A common job-interview question about money is a trap, and you should never answer it directly..
One of the most awkward questions you can be asked in a job interview is "What are your salary requirements?" or "How much are you making in your current job?"
As in many uncomfortable
situations, your immediate reaction may be to immediately give an
answer, stating how much you make and then explaining what range you'd
be looking for in this job.
It's a trap, argues Ramit Sethi, the bestselling personal-finance writer and teacher. In a recent episode of "The Tim Ferriss Show" podcast, Ferriss highlights several of Sethi's lessons that are hosted on CreativeLive, an online classroom company Ferriss works with.
When experienced hiring managers
hear a direct answer to that salary question, Sethi says, they
immediately think, "OK, gotcha." Because, for example, maybe they were
willing to offer you $90,000. But when they hear you were making
$60,000, they'll know they won't have to let go of as much of the
company's money to appeal to you.
If you flatly refuse to answer
the question, you might give your interviewer a bad impression. But you
won't need to do that. Borrow a tactic from politicians and dodge it
instead.
If you're in a job interview and
a hiring manager asks you how much you make or how much you're looking
for, Sethi says, answer something like, "You
know what, I'm happy to discuss money down the road, but right now I'm
just trying to see if there's a good fit for both of us. I'm sure you're
trying to do the same thing."
Sethi says that this communicates confidence to the interviewer and can suggest that you have multiple offers on the table.
His advice is to hold off on
salary negotiations until the hiring manager comes at you with a job
offer, but, people being people, you may run into an interviewer who
will keep pushing until they get an answer.
In an interview with Business Insider
in May, HR consultant Lynn Taylor also recommended the dodge tactic,
but said that if you get an insistent interviewer, answer truthfully but
with an explanation.
That is, answer the range
question based on what people already in that position make at the
company — which you should know from your research — and answer the
current-salary question by fleshing out your other benefits and the
possibility of recently increased duties that have yet to be reflected
in a raise.
Whatever the case, never answer directly.
Otherwise, you've already lost the edge in a negotiation before it even began
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