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4 May 2022
Reading time: 5 minutes
Posted
by
Anika Forsman
, 237 Comments
With the rising costs of living, talk of the ‘great resignation’ and a talent shortage to boot, is now the right time to ask for that raise, or go large on negotiations if you’ve landed that new role?
For many women asking to be paid what they are worth makes for a challenging, sometimes uncomfortable conversation. And for some, asking about pay can be difficult or inappropriate due to a range of cultural and personal reasons.
When Sarah landed her dream role, she had already asked what the salary band was, and knew she needed to negotiate the best deal possible once she had the offer.
“In the past I’ve not felt comfortable asking for more money and often regretted it. I know now that negotiation is a standard part of the recruitment process,” she says.
“I am also conscious that future pay increases are usually going to be capped, so if you don’t get within a decent ballpark of what you want at contract signing time, it will take a while to get there once you are in the role.”
Dr Jo Cribb, co-founder of Mind the Gap and co-author of Take Your Space: Successful Women Share Their Secrets, says it pays to know what you’re worth before you hit the negotiating table.
“Do your research. Talk to recruiters to get a benchmark for what similar roles and skillsets are paying, or check out other jobs being advertised. Chat to your peers or people you know in the industry,” she says.
“Talking about pay is uncomfortable, but we all have the right to ask. Once you know what you’re worth, have the confidence to highlight this to your prospective employer.”
Most employers will have some wriggle room on what they offer, but it pays to consider the full package and not just the pay. It’s a good idea to weigh up what is also important to you. That might be flexibility, staff benefits like higher contributions to KiwiSaver, extended parental leave or professional development opportunities.
Check out our KiwiSaver calculator to see what the difference can be if you’re employer contributes 6% compared to 3% to your balance over time. This can really add up!
The ‘great resignation’ or ‘great reshuffle’ is making headlines, with reports of millions of people chucking in their jobs around the world for other opportunities.
It’s certainly causing many employers to stop and think about the best ways they can retain their staff – and they’re thinking more broadly than what they can pay their people.
For the most part coming in cold and asking for a pay raise is probably not the best approach. You really want to hinge it on performance or if you’ve ended up taking on more responsibilities. Have a read of your company’s renumeration policy and practices. Often the best time to do this is around annual performance reviews.
You can apply some of the same approaches you use when negotiating a new role. Do a bit of research to know what you’re worth, but use the added weight of being able to demonstrate what you’ve achieved in your current role to make your case.
A top media exec, who has done her fair share of hiring people and performance reviews, recommends coming armed with a list of your achievements and some clear points about why you deserve to be paid more.
She would like to see more women having the confidence to ask for what they’re worth.
“In my experience as a manager, men don’t think twice about asking for more money, but frustratingly women just aren’t asking like their male counterparts. I’ve seen plenty of scenarios where women are happy to accept an offer for the same role at a lower salary to a male candidate, who will almost always try and push it up.”
Across the board, Kiwis generally don’t like talking about money – particularly sharing what each of us get paid. This culture of pay secrecy is doing nothing to help the close the gender and ethnic pay gaps experienced by women, Māori and Pacific Peoples.
According to Stats NZ, the gender pay gap is 9.1% and has remained stubbornly around 9-10% for the last decade.
Jo says if we can start normalising conversations about pay and pay gaps, we will encourage greater transparency and we can bridge the pay disparities in Aotearoa.
“Not talking about pay gaps makes it worse. About 20% of the gender pay gap in Aotearoa New Zealand can be accounted for by differences between men and women in education, occupation choice, age, type of work and family responsibilities.
“The remaining 80% cannot be easily explained other than by behaviour, attitudes and assumptions about women in work, including unconscious bias and discrimination.
“We want an Aotearoa New Zealand where everyone is paid fairly for their work, where pay discrimination based on ethnicity, gender or ability no longer exists.”
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Comments (237)
Comments
5 May 22
Amanda
I have asked for a raise and negotiated my salary on a number of occasions throughout my career. It takes quite a bit of courage and can feel uncomfortable, but you HAVE to ask, and persevere, when you don’t feel like you are being paid what you are worth!
5 May 22
Alice
Yes I have once negotiated my teacher's salary whilst living in the UK. I felt awkward and "naughty" though. My principal, who was also a woman, was shocked I'd negotiated also!
5 May 22
I have asked for a raise but was told nothing could happen due to the public sector pay freeze.
5 May 22
No I don't have the nerve! I'm a student again for now tho. I will be saving this for when I go back to working!
5 May 22
Belinda
I have asked for a pay rise. I didnt get it. I was ignored by the employers and resigned two weeks later.
I have also challenged my superior when she was negotiating with me – and I got the rate I wanted.
5 May 22
Deb
I've never asked for a raise, even when I probably should have. I'd love to get the skills to do this confidently.
5 May 22
Cat
Once in three years I have asked for, and received, a pay rise in my current role. I am in the performance appraisal process again at the moment but am nervous about asking again. I wish it was a standard part of the process to discuss it and not up to me to bring it up.
5 May 22
Megan
I've never asked for a raise, I guess it's never crossed my mind to think to ask, nor think that I am worth more. So this would be a great read. The only pay increases I've received a from changing jobs
5 May 22
Of course I had to negotiate many times! Sometimes being a migrant it makes it harder to get a fair salary.
5 May 22
Kirsty
I've never asked for a raise – I'm always too scared. So my pay raises have only come from changing jobs and negotiating salary – which I'm not very good at!
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