tackle reality
Ultimately we have one of two possibilities here.
A. what this person is asking is technically fair and reasonable based on expected return on investment.
B. what this person is asking is not fair or is unreasonable based on the expected return on investment.
and ultimately which of these two scenarios it is winds up being irrelevant in your current negotiations... In both cases your best bet is to stick to the ranges common at your employer and accept there is a strong possibility you'll fail to retain this person. If you're lowballing them they are perfectly justified going else where, if you're not lowballing them they'll either accept it or they'll move on.
Long term negotiations
This is not a one time occurrence, there will be many others like this person in your future. You need to have a good idea what people are REALLY worth to you. You should make sure your people are paid / treated well enough to maintain a reasonable employee retention, without exceeding your cap. (where the sweet spot between good retention and the cap is varies greatly based on company, location, your employees, etc.) If you go too low you risk possible running loss. (one person leaves which leads to others leaving, chain reaction) if you go too high that's lost profits. (which is good for the economy but bad for the company)
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
3
@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
Negotiations can be a tricky thing, and sometimes people have entirely unrealistic expectations that you simply can't fix. Typically this comes from people just starting off their career and go... programmers entry level make... and completely miss that location, market, etc are all HUGE factors in what "average" is.
I know someone like me who gets paid more
What someone else gets paid has little to no relevance to the negotiation at hand. Did this person apply to that company, get an offer, waiting to accept that offer based on your choice here... if not than how is their friend's success relevant?
The average pay is higher
This has "some" relevance, but only in two primary factors.
First, in your market, in your region, at their experience level what is average? If you're simply below that likely your employees will eventually figure it out and as spots open up in those companies you'll lose people to those companies.
Second, if other companies hiring for that role offer significantly more, retention will be very challenging as people figure that out. Sometimes you really have no choice but to accept retention issues if the role isn't worth as much to you, but if you low ball employee retention gets messy.
I can get a better offer elsewhere
Fine, go do it. No seriously if I'm offering you 50K and someone else is offering 75K for the same work you'd be stupid to take my offer. (we're assuming all things equal here)
I've actually said almost those exact words to people. "Oh, you could get paid more at Name of company? Then you should go do that. Unfortunately this role just isn't worth that much to us here."
What is reasonable and "fair"
This is ultimately what should be the driving result of negotiations. Both sides need to do their homework here.
You need to know well in advance what sort of return you'll expect having this person in your office. This gets extremely tricky to calculate in some industries but the short version is what revenue does this person generate, what expenses does this person mitigate, and ultimately at the end of the day how much of your profit would this person generate? (It get's WAY more complicated than that with nuances)
Once you know where all the money works you can safely say, this role will make me ~amount of money you can only justify paying the person less than this amount by a fair margin. (because as a company I hire people to make more money, otherwise my money can be put to better use else where)
If you figure this all out and what they are asking falls within the "profitable by a fair margin" range than what they are asking is realistic and fair. (of coarse many companies will pay as low as they can get away with) but we're talking maximums here not minimums.
My other employees only get paid...
This also is only partly relevant... it's relevant only if what's being asked is fair and reasonable when considering the return on investment of hiring this person is significantly more than you're paying your people. If that's the case than you are paying below what is fair and that's good for your company, but sooner or later others will offer more and your retention will suffer.
On the other hand paying this person more isn't a good idea since it'll upset the others and potentially cost you jobs as well. (same reason, just different triggering event)
How to tackle reality
Ultimately we have one of two possibilities here.
A. what this person is asking is technically fair and reasonable based on expected return on investment.
B. what this person is asking is not fair or is unreasonable based on the expected return on investment.
and ultimately which of these two scenarios it is winds up being irrelevant in your current negotiations... In both cases your best bet is to stick to the ranges common at your employer and accept there is a strong possibility you'll fail to retain this person. If you're lowballing them they are perfectly justified going else where, if you're not lowballing them they'll either accept it or they'll move on.
Long term negotiations
This is not a one time occurrence, there will be many others like this person in your future. You need to have a good idea what people are REALLY worth to you. You should make sure your people are paid / treated well enough to maintain a reasonable employee retention, without exceeding your cap. (where the sweet spot between good retention and the cap is varies greatly based on company, location, your employees, etc.) If you go too low you risk possible running loss. (one person leaves which leads to others leaving, chain reaction) if you go too high that's lost profits. (which is good for the economy but bad for the company)
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
3
@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Negotiations can be a tricky thing, and sometimes people have entirely unrealistic expectations that you simply can't fix. Typically this comes from people just starting off their career and go... programmers entry level make... and completely miss that location, market, etc are all HUGE factors in what "average" is.
I know someone like me who gets paid more
What someone else gets paid has little to no relevance to the negotiation at hand. Did this person apply to that company, get an offer, waiting to accept that offer based on your choice here... if not than how is their friend's success relevant?
