Why Most People Don't Negotiate

Fewer than 40% of job seekers negotiate their salary. The reasons are predictable. Fear of rejection. Fear of losing the offer. Not knowing what to say. But here's the hard truth: the first offer is almost never the best offer. Employers typically budget 10–20% above what they initially put on the table, expecting you'll come back.

Over a ten-year career, not negotiating your starting salary can cost ₹40 lakh or more in India, $500,000+ in the US. Raises compound. Future offers anchor to your current base. The first conversation matters out of all proportion to its length.

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Do Your Research First

Negotiation without data is haggling. Before any salary conversation, research the market range for your role, experience level, and location:

  • Glassdoor and Levels.fyi for company-specific data, especially tech
  • LinkedIn Salary Insights for role and geography benchmarks
  • Payscale and AmbitionBox for India-specific industry ranges
  • Conversations with peers in similar roles — talking about money is less taboo than you think, especially among friends two drinks in

Establish three numbers. Your ideal (stretch). Your target (realistic market rate). Your walk-away minimum. Never anchor below your target.

The Golden Rule: Let Them Go First

When the recruiter asks "What are your salary expectations?" early in the process, don't blurt a number. Try: "I'm flexible and want to find the right fit first. Can you share the budgeted range for this role?" Most recruiters will respect that and tell you. The ones who push back, push back politely once, then concede.

The Negotiation Script That Works

When the offer arrives, lead with enthusiasm, then negotiate:

"Thank you — I'm really excited about this and I can see myself contributing to [specific company goal]. I did want to discuss compensation. Based on my research and the value I'll bring, I was targeting something in the range of [X to Y]. Is there flexibility to get closer to that?"

Then stop talking. Silence is the most powerful tool you have. Most candidates lose money in the awkward five seconds after they make the ask, when they keep talking and walk back their own number. Don't. Let them respond.

Negotiating Beyond Base Salary

If they can't move base, negotiate the total package. A friend at a Series B fintech got told "we can't go above ₹35 lakh on base." She asked for a ₹4 lakh signing bonus, a six-month review with a 10% raise tied to OKRs, and an extra week of PTO. They agreed to all three. Effective package up by ₹6 lakh in year one.

  • Signing bonus — often easier to approve than a higher base
  • Performance review timeline — six-month review instead of twelve
  • Remote work flexibility — real monetary value when you net out commute
  • Extra PTO — five extra days has measurable worth
  • Professional development budget — courses, conferences, certifications
  • Equity or stock options — especially at growth-stage companies

How to Handle Pushback

If they say "that's above our budget," reply: "I understand. What's the highest you can go?" This keeps the door open without committing you. If they hold firm: "If the base is fixed, can we revisit in six months tied to specific performance milestones?" Collaborative, not adversarial. Recruiters remember candidates who negotiated well and ones who threw tantrums. Be the first.

Negotiating Internal Raises

Same principles apply to raises with your current employer. Request the conversation. Bring a documented list of achievements, plus market data. Frame it as: "Based on what I've contributed and what the market pays for this role, I'd like to discuss getting my compensation to [X]." The worst answer is no. The data shows that's a rare worst case when you've earned it.

The candidates who get the most aren't the most aggressive. They're the most prepared. Walk into the conversation with three numbers, two scripts, and one moment of silence ready to deploy. The money follows.