40 years old, no retirement savings, $95k income — what's actually possible?
Here's what I've learned about negotiating your salary when you don't have a competing offer.
A competing offer is the strongest negotiation leverage, but most people don't have one every time they negotiate. Here's what to do without it.
First, research thoroughly. Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, Levels.fyi, and direct conversations with peers in other companies give you a market rate range. This external data is your leverage — not the emotional case for why you deserve more, but the factual case for what the market pays.
Second, time the conversation deliberately. Annual reviews are the expected moment; after a significant project win is often better. Asking for a raise two months after a project failure is negotiating from weakness.
Third, make the ask concrete and market-anchored. 'I'd like to discuss my compensation. Based on my research, the market rate for this role and experience level in this area is $X to $Y, and I'm currently below that range. I'd like to get to [specific number].' Then stop talking.
Fourth, accept that the answer may be no. In that case, ask what would need to change for the answer to be yes next time, get that in writing if possible, and evaluate whether the answer is satisfactory.
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