The average pay is higher
This has "some" relevance, but only in two primary factors.
First, in your market, in your region, at their experience level what is average? If you're simply below that likely your employees will eventually figure it out and as spots open up in those companies you'll lose people to those companies.
Second, if other companies hiring for that role offer significantly more, retention will be very challenging as people figure that out. Sometimes you really have no choice but to accept retention issues if the role isn't worth as much to you, but if you low ball employee retention gets messy.
I can get a better offer elsewhere
Fine, go do it. No seriously if I'm offering you 50K and someone else is offering 75K for the same work you'd be stupid to take my offer. (we're assuming all things equal here)
I've actually said almost those exact words to people. "Oh, you could get paid more at Name of company? Then you should go do that. Unfortunately this role just isn't worth that much to us here."
What is reasonable and "fair"
This is ultimately what should be the driving result of negotiations. Both sides need to do their homework here.
You need to know well in advance what sort of return you'll expect having this person in your office. This gets extremely tricky to calculate in some industries but the short version is what revenue does this person generate, what expenses does this person mitigate, and ultimately at the end of the day how much of your profit would this person generate? (It get's WAY more complicated than that with nuances)
Once you know where all the money works you can safely say, this role will make me ~amount of money you can only justify paying the person less than this amount by a fair margin. (because as a company I hire people to make more money, otherwise my money can be put to better use else where)
If you figure this all out and what they are asking falls within the "profitable by a fair margin" range than what they are asking is realistic and fair. (of coarse many companies will pay as low as they can get away with) but we're talking maximums here not minimums.
My other employees only get paid...
This also is only partly relevant... it's relevant only if what's being asked is fair and reasonable when considering the return on investment of hiring this person is significantly more than you're paying your people. If that's the case than you are paying below what is fair and that's good for your company, but sooner or later others will offer more and your retention will suffer.
On the other hand paying this person more isn't a good idea since it'll upset the others and potentially cost you jobs as well. (same reason, just different triggering event)
How to tackle reality
Ultimately we have one of two possibilities here.
A. what this person is asking is technically fair and reasonable based on expected return on investment.
B. what this person is asking is not fair or is unreasonable based on the expected return on investment.
and ultimately which of these two scenarios it is winds up being irrelevant in your current negotiations... In both cases your best bet is to stick to the ranges common at your employer and accept there is a strong possibility you'll fail to retain this person. If you're lowballing them they are perfectly justified going else where, if you're not lowballing them they'll either accept it or they'll move on.
Long term negotiations
This is not a one time occurrence, there will be many others like this person in your future. You need to have a good idea what people are REALLY worth to you. You should make sure your people are paid / treated well enough to maintain a reasonable employee retention, without exceeding your cap. (where the sweet spot between good retention and the cap is varies greatly based on company, location, your employees, etc.) If you go too low you risk possible running loss. (one person leaves which leads to others leaving, chain reaction) if you go too high that's lost profits. (which is good for the economy but bad for the company)
Negotiations can be a tricky thing, and sometimes people have entirely unrealistic expectations that you simply can't fix. Typically this comes from people just starting off their career and go... programmers entry level make... and completely miss that location, market, etc are all HUGE factors in what "average" is.
I know someone like me who gets paid more
What someone else gets paid has little to no relevance to the negotiation at hand. Did this person apply to that company, get an offer, waiting to accept that offer based on your choice here... if not than how is their friend's success relevant?
The average pay is higher
This has "some" relevance, but only in two primary factors.
First, in your market, in your region, at their experience level what is average? If you're simply below that likely your employees will eventually figure it out and as spots open up in those companies you'll lose people to those companies.
Second, if other companies hiring for that role offer significantly more, retention will be very challenging as people figure that out. Sometimes you really have no choice but to accept retention issues if the role isn't worth as much to you, but if you low ball employee retention gets messy.
I can get a better offer elsewhere
Fine, go do it. No seriously if I'm offering you 50K and someone else is offering 75K for the same work you'd be stupid to take my offer. (we're assuming all things equal here)
I've actually said almost those exact words to people. "Oh, you could get paid more at Name of company? Then you should go do that. Unfortunately this role just isn't worth that much to us here."
What is reasonable and "fair"
This is ultimately what should be the driving result of negotiations. Both sides need to do their homework here.
You need to know well in advance what sort of return you'll expect having this person in your office. This gets extremely tricky to calculate in some industries but the short version is what revenue does this person generate, what expenses does this person mitigate, and ultimately at the end of the day how much of your profit would this person generate? (It get's WAY more complicated than that with nuances)
Once you know where all the money works you can safely say, this role will make me ~amount of money you can only justify paying the person less than this amount by a fair margin. (because as a company I hire people to make more money, otherwise my money can be put to better use else where)
If you figure this all out and what they are asking falls within the "profitable by a fair margin" range than what they are asking is realistic and fair. (of coarse many companies will pay as low as they can get away with) but we're talking maximums here not minimums.
