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| quote: | Originally posted by Moral Hazard
Again, my advice remains; unless you are absolutely committed to leaving if you don't get what you want (and you don't care about burning bridges) then demanding a raise by exploiting the situation is a bad idea. |
I had a situation a couple years ago where I had a client give me an unsolicited written offer which was around 25k per year more than i was currently making for a position that was, in my opinion slightly out of my experience range at the time. I took that offer to my director and was completely honest that while i acknowledged the offered position was out of my current experience range, my market value was clearly above what i was currently being paid. The director was able to meet me half way within 4 hours which was still completely reasonable for me. 12.5k increase without burning bridges or making threats.
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| quote: | Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
I have 3 hobbies: gaming, DJing & correcting maladjusted fools on the internet. |
| quote: | Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
Yeah, I’d like to know what horrible, scarring incident in your childhood turned you into such an ignorant, intellectual-hating philistine? |
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