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(knocking)
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(bell ringing)
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- Come on in!
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(upbeat music)
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Salary Negotiation, phew.
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You did it, you've just landed your dream job
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after so many phone calls, hundreds of resumes submitted,
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dozens of interviews and finally, you got the job.
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And now you need to negotiate your salary.
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Maybe you are a little bit scared, little bit afraid,
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little bit intimidated.
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Or maybe you've been with the company for some time now
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for a few years, and now you want to go in
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and talk to your employer about a higher pay,
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a higher salary.
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What do you do?
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You see most of the information out there
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is sharing with you how do you negotiate salary,
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is coming from an employer perspective.
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Today I'm going to do something very different.
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I'm going to share with you coming from a CEO perspective
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how do you negotiate salary?
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How do you talk to a CEO, how do you convince a CEO?
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How do you read their mind?
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You see, the problem with most employees is,
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they either ask for a salary increase too soon
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meaning they have not established a track record,
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a performance record, what they have done, too early.
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You see you don't get higher pay because you demand it.
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You get higher pay because you deserve it.
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Or they ask for it too late,
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meaning they have been with a company three, four, five,
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six, seven years but very little increase in pay.
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So you don't want to do it too early,
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you don't want to do it too late.
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You see as the creator of High-Ticket Closer program,
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it's one of the programs I teach to people around the world,
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teaching people the art of closing.
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How to get people to say yes more often to you.
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I'm gonna take some of those ideas and I'm gonna teach you
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how do you actually close your CEO.
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How do you close your supervisor.
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How do you close your employer to give you higher pay.
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Salary negotiation tip number one,
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do not try to negotiate salary increase in text or in email.
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You see most employees, they're afraid, they're afraid
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to sit down face to face or get on the phone
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with your employer, talk about your pay increase,
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because they lack confidence, they lack self-esteem.
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You don't want to do that, because when you ask for salary
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when you're negotiating salary,
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when you do it through an email
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it's very easy to communicate the wrong way.
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It's very easy to come across too aggressive.
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Maybe that's not your intent, but reading,
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you cannot communicate your tone, your emotions.
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So do your very best, if you could, do it face to face
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or do it through a telephone.
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Now you've got all the tools working for you
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instead of working against you.
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You can use your emotions, you can use your tonality,
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you can use your body language to communicate.
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Eye contact, to demonstrate, to show your confidence,
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you need to be confident when you are going
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into a salary negotiation.
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So don't be afraid.
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You wanna practice ahead of the time.
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Right?
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To practice multiple times.
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Maybe with your friends, maybe with your coworkers,
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your family members.
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You practiced that ahead of the time.
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And when you go in there, you've done it dozens
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and dozens of times.
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You're ready, whatever objections that you may face,
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you're ready to go.
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- I'd like to report a boom, yes.
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For HTC, I would like to thank everybody
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for your support, Mr. Dan Lok for the knowledge,
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Desmond, Tina, all the team and of course to family
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without you this wouldn't be possible.
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- My name is Santino Carangi and I am here
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to celebrate my first three booms
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of being a High Ticket Closer.
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So thankful for this course,
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not only does it give you a high ticket skill
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or a high income skill,
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what Sifu teaches you is for life.
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I am so excited, you guys can do it,
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keep up the training, keep up the hard work,
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believe in yourself,
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kick lower self in the balls, okay.
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This is your life, go kill it.
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We are in this for life; HTC for life baby.
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Season nine fam signing out, best of luck to you.
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We got a billion sales,
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let's crank it to two billion baby, come on,
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you are closer than you think.
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- Salary negotiation tip number two;
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come to the meeting with facts and not feelings.
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You see, most employees they make this mistake,
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they come to the meeting,
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sitting down with the manager or CEO
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and they say something like this;
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well I feel like I have been around a long time,
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I feel like I've been contributing,
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that I feel like I've been working hard, and then,
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I feel like I deserve more pay.
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That does not work, because that's feeling.
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Well, we don't care how you feel, you gotta come
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to the meeting with facts.
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What have you done?
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You should do your research ahead of time.
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What are some of the contributions you've made
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to the company?
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So when you sit down with your employer,
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you're not just talking about feelings,
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you're presenting, kind of almost like a case,
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like a lawyer, and let's say hypothetically
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you are a social media manager.
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You manage the company's social media account.
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You go to the CEO with facts and say
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okay since my employment here, here's what I've done.
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I have grown the company's Instagram account
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by 527% since I was here.