My other employees only get paid...
This also is only partly relevant... it's relevant only if what's being asked is fair and reasonable when considering the return on investment of hiring this person is significantly more than you're paying your people. If that's the case than you are paying below what is fair and that's good for your company, but sooner or later others will offer more and your retention will suffer.
On the other hand paying this person more isn't a good idea since it'll upset the others and potentially cost you jobs as well. (same reason, just different triggering event)
How to tackle reality
Ultimately we have one of two possibilities here.
A. what this person is asking is technically fair and reasonable based on expected return on investment.
B. what this person is asking is not fair or is unreasonable based on the expected return on investment.
and ultimately which of these two scenarios it is winds up being irrelevant in your current negotiations... In both cases your best bet is to stick to the ranges common at your employer and accept there is a strong possibility you'll fail to retain this person. If you're lowballing them they are perfectly justified going else where, if you're not lowballing them they'll either accept it or they'll move on.
Long term negotiations
This is not a one time occurrence, there will be many others like this person in your future. You need to have a good idea what people are REALLY worth to you. You should make sure your people are paid / treated well enough to maintain a reasonable employee retention, without exceeding your cap. (where the sweet spot between good retention and the cap is varies greatly based on company, location, your employees, etc.) If you go too low you risk possible running loss. (one person leaves which leads to others leaving, chain reaction) if you go too high that's lost profits. (which is good for the economy but bad for the company)
answered Dec 2 '14 at 21:08
RualStorge
9,5372231
9,5372231
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
3
@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
suggest improvements |Â
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
3
@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
You don't know if there will be another person like this in the future. Apart from that, +1.
– James
Dec 4 '14 at 13:52
3
3
@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
@Jimbo there might not be, but I can say I've probably interviewed half a dozen people like this. We pay above average in our area so we've had some take the offer anyway later admitting they were trying to just get a little more out of it, and others who just saw Google's top engineers get paid... and think "I'm pretty good, I should get paid close to that much" ... yeah... no... Best to assume this isn't a one time occurrence and just be prepared to deal with it in whatever way is appropriate.
– RualStorge
Dec 9 '14 at 19:38
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
The main point is: you FEEL their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location. It may not be the case. Maybe the other company will not find that money unrealistic.
The point is, your company do. And your company won't pay him that money. Be honest about it, because it's actually the case. Just say your company won't offer him more than XYZ, because she won't pay him more than XYZ.
Then it's his decision: either to accept XYZ, or try luck somewhere else.
It's better not to say "you're not worth that money" because if he gets offered that money, he can blame your company for using 'psycho tricks to lower self esteem to trick people to accept low wages'. If you just say "we can pay XYZ", it's the objective fact and should actually not hurt anyone's feelings. The person involved is free to interpret it as he wish, either as "I'm not yet worth that money" or "That company is not worth me". Or to accept that offer.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
The main point is: you FEEL their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location. It may not be the case. Maybe the other company will not find that money unrealistic.
The point is, your company do. And your company won't pay him that money. Be honest about it, because it's actually the case. Just say your company won't offer him more than XYZ, because she won't pay him more than XYZ.
Then it's his decision: either to accept XYZ, or try luck somewhere else.
It's better not to say "you're not worth that money" because if he gets offered that money, he can blame your company for using 'psycho tricks to lower self esteem to trick people to accept low wages'. If you just say "we can pay XYZ", it's the objective fact and should actually not hurt anyone's feelings. The person involved is free to interpret it as he wish, either as "I'm not yet worth that money" or "That company is not worth me". Or to accept that offer.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
The main point is: you FEEL their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location. It may not be the case. Maybe the other company will not find that money unrealistic.
The point is, your company do. And your company won't pay him that money. Be honest about it, because it's actually the case. Just say your company won't offer him more than XYZ, because she won't pay him more than XYZ.
Then it's his decision: either to accept XYZ, or try luck somewhere else.
It's better not to say "you're not worth that money" because if he gets offered that money, he can blame your company for using 'psycho tricks to lower self esteem to trick people to accept low wages'. If you just say "we can pay XYZ", it's the objective fact and should actually not hurt anyone's feelings. The person involved is free to interpret it as he wish, either as "I'm not yet worth that money" or "That company is not worth me". Or to accept that offer.
The main point is: you FEEL their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this location. It may not be the case. Maybe the other company will not find that money unrealistic.
The point is, your company do. And your company won't pay him that money. Be honest about it, because it's actually the case. Just say your company won't offer him more than XYZ, because she won't pay him more than XYZ.
