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Knowing your worth: The whys and hows of salary negotiations

Don鈥檛 leave money on the table.

05/15/2019 2:35 PM

Don鈥檛 leave money on the table.

New college graduates hear this often when beginning a job search, but negotiating over salary, especially in a first job, can be daunting. That鈥檚 why Amy Scott, director of the Women鈥檚 and Gender Studies (WGS) Program and associate professor of history, has worked with colleagues to assemble a team of experts to coach students in this essential skill.

In 2014, using materials from AAUW鈥檚 鈥淪tart Smart鈥 Salary Negotiation program, WGS partnered with the Smith Career Center (SCC) to host workshops. Since then, 750 students 鈥 women and men representing all five colleges 鈥 have completed Start Smart.

鈥淥ur certified facilitators explain the gender wage gap, introduce tools for researching salary benchmarks and ranges, coach students on persuasive responses to use in salary negotiation, and provide opportunities to role play and practice newly learned salary negotiation skills,鈥 Scott said.

Kate Mendham 鈥18 took the workshop twice: once as a sophomore and once closer to graduation. She used the techniques not only to negotiate salaries in two internships, but in making a case for scholarships from law schools. 鈥淚 learned not to undervalue myself. That I am qualified and deserve the job. That it鈥檚 OK to negotiate 鈥 and how to do it.鈥

Nine facilitators from three colleges and the SCC teach the 2.5-hour workshops in teams of three. Hampton Inn-Hilton Hotels, also facilitate. The program has allowed students to collaborate with employees from Caterpillar Inc. and the United Way.

Scott said the SCC is 鈥渁n equal partner鈥 in Start Smart, providing funds and administrative support to market and run it. 鈥淭hey also secured corporate sponsorship from leaders at Auto-Owners Insurance, who provide food and send a manager to every workshop to offer a corporate perspective on the nuances of the interviewing and negotiation process.鈥

An example of the interdepartmental collaboration the Women鈥檚 and Gender Studies program has always championed, the salary negotiation training has been an unqualified success.

鈥淣inety percent of our participants say they鈥檙e more confident they鈥檒l be able to negotiate a fair salary and benefits package,鈥 Scott said. 鈥淲e just renewed the university鈥檚 three-year license with the AAUW, and plan to deliver Start Smart to 250 more 爱豆传媒视频 students by 2020.鈥