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Here are the things that I've done.
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The Facebook page, using my social media strategies
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and my contribution this is what,
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how much money I have made the company,
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how much money I've saved the company.
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Now the CEO may or may not know these things,
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so when you present a case, now you're speaking from facts.
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You are demonstrating,
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look these are the contributions that I have made
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to the company in the last one year,
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two years, things like that.
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Or, if this is a brand new job it is exactly the same thing.
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Now you're presenting what are some of the things
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that you could do.
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Right, what are some of the things that your employer,
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new employer, could expect from you.
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You are going in instead of well, I guess it depends
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on what you want me to do
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and I'll do my best to do it, no,
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you're saying these are things that I think we could do.
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This is my plan.
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This is how I'm planning to make the company more money,
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this is my plan to generate more revenue,
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this is my plan to bring in more customers,
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this is my plan how I could make things better.
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You see the difference.
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So come to the meeting with facts and not feelings.
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Salary negotiation tip number three,
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Ask questions, don't make statements.
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During a negotiation you don't just want
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to keep making statements.
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Because it will sound like and feel like you are justifying.
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You're saying, oh, here's what I've done,
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and here are the things, and here's what's going on,
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and all those are good, you're presenting your case,
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but you always want to be asking questions.
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One of the things I teach all my students,
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all the professionals that I mentor, is this;
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Whoever asks the questions, controls the conversation.
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So you wanna be asking leading questions,
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discovery questions, probing questions,
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you're asking your employer, by getting more information,
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by kinda gauging how they're feeling
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about the different requests that you might have.
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Instead of just making a statement and then
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it's very easy to turn in to an argument
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or some kind of conflict
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when you're just throwing statements out there.
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But when you're asking questions
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it would feel much more like a collaboration effort;
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that we're on the same page, right.
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As employee employer we're on the same page,
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how could we make this work?
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So, ask questions, don't make statements.
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Salary negotiation tip number four and that is
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set the agenda.
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Don't be afraid to set the agenda.
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What that means is, where is this gonna go,
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what is the purpose of this meeting,
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what is the outcome,
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what are we trying to accomplish?
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As the employee you wanna set the agenda,
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set the tone, right.
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What are we trying to accomplish here?
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What is the outcome we want from this meeting?
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So you could say something like this,
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I'm gonna give you a little script;
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Mr. Employer, you know I'm very excited
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to be joining your company,
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I'm truly excited about this opportunity,
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and I look forward, very much look forward
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to working alongside with your amazing team.
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Do you mind if we talk about compensation for a second?
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See how I ask a question?
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Oh, not a problem, shoot.
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Talk about compensation.
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You see, Mr. Employer, based on my research,
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for someone with highers, with my background
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and credentials and my skill sets,
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the market rate is X-amount of dollars, this much per year.
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How do you feel about that?
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You see how I'm asking a question,
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how do you feel about that?
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Would you be comfortable with that?
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And then right from there the CEO, the employer,
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will say well, you know what,
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yeah that's kinda what I'm thinking, as well.
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Or they might say that's a little bit more,
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that's a little bit higher than what we have budgeted for.
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But then you're not guessing,
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you're not afraid to say
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hey this is what the market rate is,
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this is what industry rate is, how do you feel about that?
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That's it.
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You set the agenda.
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And you go from there.
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Salary negotiation tip number five,
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and that is don't be needy.
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Needy is creepy.
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You don't wanna sit down,
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face to face with your employer,
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and be all needy about what you want.
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That is a big turn off.
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So do not use words like, oh I want, or I need,
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I see this a lot.
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Your job pays you $50,000 a year,
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and you actually wanna make $55,000 dollars a year.
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So there's a five thousand dollar gap.
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Instead of saying oh, I need another $5,000
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a year for my position, right.
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Or I want big vacation pay, I want overtime,
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or I need this and I need that,
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it's a big turn off for the employer.
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Nobody gives a shit what you need, right.
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What you wanna do is you want to ask questions with finesse.
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Be on the same page.
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A much more powerful thing you could say is,
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I would be more comfortable with.
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You see the difference,
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I want this, I would be more comfortable with.
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So example.
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Let's say the job you want $55,000 and the job pays $50,000.
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First of all you could say well,
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is there any flexibility with that?
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Is there any flexibility with that?
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See how powerful that question is?
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And then you could say that, you know I would be,
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I would be more comfortable with 55K a year.
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Would you be comfortable with that?
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How do you feel about that?
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Do you hear the difference?