The biggest mistake I see candidates make is answering the salary question before they understand the full scope of the role. After coaching thousands of job seekers through negotiations, my go-to advice is this: delay the number as long as you can without being evasive. When a recruiter asks early on, I recommend something like, "I'd love to learn more about the responsibilities and team structure before discussing compensation -- could you share the budgeted range for this role?" This does two things: it signals you're serious about fit, not just pay, and it shifts the anchoring power back to you. About 70% of the time in my experience, the recruiter will share their range first, which is exactly where you want to be. If they push, and some will, give a researched range rather than a single number. I tell my clients to say, "Based on my research and experience, I'm targeting the $X to $Y range, but I'm open to discussing total compensation once I understand the full picture." The key word is "targeting" -- it's softer than "expecting" and leaves room to negotiate without boxing yourself in. One thing that catches people off guard: the salary question in a phone screen is often just a screening tool, not a negotiation. Recruiters want to confirm you're in the ballpark before investing time. So don't overthink it at that stage. Save the real negotiation for after they've decided they want you -- that's when your leverage is highest.
When salary comes up early in the process, I always advise people to remember that timing matters. Early conversations are about fit and scope, not numbers. If you lock yourself into a figure before you fully understand the expectations, reporting structure, and performance metrics, you're negotiating in the dark. The approach I've seen work best is to answer with context, not a hard number. Something along the lines of: "I'd like to understand the full scope of the role and how success is defined before settling on a specific number, but based on similar positions, I'd expect to be in the range of X to Y." That keeps the conversation open without undervaluing yourself. As someone who has hired at multiple levels, I can say that rigidity early on is usually a red flag. Flexibility, paired with clarity, signals professionalism. If a candidate gives a thoughtful range and explains what drives it experience, complexity of the role, leadership responsibility it makes the discussion collaborative rather than adversarial. It's also important to know your floor before you walk into the conversation. That's private. You don't share your minimum; you share your target range. There's a difference. The key is to protect your range without turning it into a negotiation standoff. If both sides treat compensation as part of a broader value conversation, it usually lands where it should.
When I get asked about salary expectations early, I try not to answer with a single number too quickly. Early in the process, I usually do not have enough information yet about scope, success metrics, reporting line, or total package. If I answer too early, I risk pricing myself out or underselling myself. My goal is to stay open, but not vague. The approach that works best for me is to first ask for context, then share a range. I usually say something like: "I'm open, but I'd like to anchor this to the role scope, location, and total compensation. Can you share the budgeted range for the position?" That keeps the conversation professional and saves time for both sides. If they insist that I go first, I give a range, not a fixed figure, and I explain the logic. My phrasing is usually: "Based on what I understand so far, and current market rates for this level of responsibility, I'd be looking in the range of X to Y. That said, I'd want to assess the full package, growth opportunity, and role expectations before confirming." This protects my range while showing flexibility and maturity. What I avoid is sounding defensive or transactional. The tone matters. I keep it calm and collaborative, because this is not a negotiation fight yet. It is an alignment check. The best salary conversations happen when both sides are transparent early, instead of trying to win the first question.
As the founder of The Salary Negotiator(r) (https://www.thesalarynegotiator.com/), I help hundreds of career professionals each year navigate salary negotiations, comp discussions, career transitions, and company benefits. I've provided my comments on how to navigate the salary expectations conversation but let me know if you have any questions or wish to connect: In my experience, I've found that sharing your salary expectations can work against you in receiving a fair offer. They might tell you that if your compensation expectations are known then they can try to find the best deal for both you and the company. But we know that they're working for the company, not you. If you share a lower compensation than what they could offer, they are more likely to offer you that low compensation or possibly down level you. If you throw out a number higher than what they could offer, there is the chance that they could become disinterested and decide to go a different route. Also, it doesn't make sense to discuss compensation before you learn more about the role, the company benefits, the compensation breakdown, plus whether those aspects feel like a good fit for you. If they do press you for your salary expectations, I suggest using the below response to turn the questions back on the recruiter before you receive the offer details. That way they will hopefully provide you with a general idea of the range and competitive offer instead of pressuring you by trying to get your comp expectations. Question: "What are your compensation expectations?" Response: "To be honest, I've put all my focus on interviewing for the role and not what the compensation should be at this point, so I do not feel comfortable sharing my compensation expectations. However, I'd love to understand from you what the planned compensation range is for this role." Question: "How do you feel about this range?" Response: "I think if it was towards the top end of that range, it might be acceptable. However, as I said earlier, I've put all my focus on interviewing for the job and not on what the compensation is at this point so I will need to review the complete offer in detail to see if I have any concerns. Once I receive the full offer package, I will review it in detail to ensure I'm also evaluating the benefits and not the salary alone. I am very excited about the opportunity and look forward to wrapping up the interviews and receiving an offer."
Hi, To protect my range early on, I shift the focus from a fixed number to a "total compensation framework" by asking, "Can you share the budgeted range for this role so I can ensure we're aligned on the full scope of the position?" This approach has helped me avoid underpricing myself, as it often reveals that the employer's ceiling is 10-15% higher than the "market average" I initially researched. If pressed, I provide a wide range—for example, $115k-$140k—contingent on the specifics of the bonus structure, equity, and healthcare premiums. This keeps the conversation positive by signaling flexibility while anchoring the discussion in a professional, data-backed bracket rather than a singular, vulnerable figure. As a career strategist at SellerPrism.agency, I've coached dozens of professionals through high-stakes negotiations to ensure their market value matches their final offer. Happy to provide more detail or specific "scripts" for these conversations if helpful. Best, Vitaliy Content Team, SellerPrism.agency
When asked about salary expectations early in the process, I first assess how much clarity I have about the role scope, performance expectations, and total compensation structure before committing to a specific number. If the role is not fully defined yet, I respond with a market-informed range based on responsibilities and explain that I am open to refining it once I understand the full package, including bonuses, equity, and growth opportunities. A phrasing that protects flexibility while keeping the conversation positive is to say that based on my research and experience level, I am targeting a range aligned with similar roles in the market, but I am most interested in finding a strong mutual fit and am open to discussing the complete compensation picture. This approach signals confidence and preparation without locking into a fixed number too early, and it keeps the discussion collaborative rather than transactional.