Then it's his decision: either to accept XYZ, or try luck somewhere else.
It's better not to say "you're not worth that money" because if he gets offered that money, he can blame your company for using 'psycho tricks to lower self esteem to trick people to accept low wages'. If you just say "we can pay XYZ", it's the objective fact and should actually not hurt anyone's feelings. The person involved is free to interpret it as he wish, either as "I'm not yet worth that money" or "That company is not worth me". Or to accept that offer.
answered Dec 3 '14 at 9:48
user1023
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You provided the answer within your initial question:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this
location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for
anywhere around here with their current level of skills &
qualifications
There is a fundamental economic dynamic at play here that almost everyone can "feel" but most people don't quite understand. What you are reaching at is the (Subjective) Marginal Revenue Productivity Theory of Wages, developed by Carl Menger and Eugen Böhm von Bawerk during the period of thought known as the "Marginal Revolution" (~1850-1900ish) where the Marxian Labor Theory of Value was proven fallacious (The LTV is fallacious because it attempts to explain the human concept of value and failed do so)
At any rate, there is a very robust explanation of the theory in Walter Block's "Labor Economics From a Free Market Perspective: Employing the Unemployable"
The loose definition of the theory is
The marginal revenue product of labour MRPL is the increase in revenue
per unit increase in the variable input
To provide my own paraphrasing to the theory (sticking to the currently relevant parts), there is nothing 'special' about labor. It is a service provided by the laborer with the businesses he works for as the purchaser of that labor. As such, the price for all labor is subject to the same clearing process as any product and the natural focus for any consumer(in this case, the business) is to maximize the return on their budget dollars. As is the natural course of things, the only truly acceptable price for any product is "zero" but negotiating with free actors means that with everyone trying to optimize their costs to "zero", the only way to effect a trade is for each party to pull away from their optimal expectations and give up something of value in exchange for something of greater perceived value.
As part of that negotiating process for a business, the "perceived value" of adding an additional worker to the production process is known as the marginal revenue product. If you generate $10,000/day revenue with 100 workers, and you expect that adding a 101st worker will result in $10,400/day revenue, the marginal revenue product of the 101st worker is $400/day and his labor must be purchased for less than this number in order to justify the expense of hiring him. Again, this is trading something of value (his wage) for something of greater perceived value (that $400/day of additional revenue)
All wages tend towards this number, because if someone is capable of contributing $400/day of revenue productivity to a production process and his pay for this productivity is below this value, competitors have free margin to burn to draw him away and add to their own production process. And note that it is the competitor offers that actually determine one's wage. In a market where the second best offer does not rise to match a laborer's Revenue Productivity, the "winner" of the auction for that laborer's productivity need only provide a modicum above the second offer to price them out of the contest.
If the sklll supplier attempting to negotiate with you has a second offer (or you believe he is capable of getting an offer from a competitor in the range that he expects) then the decision is on you whether or not to attempt to retain him.
If you feel (as you have expressed) that this individual is incapable of gaining a competing offer to his expectations, then you really are working from within your own budget expectations, risk assessment, and future outlook for their growth potential...which are things that only you can place an adequate value upon; they are your values.
There is no such thing as a "pay scale."
There is no such thing as a "pay range."
There is ∆MRP and there is an auction process for labor, just as there is with every product.
With this grounding, you merely have to be honest.
1) Analyze the comps he provided for his justification
2) point out the cost of living adjustment between the locations
3) point out the skill differential between your organization's expectations of ability and his current status
and then decide if you're willing to put out a carrot for him to chase.
Perhaps lay out a plan for him to get where it is that you expect someone to be at to be able to issue the demands he has made. Then, simply make a counter offer as high as you're willing to go, and make that an honest maximum.
I hope that helps clarify your concerns.
1
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
1
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
1
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
3
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You provided the answer within your initial question:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this
location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for
anywhere around here with their current level of skills &
qualifications
There is a fundamental economic dynamic at play here that almost everyone can "feel" but most people don't quite understand. What you are reaching at is the (Subjective) Marginal Revenue Productivity Theory of Wages, developed by Carl Menger and Eugen Böhm von Bawerk during the period of thought known as the "Marginal Revolution" (~1850-1900ish) where the Marxian Labor Theory of Value was proven fallacious (The LTV is fallacious because it attempts to explain the human concept of value and failed do so)
At any rate, there is a very robust explanation of the theory in Walter Block's "Labor Economics From a Free Market Perspective: Employing the Unemployable"
The loose definition of the theory is
The marginal revenue product of labour MRPL is the increase in revenue
per unit increase in the variable input
To provide my own paraphrasing to the theory (sticking to the currently relevant parts), there is nothing 'special' about labor. It is a service provided by the laborer with the businesses he works for as the purchaser of that labor. As such, the price for all labor is subject to the same clearing process as any product and the natural focus for any consumer(in this case, the business) is to maximize the return on their budget dollars. As is the natural course of things, the only truly acceptable price for any product is "zero" but negotiating with free actors means that with everyone trying to optimize their costs to "zero", the only way to effect a trade is for each party to pull away from their optimal expectations and give up something of value in exchange for something of greater perceived value.
