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I have been in HR for many years and handle all recruiting for my company. I always ask a candidate during our initial conversation what they are earning in their current (or previous) position and what their salary expectations are. What really bothers me is when I receive the following replies:
- my salary expecations are flexible (this tells me nothing)
- the position and company are more important than compensation (again, this tells me nothing)
- well what is the salary range for the position (ok, this is a question not an answer)
- at this point in the process I don't want to share that information with you (don't waste my time getting to a further point in the process)
- I would need to better understand the position requirements and benefits before I could answer this (baloney)
I wouldn't ask the question unless I wanted to know the real answer. Drives me crazy. What's the big secret -everyone has a range they are willing to work for. I'm not interested in playing games.
If you're recruiting them, why can't you pony up a salary range? Why is it not right for them to ask what the range is? Why wouldn't that be disclosed to them prior to the interview? I couldn't imagine a situation when there was no set salary range for a role- There's always a range or at least a top end figure.
How would you expect for someone to tell you what they would be willing to work for without them knowing the scope/responsibilities of the role? I know I wouldn't be doing manual labour at the same rate that I'm golfing for... It's all relative.
I don't think it's about candidates having a secret- it's about getting a fair/good offer.
Now if they weren't willing to disclose their current salary I could understand why you'd be aprehensive to continue with the process, but I see these statements being somewhat hypocritical and one sided.
Wendy Pugh said:I have been in HR for many years and handle all recruiting for my company. I always ask a candidate during our initial conversation what they are earning in their current (or previous) position and what their salary expectations are. What really bothers me is when I receive the following replies:
- my salary expecations are flexible (this tells me nothing)
- the position and company are more important than compensation (again, this tells me nothing)
- well what is the salary range for the position (ok, this is a question not an answer)
- at this point in the process I don't want to share that information with you (don't waste my time getting to a further point in the process)
- I would need to better understand the position requirements and benefits before I could answer this (baloney)
I wouldn't ask the question unless I wanted to know the real answer. Drives me crazy. What's the big secret -everyone has a range they are willing to work for. I'm not interested in playing games.
I am a recruiter in corporate HR. For candidates that I source, I initiate the salary discussion during the first phone call. If the salary isn't a fit on either side, there is no point in wasting the candidate's time or mine. If the candidate comes from an agency, the salary discussion between me and the agency rep happens before I present the candidate to the manager, for the same reason given above.
I, too, am a corporate recruiter and I agree w/David as that is my policy as well. Why waste anyone's time if even that basic point is not a match???
David George said:I am a recruiter in corporate HR. For candidates that I source, I initiate the salary discussion during the first phone call. If the salary isn't a fit on either side, there is no point in wasting the candidate's time or mine. If the candidate comes from an agency, the salary discussion between me and the agency rep happens before I present the candidate to the manager, for the same reason given above.
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