Question: “What’s the salary range for this position? You
won't tell me the top amount they're willing to offer?”
Answer:
I've been doing this for
a very long time, here is the reality of the scenario. Some companies
have very specific ranges. Some companies have a rough idea. Some companies
simply let the market tell them what they should be paying for a job. Some
companies ask me to help them arrive at a fair range. Some companies will flex
to a degree on what they are targeting for the hire. So as you can see there
are numerous scenarios. No two situations are exactly the same.
It always depends on a
person’s experience and how directly applicable it is to a company’s needs. Is
the person more junior in experience? Is the person more senior in experience?
How does the person’s experience compare to other people already on staff?
And how is internal equity kept in line?
So there is never a real easy
answer as there are so many variables. In the many years of doing this, my
opinion of the best approach is to be certain that a company’s ideal number for
the hire and a candidate’s ideal number on what they’d expect are in line. Do
they have to be spot on? No. Sometimes there is flexibility on the company’s
end, sometimes there is flexibility on the candidate’s end. Sometimes if the
company feels the candidate is the person they want and the candidate
feels that this is the opportunity for them there are creative ways of
bridging possible gaps as well.
Last but not least, it is
human tendency to always gravitate towards the top of a stated salary range. It
never fails. The moment a range is thrown out in conversation the candidate
will gravitate towards the top number. Right or wrong, consciously or
unconsciously, I've seen it happen time and time again where a recruiter will
tell a candidate a range, $65,000 to $80,000 for example, and when the offer
comes and it is at $70,000 the candidate protests, “Hey Mr. Recruiter, you told
me the job paid $80,000!”
The best way to avoid this,
just be certain the candidate’s expectations and the company’s expectations
fall within the “okay place.”
The bottom line: If I
do my job correctly and all parties are forthcoming with information, then the
hiring manager has an idea where they want to hire in, and the candidate has an
expectation of where they need to be. Based on what I know from the
candidate and from the hiring manager, if the situation were to move in a
positive direction the candidate’s expectation will be met.
Scot Dickerson, CPC
President
President
4 comments:
سایپا - قیمت خودرو
Was excellent.
Thank you very much., You are a good writer.
In addition to art that will give you good
I congratulate you
Was excellent.
Thank you very much., You are a good writer.
In addition to art that will give you good
I congratulate you
درب ضد سرقت - درب ضد سرقت
Writing is an art that everyone does it. Congratulate you for having this art.
Your blog is unique
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