As part of that negotiating process for a business, the "perceived value" of adding an additional worker to the production process is known as the marginal revenue product. If you generate $10,000/day revenue with 100 workers, and you expect that adding a 101st worker will result in $10,400/day revenue, the marginal revenue product of the 101st worker is $400/day and his labor must be purchased for less than this number in order to justify the expense of hiring him. Again, this is trading something of value (his wage) for something of greater perceived value (that $400/day of additional revenue)
All wages tend towards this number, because if someone is capable of contributing $400/day of revenue productivity to a production process and his pay for this productivity is below this value, competitors have free margin to burn to draw him away and add to their own production process. And note that it is the competitor offers that actually determine one's wage. In a market where the second best offer does not rise to match a laborer's Revenue Productivity, the "winner" of the auction for that laborer's productivity need only provide a modicum above the second offer to price them out of the contest.
If the sklll supplier attempting to negotiate with you has a second offer (or you believe he is capable of getting an offer from a competitor in the range that he expects) then the decision is on you whether or not to attempt to retain him.
If you feel (as you have expressed) that this individual is incapable of gaining a competing offer to his expectations, then you really are working from within your own budget expectations, risk assessment, and future outlook for their growth potential...which are things that only you can place an adequate value upon; they are your values.
There is no such thing as a "pay scale."
There is no such thing as a "pay range."
There is ∆MRP and there is an auction process for labor, just as there is with every product.
With this grounding, you merely have to be honest.
1) Analyze the comps he provided for his justification
2) point out the cost of living adjustment between the locations
3) point out the skill differential between your organization's expectations of ability and his current status
and then decide if you're willing to put out a carrot for him to chase.
Perhaps lay out a plan for him to get where it is that you expect someone to be at to be able to issue the demands he has made. Then, simply make a counter offer as high as you're willing to go, and make that an honest maximum.
I hope that helps clarify your concerns.
1
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
1
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
1
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
3
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
You provided the answer within your initial question:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this
location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for
anywhere around here with their current level of skills &
qualifications
There is a fundamental economic dynamic at play here that almost everyone can "feel" but most people don't quite understand. What you are reaching at is the (Subjective) Marginal Revenue Productivity Theory of Wages, developed by Carl Menger and Eugen Böhm von Bawerk during the period of thought known as the "Marginal Revolution" (~1850-1900ish) where the Marxian Labor Theory of Value was proven fallacious (The LTV is fallacious because it attempts to explain the human concept of value and failed do so)
At any rate, there is a very robust explanation of the theory in Walter Block's "Labor Economics From a Free Market Perspective: Employing the Unemployable"
The loose definition of the theory is
The marginal revenue product of labour MRPL is the increase in revenue
per unit increase in the variable input
To provide my own paraphrasing to the theory (sticking to the currently relevant parts), there is nothing 'special' about labor. It is a service provided by the laborer with the businesses he works for as the purchaser of that labor. As such, the price for all labor is subject to the same clearing process as any product and the natural focus for any consumer(in this case, the business) is to maximize the return on their budget dollars. As is the natural course of things, the only truly acceptable price for any product is "zero" but negotiating with free actors means that with everyone trying to optimize their costs to "zero", the only way to effect a trade is for each party to pull away from their optimal expectations and give up something of value in exchange for something of greater perceived value.
As part of that negotiating process for a business, the "perceived value" of adding an additional worker to the production process is known as the marginal revenue product. If you generate $10,000/day revenue with 100 workers, and you expect that adding a 101st worker will result in $10,400/day revenue, the marginal revenue product of the 101st worker is $400/day and his labor must be purchased for less than this number in order to justify the expense of hiring him. Again, this is trading something of value (his wage) for something of greater perceived value (that $400/day of additional revenue)
All wages tend towards this number, because if someone is capable of contributing $400/day of revenue productivity to a production process and his pay for this productivity is below this value, competitors have free margin to burn to draw him away and add to their own production process. And note that it is the competitor offers that actually determine one's wage. In a market where the second best offer does not rise to match a laborer's Revenue Productivity, the "winner" of the auction for that laborer's productivity need only provide a modicum above the second offer to price them out of the contest.
If the sklll supplier attempting to negotiate with you has a second offer (or you believe he is capable of getting an offer from a competitor in the range that he expects) then the decision is on you whether or not to attempt to retain him.
