Research by Glassdoor found that 59% of UK workers accepted the first salary offered without negotiating. Over a career, this can cost you hundreds of thousands of pounds. A £3,000 raise at age 30 — compounded through future raises, pension contributions, and career progression — is worth over £100,000 by retirement. Yet most people don't negotiate because they don't know how or they fear the conversation. The truth is that employers expect negotiation, budgets often have flexibility, and the worst they can say is no. Here's exactly how to do it.
When to Negotiate
- •New job offer: after written offer, before signing
- •Annual review: prepare 2–4 weeks in advance
- •After completing a major project or taking on new duties
- •12+ months without a raise
- •NOT during layoffs, restructuring, or your first 6 months
- •Best day: Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday (avoid Monday/Friday)
Can a new employer withdraw an offer if I negotiate?+
In practice, this almost never happens. Employers expect negotiation and budget for it. As long as you're polite, reasonable, and professional, negotiating is seen as a sign of confidence, not greed.
Preparing Your Case
- •Research market rates on Glassdoor, Reed, LinkedIn
- •Document your achievements with specific numbers
- •Quantify your value: revenue, savings, efficiency gains
- •Know your target salary, realistic range, and walk-away point
- •Consider total compensation: pension, benefits, holidays, flexibility
- •Prepare for common pushback questions
The Conversation: Scripts That Work
- •Start with gratitude and enthusiasm
- •State your research and specific number/range
- •Use 'we' language: 'Can we discuss...', 'Is there flexibility...'
- •Reference specific achievements and market data
- •If they say no to salary, negotiate benefits, holiday, or flexible working
- •Get the final agreement in writing
What if they say the budget is fixed?+
Ask: 'I understand budget constraints. Could we revisit this in 6 months with specific goals I need to meet for a raise? Also, is there flexibility on other benefits — additional holiday days, flexible working, or a signing bonus?'
After the Raise: Make It Count
- •Don't inflate your lifestyle to match the raise
- •Save at least 50% of the net increase
- •Increase pension contributions (tax-efficient)
- •Top up ISA or investment contributions
- •Set up new savings transfers before the first new payslip
- •Track the impact of your raise in SYM
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