Tag-Archive for ◊ salary negotiations ◊

You won’t get what you don’t ask for

By Pat O'Donnell | November 11, 2011

A reminder that generating a job offer is not different from closing a sales deal.

1. You can’t expect to be the preferred resource when applying for a job at a particular company if you don’t know what product to offer. You must listen/do research to learn VOC (voice of customer) and then address the relevance and value of your product and services. Client will be looking to solve a specific problem like fix products now flat or in decline. Grow profit. Even if your resume has a track record of success, it has little value if it has questionable relevance.
2. Providing facts and features about you does not move the relationship forward by itself. Trust and relationship are crucial to the selling process. The client will prefer someone with lesser credentials on a superficial level if that person comes highly recommended by someone the client trusts. Resumes offer too little depth or proof of connection of you to the results claimed to offset that. Single interviews don’t often solve the problem because clients are not usually trained interviewers.
3. Network with several people at a company first, send resume later. Listen 2/3, talk 1/3.
4. “Consulting” with a client you would like to work for permanently without a designated selling process may distract and pre-empt closing a deal. Similarly, offering too much information during consulting, networking, and interviewing without closing the deal encourages the client to ask for more free advice/details without committing. A gift of gab does not equal selling.
5. A direct mail piece gets a .5-2% return at best. A superficial resume sent to a portal generates similar results.
6. You are highly unlikely to get what you want from a sales meeting or interview if you don’t ask for it and specify exactly what you want and provide specific rationale for deserving it. “I want $200K salary base and $200K is justified for these reasons…” “I want the open Business Development Manager role, and I am the best candidate over other Biz Dev Mgrs with the same amount of industry experience and sales success because of these reasons…” The sales trainer John Baker says 3 reasons establishes a pattern and builds just enough intrigue to consumate the deal.

If you want more in depth training on closing deals in person whether or not you are a professional sales person, read The Asking Formula, by John Baker. He is a fun trainer for any audience.

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Topics: communications, getting ahead, hidden job market, interviews, negotiating, networking, resume + cover letter, salary, selling skills, technical skills | No Comments »

Why Joe was “red-flagged”

By Pat O'Donnell | August 30, 2010

A young job seeker named Joe applied to an engineering firm last week through a third party recruiter stating he would jump for the right opportunity accompanied by a salary around $70K.

Joe then told the corporate HR person in a phone screen a few days later he was making $72K salary and wouldn’t move for less than $80K.

The engineering firm knew his present salary was $62K because they had hired a number of other people from the same firm. Read the rest of this entry »

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Topics: career strategy, negotiating, salary | 2 Comments »

Parallels between marriage and employment

By Pat O'Donnell | August 19, 2010

Most folks assume getting married or accepting a job will bring long-term financial and emotional security. 10% of marriages end in divorce after 5 years, 40% of marriages by the 50th year (a). Comparatively, the average job tenure is now 2-3 years.

Someone who has been out of a relationship or work many months may take a questionable spouse or job out of financial desperation or the need to be “wanted.”

In both marriage and work, you should do more homework about long-range goals and the cultural fit before committing. Beauty is only skin deep. One-night-stand and one interview decisions carry a lot of risk. Consider Contract-2-Hire. Read the rest of this entry »

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Topics: career strategy, negotiating, networking, salary, solving problems | 12 Comments »

Job-Hunting over the age of 45

By Pat O'Donnell | July 20, 2008

older worker and team

I am in my 50s. Yes, age bias exists and, yes, it is illegal. You won’t always be able to avoid it. But age bias is sometimes not really about your actual age, it is about certain soft skills and attitudes that employers desire but older employees are less likely to value. And if you learn to address those issues, you can make concerns about age go away.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Topics: branding + positioning, career strategy, interviews, networking, resume + cover letter, salary | No Comments »

Lying on Resumes and in Interviews

By Pat O'Donnell | June 22, 2008

liar

The simple answer? Don’t do it.

  • I have seen national studies that claimed about 70% of resumes have “mistruths” in them.
  • Other studies state 25-50% of resumes have “embellishments” (an exaggeration but not lie.)

The most common lies:

  • Length of employment gaps
  • Titles
  • Degrees completed
  • Salary
  • Reason for leaving
  • Not mentioning a job from which you were fired
  • Taking credit for an idea developed by the team
  • When career started (age)
  • Size of business or projects managed
  • Rank as a sales person or total revenue you represented
  • Claiming to be “Consulting” when you were billing zero hours

I could quote more studies, but the point is: Recruiters and Hiring Managers EXPECT there to be many lies in resumes and in the interviews we have with applicants so we look and listen for them. Read the rest of this entry »

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Topics: branding + positioning, career strategy, interviews, recruiting, resume + cover letter, salary | No Comments »