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💼 Career
Card 08
🤝 💰 ⚖️ 🎯

Why do most people leave money on the table by not negotiating—and how do you negotiate well?

💭 How to Think About This

Studies show that not negotiating your starting salary can cost hundreds of thousands over a career. Yet most people accept first offers. Why is negotiation so uncomfortable, and what makes it effective?

🔒 Start writing to unlock hints

Common barriers:
• Fear of seeming greedy or difficult
• Don't want to risk the offer
• Assume the offer is final
• Feel grateful just to be chosen
• Lack practice and scripts
Reality: Employers expect negotiation. Not asking often leaves value unclaimed.

BATNA = Best Alternative To Negotiated Agreement
• Your walkaway option
• The stronger your BATNA, the more power you have
• Always know your BATNA before negotiating
• Never reveal a weak BATNA
• Work on improving your BATNA
Power comes from options, not aggression.

Key principles:
• ANCHOR first when possible (higher anchors pull up)
• Focus on INTERESTS, not positions
• Use OBJECTIVE CRITERIA (market data, benchmarks)
• Ask for more than you expect (leave room)
• Practice saying numbers out loud (reduces discomfort)
• Silence is powerful—pause after asking

Negotiation isn't adversarial:
• Frame as problem-solving together
• "How can we make this work for both of us?"
• Seek win-win, expand the pie
• Be firm on your interests, flexible on how
• Build the relationship, not just the deal
Long-term relationships matter more than one deal.

Negotiation skill is learnable, employers expect it, and not negotiating has massive compound costs over a career!

Key insight: Negotiation is a skill, not a personality trait. Know your BATNA, anchor appropriately, use objective criteria, and frame it as collaborative problem-solving. The discomfort of asking is temporary; the cost of not asking lasts.

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

Two identical candidates. Same offer: $65,000.
Candidate A: "Thank you! I accept!"
Candidate B: "I'm excited about this role. Based on my research and the value I'll bring, I was hoping for $72,000."
HR: "We can do $69,000."
20 years later: $100,000+ lifetime difference.
One conversation. Permanent impact.

See more guidance →

Key concepts: BATNA, anchoring, principled negotiation (Getting to Yes), salary negotiation, total compensation.