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Negotiating with Numbers, Not Feelings
Walking into a boss's office and saying "I feel I deserve a raise" is weak. Walking in with a spreadsheet showing your market value is strong.
The "Annual Value" Pitch
If you are an hourly worker making $20/hour, asking for "$2 more an hour" sounds small. But to a business, that is $4,160 a year. You need to justify the $4,160 value you bring, not just the $2.
The Script
"I've taken on X and Y responsibilities. This has saved the team about $10,000 in lost time this year. I'd like to adjust my rate to reflect that value."
Using Commute Time as leverage
If a new job offer is $1/hour more but adds 30 minutes to your commute each way, do the math:
- 1 hour/day extra travel = 5 hours/week unpaid.
- At $20/hour, that's $100/week of "lost time."
You can use this to negotiate a higher rate: "I'd love to join, but the commute adds 5 hours to my week. Can we bridge that gap with a higher starting rate?"
Conclusion
Employers speak the language of annual budgets. Translate your hourly requests into their language to get what you want.