If you feel (as you have expressed) that this individual is incapable of gaining a competing offer to his expectations, then you really are working from within your own budget expectations, risk assessment, and future outlook for their growth potential...which are things that only you can place an adequate value upon; they are your values.
There is no such thing as a "pay scale."
There is no such thing as a "pay range."
There is ∆MRP and there is an auction process for labor, just as there is with every product.
With this grounding, you merely have to be honest.
1) Analyze the comps he provided for his justification
2) point out the cost of living adjustment between the locations
3) point out the skill differential between your organization's expectations of ability and his current status
and then decide if you're willing to put out a carrot for him to chase.
Perhaps lay out a plan for him to get where it is that you expect someone to be at to be able to issue the demands he has made. Then, simply make a counter offer as high as you're willing to go, and make that an honest maximum.
I hope that helps clarify your concerns.
You provided the answer within your initial question:
I feel their pay expectation genuinely REALLY is unrealistic for this
location, I don't think they will get what they are asking for
anywhere around here with their current level of skills &
qualifications
There is a fundamental economic dynamic at play here that almost everyone can "feel" but most people don't quite understand. What you are reaching at is the (Subjective) Marginal Revenue Productivity Theory of Wages, developed by Carl Menger and Eugen Böhm von Bawerk during the period of thought known as the "Marginal Revolution" (~1850-1900ish) where the Marxian Labor Theory of Value was proven fallacious (The LTV is fallacious because it attempts to explain the human concept of value and failed do so)
At any rate, there is a very robust explanation of the theory in Walter Block's "Labor Economics From a Free Market Perspective: Employing the Unemployable"
The loose definition of the theory is
The marginal revenue product of labour MRPL is the increase in revenue
per unit increase in the variable input
To provide my own paraphrasing to the theory (sticking to the currently relevant parts), there is nothing 'special' about labor. It is a service provided by the laborer with the businesses he works for as the purchaser of that labor. As such, the price for all labor is subject to the same clearing process as any product and the natural focus for any consumer(in this case, the business) is to maximize the return on their budget dollars. As is the natural course of things, the only truly acceptable price for any product is "zero" but negotiating with free actors means that with everyone trying to optimize their costs to "zero", the only way to effect a trade is for each party to pull away from their optimal expectations and give up something of value in exchange for something of greater perceived value.
As part of that negotiating process for a business, the "perceived value" of adding an additional worker to the production process is known as the marginal revenue product. If you generate $10,000/day revenue with 100 workers, and you expect that adding a 101st worker will result in $10,400/day revenue, the marginal revenue product of the 101st worker is $400/day and his labor must be purchased for less than this number in order to justify the expense of hiring him. Again, this is trading something of value (his wage) for something of greater perceived value (that $400/day of additional revenue)
All wages tend towards this number, because if someone is capable of contributing $400/day of revenue productivity to a production process and his pay for this productivity is below this value, competitors have free margin to burn to draw him away and add to their own production process. And note that it is the competitor offers that actually determine one's wage. In a market where the second best offer does not rise to match a laborer's Revenue Productivity, the "winner" of the auction for that laborer's productivity need only provide a modicum above the second offer to price them out of the contest.
If the sklll supplier attempting to negotiate with you has a second offer (or you believe he is capable of getting an offer from a competitor in the range that he expects) then the decision is on you whether or not to attempt to retain him.
If you feel (as you have expressed) that this individual is incapable of gaining a competing offer to his expectations, then you really are working from within your own budget expectations, risk assessment, and future outlook for their growth potential...which are things that only you can place an adequate value upon; they are your values.
There is no such thing as a "pay scale."
There is no such thing as a "pay range."
There is ∆MRP and there is an auction process for labor, just as there is with every product.
With this grounding, you merely have to be honest.
1) Analyze the comps he provided for his justification
2) point out the cost of living adjustment between the locations
3) point out the skill differential between your organization's expectations of ability and his current status
and then decide if you're willing to put out a carrot for him to chase.
Perhaps lay out a plan for him to get where it is that you expect someone to be at to be able to issue the demands he has made. Then, simply make a counter offer as high as you're willing to go, and make that an honest maximum.
I hope that helps clarify your concerns.
edited Dec 3 '14 at 18:15
answered Dec 3 '14 at 15:13
K. Alan Bates
47227
47227
1
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
1
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
1
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
3
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
suggest improvements |Â
1
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
1
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
1
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
3
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
1
1
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
That kind of reasoning is applicable in manufacturing piece work. It can also be used in justifying/dismissing robotic automation on the basis of throughput, revenue and capital and operating cost. Such formulas break down when you're talking about knowledge workers and most service jobs.
