Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it’s a non-profit or association, you can pull the 990 and extrapolate a reasonable salary for the position.
Or give a range, and say you can be flexible, based on total compensation.
When I have been on the hiring side, I’ve trashed letters that get cute with salary requests. I don’t want to waste my time or the candidate’s time if they are way out of my range.
Serious question, if you don't want to waste your time, why don't you share the range you expect to pay?
THIS! Tell people how much you are willing to pay the right person to do the damn job and stop making the applicant play some guessing game as to what number it is you want them to submit!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it’s a non-profit or association, you can pull the 990 and extrapolate a reasonable salary for the position.
Or give a range, and say you can be flexible, based on total compensation.
When I have been on the hiring side, I’ve trashed letters that get cute with salary requests. I don’t want to waste my time or the candidate’s time if they are way out of my range.
Serious question, if you don't want to waste your time, why don't you share the range you expect to pay?
Anonymous wrote:Don't write negotiable. Ok to put a range (be honest about what range you would accept). I come from nonprofit world, and we were once hiring for an entry level position, and found a great candidate. She aced the phone interview and first round. At second round, we asked her what salary she was looking for. Her response was $80,000. Our mouths hit the floor - entry level for us was $25-$28k. So while she might have been negotiable, she wasn't even close to our ballpark. From that day forward, 15+ years later, we REQUIRE a salary range, and if you don't put one, you are not considered (you didn't follow directuons).
Esp. if it's nonprofit, they don't want to waste their time, or yours. Might be different in for profit world....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't write negotiable. Ok to put a range (be honest about what range you would accept). I come from nonprofit world, and we were once hiring for an entry level position, and found a great candidate. She aced the phone interview and first round. At second round, we asked her what salary she was looking for. Her response was $80,000. Our mouths hit the floor - entry level for us was $25-$28k. So while she might have been negotiable, she wasn't even close to our ballpark. From that day forward, 15+ years later, we REQUIRE a salary range, and if you don't put one, you are not considered (you didn't follow directuons).
Esp. if it's nonprofit, they don't want to waste their time, or yours. Might be different in for profit world....
So stop playing games and have people guess and just state the range in your ad. Goes both ways.
Anonymous wrote:Don't write negotiable. Ok to put a range (be honest about what range you would accept). I come from nonprofit world, and we were once hiring for an entry level position, and found a great candidate. She aced the phone interview and first round. At second round, we asked her what salary she was looking for. Her response was $80,000. Our mouths hit the floor - entry level for us was $25-$28k. So while she might have been negotiable, she wasn't even close to our ballpark. From that day forward, 15+ years later, we REQUIRE a salary range, and if you don't put one, you are not considered (you didn't follow directuons).
Esp. if it's nonprofit, they don't want to waste their time, or yours. Might be different in for profit world....
Anonymous wrote:If it’s a non-profit or association, you can pull the 990 and extrapolate a reasonable salary for the position.
Or give a range, and say you can be flexible, based on total compensation.
When I have been on the hiring side, I’ve trashed letters that get cute with salary requests. I don’t want to waste my time or the candidate’s time if they are way out of my range.