Squished wrote: » Here's an even better question, when you give your salary, and you know it's within their salary range because position is a "graded" job that the ranges are publicly posted, and they tell you "that's on the high side" what do you do in that case? Continue or move on?
LeBroke wrote: » I think in that case you'd have to evaluate how much you want to work there... if it's a public position with publicly posted ranges, chances are it's a government (or similar) position, so benefits are probably really good.
gespenstern wrote: » There's that career advice from multiple people on the Internet who claim to be experts on this, to delay the salary negotiation using various tricks to the latest stage possible. The main argument is the later the stage the more expensive it is for the company to **** you, therefore, you get the leverage in negotiation. I'm pretty high in both position and salary range on this market and I can tell that this never worked for me so I consider this advice BS. I tried it and it just leads to wasted time. I have plenty of pings from recruiters almost everyday and to minimize time wasted I bluntly go to the salary question first or just don't reply/pick up as almost all good jobs come with a pay tag right away. If it's out of range -- it's the end of conversation. Maybe it's worth to use this advice on early stages of your career, who knows.