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Experts
Tips on How to Ask Your Employer for a Raise
by: John Mckee
:::Business
Success Coach offers advice on how to get paid what
youre worth:::
Weve
all done it - played that movie over and over in our
minds of our confident entry into the boss office
and asking for - no, demanding that elusive pay
raise. However deserved, however, reality often plays
out far differently, with many relegating themselves
to their boss budgetary discretion.
Yes,
asking for a raise can be tricky as there are so many
factors that come into play: the business culture, company
policies regarding regular job assessments and wage
reviews, and the subjectivity of your boss. Asking for
a raise can be more than anxiety provoking
it can
be downright depressing. So, what are the throngs of
underpaid, though deserving, employees throughout corporate
America to do?
John
McKee, a Certified Business and Executive Coach and
Author of 21 Ways Women in Management Shoot Themselves
in the Foot, who has received, denied and granted literally
thousands of pay raise requests throughout his management
career, offers these potentially profitable insights:
For
those employed in companies with policies regarding
wage reviews, the first thing is to find out how frequently
those are supposed to occur. In most large companies,
it will be an annual activity with the HR department
providing supervisors with guidelines for how to appraise
individuals, and what type of increases are appropriate
based on how the employee is rated for performance,
attitude and potential growth on the job in the future.
If you are involved in this type of organization, you
should take advantage of the formality and regularity
of the wage/performance review annual event by preparing
a self-assessment of your own job performance. This
self appraisal should be honest - if you have areas
that could be better, you should exactly what, and how,
you intend to improve, including recommendations for
any additional training that could enhance your performance.
It is also important you note any and all accomplishments
along with specific measurements and dates in case the
boss may overlook or forget about those highlights.
Many
companies - particularly small or new ones - will not
have formalized policies regarding annual assessments
and/or pay raises. This can be both good and bad. It's
great if the company is led by someone who is enlightened
and recognizes individual contributions, and rewards
or compensates employees accordingly. However, those
who are not lucky enough to have such intuitive bosses
and feel they are not making the kind of money they
should be should request a meeting with the boss to
specifically discuss performance and commensurate compensation.
It
is important not to get over zealous and storm in to
the boss office demanding a raise (as empowering
as that fantasy is), as doing so will put the boss in
a defensive mode that is not conducive to a positive
discussion
outcome. Simply tell the boss you would
like to discuss the subject, and ask when it would be
convenience for him or her to do so. Then, prepare!
Before the meeting you should have a complete record
of what and how you've done since the last raise, wherever
possible citing specific metric results related thereto,
with dates, to show that your merit is not subjective,
but rather based on performance fact.
While
some may feel this next piece of advice is counter productive,
I do recommend that you offer to give this self-assessment
to your boss before the meeting so he or she can understand
your point of view and prepare accordingly. By no means
is this telling the enemy your strategy, rendering your
defeat inevitable. Rather, I believe that in any negotiation
- and this is a real negotiation for you
- it is best to lay out your cards in an honest and
forthright manner. If the boss wants to keep you happy
and on staff, your information will help him or her
understand your value in undeniable terms. If, on the
other hand, the boss has no intention of rewarding you
in a manner that you feel is fair and appropriate, he
or she will always find a way to justify that decision.
So, providing the boss with your input prior to meeting
will only make it easier to find out the ultimate, final
outcome and you can make an educated decision
regarding your future with that company, accordingly.
About
The Author
John McKee, a certified business and executive coach
and Author of 21 Ways Women in Management Shoot
Themselves in the Foot, is the expert and visionary
behind BusinessSuccessCoach.net, an online destination
for professionals who aspire to maximize their success
in business. He can be reached through his Web sites
at www.businesssuccesscoach.net and www.businesswomanweb.com.
mailto:john@businesssuccesscoach.com
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