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 16:06
1
1
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
@teego1967 The principle is axiomatic. The only difference between a raw laborer and a knowledge worker in this aspect is that it becomes much more difficult to quantify the productivity attributable to a knowledge worker. The dynamic, however, is inescapable. Having difficulty in creating a formula to model something does not invalidate the principle attempting to be modeled.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:20
1
1
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
I agree that the problem is coming up with "the formula", but without it, you can't apply the principle. So what use is it in the context of the OP?
– teego1967
Dec 3 '14 at 17:39
3
3
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
@teego1967 You have to have some expectations of what an additional employee provides to your organization, and you have to have some idea of what that is worth to you. Otherwise, my productivity is worth $20,000 an hour; pay me. The lack of a hard formula does not obviate the necessity of this decision making process.
– K. Alan Bates
Dec 3 '14 at 17:41
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up vote
1
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They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
This is completely irrelevant, since the friend could have more experience than the interviewee.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is
Companies usually pay salaries that are relevant to the job and area/location. For my field: Silicon Valley pays mobile app developers around $150k anually. For Chicago this is $80-$100k. In my country it's around $55k. This is based on supply, demand, experience, but also on expenses. Some areas are more expensive to live in than others, so you will get paid more there (i.e., average Manhattan salary for i.e. lawyers and bankers is 500k anually).
Unless the person is so experienced and valuable to the company, he has no reason to ask for an unreasonable amount. If he can provide offers from other companies that are higher, you could compete with them by raising your initial offer. While a person works at a certain position for a longer period, he/she gets more experience and therefore can ask for a higher salary. Since this is not the case, he's probably bluffing in order to get paid more.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
This is completely irrelevant, since the friend could have more experience than the interviewee.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is
Companies usually pay salaries that are relevant to the job and area/location. For my field: Silicon Valley pays mobile app developers around $150k anually. For Chicago this is $80-$100k. In my country it's around $55k. This is based on supply, demand, experience, but also on expenses. Some areas are more expensive to live in than others, so you will get paid more there (i.e., average Manhattan salary for i.e. lawyers and bankers is 500k anually).
Unless the person is so experienced and valuable to the company, he has no reason to ask for an unreasonable amount. If he can provide offers from other companies that are higher, you could compete with them by raising your initial offer. While a person works at a certain position for a longer period, he/she gets more experience and therefore can ask for a higher salary. Since this is not the case, he's probably bluffing in order to get paid more.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
This is completely irrelevant, since the friend could have more experience than the interviewee.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is
Companies usually pay salaries that are relevant to the job and area/location. For my field: Silicon Valley pays mobile app developers around $150k anually. For Chicago this is $80-$100k. In my country it's around $55k. This is based on supply, demand, experience, but also on expenses. Some areas are more expensive to live in than others, so you will get paid more there (i.e., average Manhattan salary for i.e. lawyers and bankers is 500k anually).
Unless the person is so experienced and valuable to the company, he has no reason to ask for an unreasonable amount. If he can provide offers from other companies that are higher, you could compete with them by raising your initial offer. While a person works at a certain position for a longer period, he/she gets more experience and therefore can ask for a higher salary. Since this is not the case, he's probably bluffing in order to get paid more.
They are quoting salary level of a friend in another company they feel is in a similar role.
This is completely irrelevant, since the friend could have more experience than the interviewee.
a) The quoted comparison salary seems extraordinarily high to me but I have no idea or way of knowing if it is genuine or if the friend is really at the same level this person is
Companies usually pay salaries that are relevant to the job and area/location. For my field: Silicon Valley pays mobile app developers around $150k anually. For Chicago this is $80-$100k. In my country it's around $55k. This is based on supply, demand, experience, but also on expenses. Some areas are more expensive to live in than others, so you will get paid more there (i.e., average Manhattan salary for i.e. lawyers and bankers is 500k anually).
Unless the person is so experienced and valuable to the company, he has no reason to ask for an unreasonable amount. If he can provide offers from other companies that are higher, you could compete with them by raising your initial offer. While a person works at a certain position for a longer period, he/she gets more experience and therefore can ask for a higher salary. Since this is not the case, he's probably bluffing in order to get paid more.
edited Mar 20 '15 at 12:44
answered Mar 20 '15 at 12:38


Edwin Lambregts
813513
813513
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I once hooked up a friend with a job interview, and upon consulting with the interviewer afterwards learned that my friend - in response to the compensation question - said "Look up what the average salary is for this position in our state. That's what I want." This person was entry level and in no way qualified to be making as much as they were asking for (and were going to require 3 months of training in order to really be able to do that job).
My other friend (the interviewer) came back and offered what they asked for -20%, knowing that this person was currently making less than half of that offer amount. Of course my friend took the job because they aren't an idiot and recognize that the opportunity to be paid to learn is going to get them much further than sticking it out for that extra 20%, which they were never going to earn without it.
