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Jay A. Hewlin, Esq.. Overview  Identifying The Truth About Negotiations  Some Negotiation Statistics  Strategies for Negotiating Salary  Resources.

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Presentation on theme: "Jay A. Hewlin, Esq.. Overview  Identifying The Truth About Negotiations  Some Negotiation Statistics  Strategies for Negotiating Salary  Resources."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jay A. Hewlin, Esq.

2 Overview  Identifying The Truth About Negotiations  Some Negotiation Statistics  Strategies for Negotiating Salary  Resources  Question and Answers

3 What is a Negotiation?  A Negotiation is a discussion between two (or more) parties in order to solve (perceived) differences (Pruitt & Carnevale, 1993). Those differences may concern different interests in resources; moral or legal issues; strategic advantage in the market, etc.

4 What is a Negotiation?  Communication concerning a matter(s) for which there is a desired outcome(s). Creating opportunities Resolving Conflicts Creating Value Distributing Value Structuring a Deal Raising a Child Loving a Spouse Purchasing/Selling

5 What is a Negotiation?  Little Stevie  Little Ethel  The Pajama Party

6 Negotiation and Influence  Each of the above stories is about the power of influence by individuals who have no formal authority and are, in fact, the least “powerful” in the context.  Each situation is about how to leverage what you have available to target the interest of the other individual in order to get what you want.

7 You are worth more than you think!

8 The Importance of Negotiating Salary  Women Don’t Ask Study with Carnegie Mellon master’s degree students: ○ Men’s Salaries were 7.6% higher on average; ○ 7% women negotiated vs. 57% of the men; ○ The negotiation accounted for the 7.6% difference. ○ Men negotiate 2 or 3 times as often.

9 Why Negotiate?  If two 30 year old applicants get offers for $100,000 and one negotiates and gets $107,400, how much longer will the non-negotiating applicant have to work after 65 to make up the difference, assuming 5% raises each year? Nine years longer!

10 The Importance of Negotiating Salary  Most recruiters are prepared to negotiate.

11 Interest vs. Position  The Orange Sisters:  Working in Ottawa:  Interest: The underlying motivator. Your interest is why you want what you want.  Position: The surface substance of the negotiation. What you tell the other party you want out of a negotiation.

12 Issue Type  Distinguish between: Distributive Issues (Fixed Pie); Integrative Issues (Common issues with different values placed); and Compatible/Congruent (Identical Interests)

13 Three Fundamental Questions  Who am I?  Where am I?  What is the other party’s interest?  What do I want? What is my interest? For what am I striving?

14 Salary Negotiation Preparation  The initial hiring decision is about fit.  A salary negotiation is about creating value between parties who presumably want to work together.  What’s it worth? A separate conversation requiring research.

15 Salary Negotiation Preparation  Defer the money conversation until you have a total picture of the position and you know the company wants you;  Listen carefully to see if the interviewer brings it up indirectly;  In most cases, he or she will lead with some number, but don’t let that deter you;  Be prepared to justify a higher number.

16 Salary Negotiation Preparation  Prepare: Research the City/Country, the cost of living, the particular company, it’s culture, management, and the particular person with whom you are interviewing. ○ Sources: On-line, books, alumni, fraternity brothers or sorority sisters; etc. Know the salary range before walking into the interview; ○ Market research, pay for similarly-situated positions in the field. What are their competitors paying? How is that organization currently performing? Sources: Association websites; books, people who work for the company, etc.

17 Salary Negotiation  Think package, not just cash: Medical benefits, dental benefits, level of responsibility, working conditions, educational reimbursement, extended health and dental insurance, likelihood of advancement, reputation in the industry; professional development, support, start date, vacation time, flexible time, bonus. Create the value ○ If you can’t get more salary, get a bigger bonus, more vacation time, etc.

18 Salary Negotiation  Know your “BATNA”  Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement  Know your Reservation Value: The lowest package you’ll take that is above your BATNA.

19 Salary Negotiation  Make sure you receive a letter from the company identifying the particulars. Understand that this letter is not necessarily a contract.

20 Negotiation Strategies  Questions?

21 Resources  Get Paid What You’re Worth: The Expert Negotiators Guide to Salary and Compensation -- Pinkley & Northcraft 2003  Getting to Yes: The Secret to Successful Negotiation -- Fisher, Ury, & Patton 2003  Difficult Conversations – Stone, Patton, and Heen 2010  The Truth About Negotiations – Leigh Thompson 2008


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