All Content from Business Insider 10月17日 17:11
当前市场下如何争取加薪
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在当前招聘市场竞争激烈、经济增长放缓的背景下,企业在加薪问题上显得更为谨慎。文章指出,虽然加薪并非不可能,但员工需要更加策略性地进行协商。建议员工了解自己的薪资范围,并探索除基本工资外的其他薪酬激励方式,如奖金、股票或培训机会。同时,选择合适的时机提出加薪请求,并利用可靠的数据来支持自己的论点,而非过度依赖薪资网站信息。最终,成为对公司不可或缺的员工,并适时评估是否需要寻求新的发展机会。

💰 **了解你的薪资范围**: 多数公司为不同职级设定了明确的薪资范围(pay band)。了解自己所在职位的薪资范围,并与HR或经理沟通,判断是否有加薪空间。如果已接近薪资上限,应将重点放在争取晋升至下一级别。

🌟 **探索多元化薪酬激励**: 不要仅将基本工资视为唯一的协商筹码。在基本工资调整困难时,可考虑争取绩效奖金、保留奖金、项目激励、股票期权或继续教育机会。这些替代性薪酬方式往往更具灵活性,且不直接增加年度基础薪资。

⏳ **把握时机,策略性地提出请求**: 避免在公司业绩不佳、领导者压力过大或刚错过重要里程碑时提出加薪。选择在公司业务平稳、你刚刚取得显著成就,且决策者心态良好时提出,能大大提高成功率。

📊 **明智运用薪资透明化数据**: 薪资网站的数据往往不够具体,难以获得管理层认可。应收集与自身职位、行业、地区高度相关的、经过验证的数据,并结合公司内部的同行反馈,以专业态度进行沟通。可将此作为契机,询问公司是否愿意进行薪酬评估。

🚀 **成为不可或缺的员工**: 专注于公司最重要项目的卓越表现,并确保相关人士知晓你的贡献。提升你在关键项目中的可见度和影响力是争取加薪的关键。同时,需注意在团队和工作成果的框架内展现价值,而非过度自我推销。

Andrea Wasserman.

During my time at Nordstrom, Verizon, and Yahoo, I managed hundreds of employees and had just as many conversations about raises and promotions. Some I approved, while others I had to turn down.

I realized that those decisions weren't always about performance. More often, it came down to whether someone understood the bigger picture — how the company made decisions, how budgets worked, and when to make their ask.

In 2025, those dynamics matter more than ever.

What many employees don't realize about today's market

Right now, there are more qualified people competing for jobs in nearly every type of function and company than I've seen in years. Hiring has slowed sharply across sectors, even while companies still post roles. Economic growth is tepid, inflation and interest rates remain headwinds, and many businesses are holding the line on workforce expansion.

I recently spoke with a recruiter who told me that for single midlevel strategy and marketing roles at a consumer brand and a tech company, she had several dozen resumés from candidates with top-tier experience applying for each. Employers know this gives them leverage.

This has two realities for people already with jobs. First, companies feel less urgency to stretch compensation to keep you because they know strong replacements are ready and willing. Second, if you do decide to leave, they may see it as a cost-saving opportunity to eliminate your role or put someone less expensive in it.

This doesn't mean raises are off the table. It means you need to be thoughtful and self-aware about how you ask.

Make sure you know your pay band

Most organizations have pre-determined compensation ranges for each employee level. Employees who hold a certain title need to be compensated somewhere within the range, or "pay band," for their title.

Ask HR or your manager where you fall within the pay range for your role. Even if that person won't share specifics, you're entitled to know whether there's room for a raise, assuming you hit certain objectives and the company is in a position to provide salary increases.

If you're already at the top of the range, focus on positioning yourself for the next level instead of pushing for more in the current one.

Don't treat base salary as the only leverage

I've seen employees become demoralized when their company denies a base salary increase, but they're missing out on other ways to increase their compensation.

At one retailer, an employee on my team asked for a raise during a year when the budget was tight. We couldn't adjust her salary, but I was able to secure a performance bonus and a retention incentive in the form of company stock. She ended up doing better financially over a three-year period than she would've done with the raise.

Ask about retention bonuses, project-based incentives, stock grants, or some kind of continuing education. Companies often have more flexibility outside base salary because they're less subject to pay bands and aren't increasing the baseline that you'll be paid each year going forward.

Consider the timing of your ask

As I've said before, this is one of the top mistakes I've seen people make in any market, and it applies even more so now.

I once had a high performer ask for a raise in the middle of a quarter when the business had just missed its numbers. Her case was good, but the timing made her seem oblivious to the reality.

If your boss is overwhelmed, the company is in crisis, or you've just missed a milestone, hold off. Wait until you've delivered a win, the business has breathing room, and decision-makers are in a better mindset to support you.

Use salary transparency data wisely

I've had employees overload my email inbox with screenshots from salary websites, attempting to make a case that they were underpaid. These sites are full of self-reported data that's rarely specific enough to the company, industry, scope of role, and geography at hand. Managers and HR leaders don't see them as credible.

Instead, use specific, verified data that's relevant to your exact situation, including anecdotes you can get from peers in your company and industry. That shows you've done your homework and positions you as a professional, not a complainer.

Further, think of it as a starting point for asking HR whether they're open to conducting a compensation assessment to determine whether you're eligible for a pay adjustment instead of acting like you're entitled to one.

Here's the best advice I give my coaching clients: Make yourself indispensable

That doesn't always mean working longer hours (although, let's be honest, sometimes it does). It means doing excellent work on projects that matter most to the company — and making sure the right people know about it.

Visibility and impact are what give you leverage. However, be forewarned that the appropriate way to raise your hand for work and then get credit for it looks different in every organization. Read the cultural and political cues so that you don't come across as someone who's always seeking the spotlight for themselves instead of for your team and for the work.

It may still be time to stop pushing and move on

Even with perfect timing and a strong business case, sometimes you'll keep hearing, "no." While you may want to be patient during this tight job market, if the goal posts keep moving, or you don't know what they are, it could be time to leave.

You deserve to know what success looks like in your role and what it will take to get to the next level. Raises are harder to come by right now, but they're not impossible.

If your company truly isn't willing or able to invest in you, take that as a sign. The best leverage you can have in your career is knowing when to stay — and whether to move on.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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加薪 薪酬谈判 职业发展 职场建议 Salary Negotiation Career Development Workplace Advice
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