| I agree that I wouldn't change jobs if it meant less paid leave. I was offered a notable raise to switched but my PTO would have been a 1/3 and hours are longer, so the hourly rate wasn't really much of a bump, certainly not enough for me to move. |
I would ask what the career path for the created position would be. |
Or better for 128 days. |
. Please don't do this. Unless you are a top-level exec this will make you seem high maintenance and full of yourself. Don't scare them off. Stick to the things that are really important to you. |
| Give yourself some kind of guarantee in case you get laid off or it doesn't work out. If they let you go within two years, for example, you get $xx. I'm sure there is a name for that. |
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Let's have fun with fringe benefits. I would demand a $5,000 account for conferences and education. And first or business class cabin on all domestic and international travel.[/quote].
Please don't do this. Unless you are a top-level exec this will make you seem high maintenance and full of yourself. Don't scare them off. Stick to the things that are really important to you. [/quote] 3k accounts are common in academia. |
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At s minimum, they would need to match my Fed benefits - 20 days paid vacation, Fed holidays, 401K that can match the TSP, health benefit sequel or better at least 20 percent more over my $120K salary for me to walk.
My DW works at a BigLaw firm and my benefits as a Fed are much better. |
Agree. Do not do this. If I were offering you a job and you came back with this trivial bs, I'd immediately label you as high maintenance and not worth the time. But, 15% is a pittance. They came to you. You should ask for a major bump ... 30% if not more. If they like you, as it appears they do, they'll come back with a counter if they really cannot do 30%. And while I have no real idea what you make, the fact that you initially suggested 15% and know such a precise range of your colleagues' salaries makes me think you don't make a monster amount - so, even 30% more is probably not a ton in an absolute sense to the employers bottom-line. You need to identify what's really important to you (salary, time off, WAH, whatever) and maximize your request in that vertical. Do not come up with a laundry list of nice to haves that will make you look like a PITA. In my experience, salary is the end all be all and can make up for lack of a lot of other perks. You may have a different view. But I would aim high but on the fewest number of demands. They are coming after you, so don't sell yourself short, but also don't scare them off with a bunch of small items you don't really need. I'd ask for a big salary, a sufficient number of vacation days, and the "flexibility to WAH" occasionally as appropriate, but not aim for a specific number of WAH days per week unless you know you need them. |
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This one. |
| Shit. Be bold. I asked for a 50k raise and got it. Asked for a $100k sign on and got it. Fuck 15%. |
| What do you want to do with your telework time that you couldn't accomplish with more $$? If you want to do laundry while at home, how much does it cost to hire someone to do laundry? I agree with PPs to make it all about the salary. If they dont go high with that you can always counter with a lower salary PLUS WAH. |