Salary Negotiation: The Conversation After 'Yes'
Most candidates leave 10-25% on the table because they treat the offer as a conclusion. Here's how to treat it as the start of a negotiation.
Maya Chen
Career Coach
The offer is not the finish line. It is the moment the company has decided they want you, and the moment your leverage is highest. Most candidates leave significant money on the table — not because they negotiated badly, but because they didn't negotiate at all.
Buy yourself time
When the recruiter delivers the offer, your only job in that conversation is to express genuine excitement and ask for the offer in writing. Do not commit. Do not counter on the call. Thank them, ask when they need an answer, and ask for the full breakdown — base, bonus, equity vesting schedule, sign-on, and benefits.
Anchor on a number you can defend
Your counter should be a specific number, not a range, and it should be backed by something — a competing offer, a market data source, or your current total compensation. Vague asks ('something in the higher range') get vague responses. Specific asks get specific yeses or specific noes, both of which give you information.
- Anchor 10–20% above the offer if you have a competing offer in hand.
- Anchor 5–10% above if you're working from market data alone.
- Always counter on at least one non-base lever — sign-on, equity refresh, start date, or PTO.
Equity is where the slack lives
Most companies have less flexibility on base salary than on equity, especially at senior levels. If the recruiter says base is fixed, ask about the equity grant. If equity is fixed, ask about a sign-on bonus. There is almost always a lever that has slack.
Know when to stop
Negotiation is not a sport. The goal is the right comp at a company you want to work at, with a manager who is excited to bring you on. If you push past the third counter, you risk eroding goodwill before your first day. Two well-placed counters usually capture most of the available value.
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