4 Benefits You Can Negotiate (and How to Do It!)
Eileen Hoenigman Meyer
Eileen Hoenigman Meyer, Author at Glassdoor US | Mar 9, 2018
1. COBRA
One benefit that Kuntzmann notes may be worth pursuing is COBRA benefits. This is short-term healthcare that covers you and your family during transitional times. Kuntzmann points out: “If you are between jobs or are leaving your current job for a new role, you may ask for your cost of COBRA to be covered by your new employer until your medical benefits go live.”2. Telecommuting
Telecommuting can help foster fit for many employees. But some employers have not caught the wave. Maybe it doesn’t suit their business model, or their leadership isn’t open to it. Telecommuting can be a great job perk, but if you’re targeting it as a key benefit for job fit, it’s in your best interest to learn whether or not your prospects are open to it. If you learn that it’s an option, Kuntzmann offers this advice for negotiating a telecommuting arrangement: “The key to remote work or telecommuting is to be specific — is it one day a week or one day a month?"3. PTO
PTO is commonly negotiated as a means to better foster job fit. Kuntzmann explains: “PTO is what I’m most often asked to negotiate. Some companies have ranges that they offer based upon tenure, and others may allow you to use time already allotted for a personal vacation that’s already been paid for without utilizing paid time as part of your offer negotiation.”4. Bonus or Stock Pay
Kuntzmann explains that if you’re going after a particular benefit when you negotiate your salary, don’t assume that you need to accept a lower base pay to negotiate that benefit. However, this might be true in the case of additional compensation. Kuntzmann explains: “I’ve often negotiated higher bonus or higher stock for a candidate for a lower base pay.” So if you find that the base pay offered is lower than what you’d expected, it might make sense to negotiate for an additional bonus or stock. Remember — negotiations are a collaboration, not a contest. “I always appreciate creative requests,” Kuntzmann says. When it’s time to negotiate, be prepared, be gracious and be confident — you can do this!Browse Open Jobs
Eileen Hoenigman Meyer
Eileen Hoenigman Meyer has been coaching job seekers since she started writing for Glassdoor’s blog in 2016. Her articles about job search strategy, interview preparation, communication, leadership, and workplace culture have appeared in Fast Company, CNBC, NBC News, Yahoo News, Entrepreneur, Thrive Global, and PopSugar. Eileen has two English degrees, and she’s a former writing teacher. After working in the non-profit sector for more than a decade, Eileen has plenty of experience interviewing job candidates. Much of what she shares with Glassdoor’s readers is what she wishes she could have whispered to some of those candidates during their interviews; she’s always been rooting for job seekers.
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