The Golden Rule: Never Accept on the Spot

When the offer arrives, resist the urge to say yes immediately, even if you're thrilled. Express enthusiasm, then ask for time: "I'm really excited about this — thank you. Could I have 48 to 72 hours to review the details?" This is standard. No reasonable employer will hold it against you. What happens next is where the actual money is made.

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Breaking Down the Offer

An offer is more than a salary number. Here's the framework for evaluating the total package:

  • Base Salary — Compare against market rates for your role, level, and location
  • Variable Pay — Target bonus %, OTE for sales, review frequency
  • Equity — Type (RSUs vs options), vesting schedule (usually 4 years with a 1-year cliff), strike price vs current valuation
  • Health Benefits — Coverage quality, premium cost, dependent coverage
  • Retirement / PF — EPF matching, NPS contributions, gratuity eligibility
  • Leave Policy — Annual, sick, parental leave
  • Remote Work Policy — Fully remote, hybrid, mandatory office days
  • Professional Development — Learning budget, conference allowance, course reimbursement
  • Joining Bonus — One-time payment, clawback period
  • Role Title and Seniority — Levelling affects every future negotiation
  • Growth Trajectory — Realistic path to the next level

Researching Market Rates

Before negotiating, validate against Glassdoor, AmbitionBox, Levels.fyi, LinkedIn Salary Insights, and peer conversations. Set three numbers: stretch, target, walk-away minimum. If the offer is above your target, negotiate the non-salary elements. If below your minimum, it's time for a candid conversation. A friend got an offer at ₹28 lakh from a Series B SaaS company. She'd validated the market range was ₹32 to ₹38 lakh for her level. Negotiated to ₹34 lakh plus a ₹3 lakh joining bonus over two emails and one call. Twenty minutes of work, ₹6 lakh extra.

The Negotiation Conversation

Call. Don't email. A live conversation is much more effective for negotiation. Use this script:

"Thank you again for the offer — I'm excited about the role and team. I've done research on market rates and the total package, and I wanted to have a candid conversation. I was hoping we could get the base salary to [X]. Could the team accommodate that?"

Then go quiet. Let them respond. Don't justify. Don't apologise. Confident, respectful directness is what professional recruiters expect and respect.

When They Push Back

If base is fixed, pivot: "If base is firm, could we look at a signing bonus, or accelerating the first performance review to six months?" If they can't move anything at all, you have a decision to make. But at least you asked. The candidates who don't ask are the ones who'll spend the next two years wondering what they'd have got if they had.

The extra ₹2 lakh in base salary today is worth ₹20+ lakh in compounded salary differentials over five years. The thirty-minute negotiation call is the highest-paid hour of your year. Make it.