I would take the emotion out of the entire scenario and offer this person what you genuinely feel they should be paid while in the scope of your budget. Expect to negotiate up about 5% if you have to. If they really aren't qualified and need the experience, they probably already know that and are just hoping you'll offer them more.
Also, isn't it kind of inappropriate to be like "Well, I know that X employee makes _______ a year." Honestly I might be against hiring this person if they were asking for way more than they were worth and already digging around the salaries of other employees. Seems like a potential red flag for other not so great behavior to come.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
I once hooked up a friend with a job interview, and upon consulting with the interviewer afterwards learned that my friend - in response to the compensation question - said "Look up what the average salary is for this position in our state. That's what I want." This person was entry level and in no way qualified to be making as much as they were asking for (and were going to require 3 months of training in order to really be able to do that job).
My other friend (the interviewer) came back and offered what they asked for -20%, knowing that this person was currently making less than half of that offer amount. Of course my friend took the job because they aren't an idiot and recognize that the opportunity to be paid to learn is going to get them much further than sticking it out for that extra 20%, which they were never going to earn without it.
I would take the emotion out of the entire scenario and offer this person what you genuinely feel they should be paid while in the scope of your budget. Expect to negotiate up about 5% if you have to. If they really aren't qualified and need the experience, they probably already know that and are just hoping you'll offer them more.
Also, isn't it kind of inappropriate to be like "Well, I know that X employee makes _______ a year." Honestly I might be against hiring this person if they were asking for way more than they were worth and already digging around the salaries of other employees. Seems like a potential red flag for other not so great behavior to come.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I once hooked up a friend with a job interview, and upon consulting with the interviewer afterwards learned that my friend - in response to the compensation question - said "Look up what the average salary is for this position in our state. That's what I want." This person was entry level and in no way qualified to be making as much as they were asking for (and were going to require 3 months of training in order to really be able to do that job).
My other friend (the interviewer) came back and offered what they asked for -20%, knowing that this person was currently making less than half of that offer amount. Of course my friend took the job because they aren't an idiot and recognize that the opportunity to be paid to learn is going to get them much further than sticking it out for that extra 20%, which they were never going to earn without it.
I would take the emotion out of the entire scenario and offer this person what you genuinely feel they should be paid while in the scope of your budget. Expect to negotiate up about 5% if you have to. If they really aren't qualified and need the experience, they probably already know that and are just hoping you'll offer them more.
Also, isn't it kind of inappropriate to be like "Well, I know that X employee makes _______ a year." Honestly I might be against hiring this person if they were asking for way more than they were worth and already digging around the salaries of other employees. Seems like a potential red flag for other not so great behavior to come.
I once hooked up a friend with a job interview, and upon consulting with the interviewer afterwards learned that my friend - in response to the compensation question - said "Look up what the average salary is for this position in our state. That's what I want." This person was entry level and in no way qualified to be making as much as they were asking for (and were going to require 3 months of training in order to really be able to do that job).
My other friend (the interviewer) came back and offered what they asked for -20%, knowing that this person was currently making less than half of that offer amount. Of course my friend took the job because they aren't an idiot and recognize that the opportunity to be paid to learn is going to get them much further than sticking it out for that extra 20%, which they were never going to earn without it.
I would take the emotion out of the entire scenario and offer this person what you genuinely feel they should be paid while in the scope of your budget. Expect to negotiate up about 5% if you have to. If they really aren't qualified and need the experience, they probably already know that and are just hoping you'll offer them more.
Also, isn't it kind of inappropriate to be like "Well, I know that X employee makes _______ a year." Honestly I might be against hiring this person if they were asking for way more than they were worth and already digging around the salaries of other employees. Seems like a potential red flag for other not so great behavior to come.
answered Aug 15 '16 at 20:42


Tam Hartman
48228
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44
Also, you are usually paid what you can negotiate, not what you deserve.
– user1220
Dec 2 '14 at 14:28
20
At this point we don't know if the OP's company pays low wages, or if the candidate has unrealistic expectations for the market salary. Moreover the actual gap is important as well, are we talking a few thousand dollars more, or 10's of thousands? It all makes a difference.
– teego1967
Dec 2 '14 at 16:49
2
@abc123 This employee of yours is a woman? Is the equality issue a concern?
– Renae Lider
Dec 2 '14 at 21:32
6
@Huangism Also, the friend could be in a more expensive market. Personally, I could easily make 1.5x what I'm making or more in other places (and have friends with nearly identical qualifications / experience who are doing so,) but the difference in cost of living would make it a wash at best financially (housing/property costs 4-5x, for instance.)
– reirab
Dec 3 '14 at 3:19
Friend's salary is completely irrelevant. Do you talk about other employers who pay their staff much less than you for similar work?
– A. I. Breveleri
Aug 16 '16 at 6:38