When salary expectations come up early, the goal is to stay open without locking yourself into a number that limits flexibility. The first step is preparation. You should know the market range for the role based on industry, geography, and experience level. That gives you confidence and prevents you from anchoring too low or too high. If asked early, a balanced response might be: "I'm still learning more about the scope of the role, so I'd like to understand responsibilities and growth path before finalizing a number. Based on my research and experience, I would expect something in the range of $X to $Y. I'm open to discussing the full compensation package." This approach protects your range in three ways. It signals that your number is market-informed, it gives a range rather than a fixed demand, and it keeps the conversation focused on total value, not just base salary. You can also ask: "Could you share the budgeted range or what someone in this role typically earns?" That keeps the discussion collaborative and grounded in data. The key is confidence without rigidity. You want to show you understand your value while leaving room to evaluate the complete opportunity.
As someone who works in recruitment, my advice to jobseekers is not to rush into giving a single number too early. Salary can depend on the full scope of the role, benefits, and growth opportunities, so it's important to keep the conversation open while still showing you've done your research. A good approach is to share a well-researched range rather than a fixed figure. For example: "Based on my experience and what I've seen for similar roles in the market, I'd be looking somewhere in the region of £X-£X, but I'm open to discussing the overall package depending on the responsibilities and benefits." This works well because it shows you understand your market value while still being flexible. It also keeps the tone positive and collaborative, which is important early in the interview process. From a recruiter's perspective, candidates who frame it this way protect their range while making it easier for everyone to see if expectations are aligned.
When determining the amount of content that you will provide and the various ways that you can provide that content, the most important step is to have a clear understanding of the specific issue or challenge for which you are being hired and your perspective on that issue. I routinely advise candidates to establish their salary expectations based upon their job description and knowledge of current salary data for similar types of jobs rather than based upon their prior salary level. In cases where the job description is not exact, one of the first strategic errors that candidates make is to provide a salary or compensation expectation without having first evaluated the complete scope of the position: i.e., the total responsibilities related to the position and the full benefits associated with the position. One effective way to communicate your salary expectation is by communicating the total value of the entire compensation package and how that total relates to the value that the new position would provide to you, and you could say something in this manner: "As a result of my research regarding similar leadership roles in this industry, I would anticipate a total compensation package of X to Y. However, I would appreciate an opportunity to learn more about the total scope of the position's responsibilities and growth opportunities before we finalize a total compensation figure." This type of communication demonstrates that you have accomplished your due diligence and are a professional; however, it also leaves the door open for increased total compensation in the event that the total requirements and/or complexities of the new role are greater than have been defined at this time. With the move toward pay transparency, which has become common practice with almost one-half of all job postings in the United States containing compensation ranges, the balance of power in the hiring process has shifted from a guess-based negotiation to an ability to substantiate or prove the total compensation. By providing a range of compensation, rather than a single compensation figure, you can protect your lower boundary and create an environment whereby both parties are utilizing the same partnership approach throughout the negotiations. In this manner, the candidates and hiring managers are focused on a mutually beneficial relationship and long-term value, rather than a one-time arisen-out-of-need situation.
Interviewers ask for your salary expectations early because they don't want to waste time interviewing people who expect a different salary. You want to delay the salary question until after you get the job offer. That's when you'll have the most leverage and can negotiate. Instead of answering, ask the interviewer what the salary range is and many times they will tell you. If they do answer, and it's what you're looking for or close, confirm by saying that's the range I'm looking for. If they won't give the salary range, you'll need to share a range based on your research. You can say something like, "Much would depend on the entire package but based on what I've seen for similar position, it seems that somewhere in the X to Y range would be reasonable." Make it a wide range and make sure you will accept the low end. Laura Browne offers training on how to get a raise or a higher starting salary at a new job at www.careercoffeebreak.com. She's author of Interview Speak: What Your Interviewer Really Wants To Know.
I recommend doing your research prior and seeing what a typical range for the role you are interviewing is - then I would say, "based on my research (or experience), a salary range for a position like this location in this region is $x-$x. Based on that, and considering my experience, education, etc., I would anticipate being at the middle or high end of that range." That keeps the conversation focused on what the role is worth and not what you've been paid in the past.
When a recruiter asks what you want to make early in the interview, my advice is simple: don't show your cards yet. The best answer is: "I'll consider your best offer." That's it. Short, polite, and it keeps you in a strong spot. You're not being rude. You're just being smart. The first person to say a number usually loses. Now, some recruiters will push back. They might say "we need a ballpark" or "we have a budget to work with." That's when you can say something like: "I'm currently at $100K, and I'd want to stay around that level or higher." This does a few things for you. It shows you're not desperate. It gives them just enough to know you're serious. And it keeps the door open without locking you into a low number before you've even had a chance to impress them. The key is to wait until they want you before you talk real numbers. Once they want you, you have power. Once you give a number too early, that power is gone. So keep it simple. Be polite. And most important - if at all possible - let them go first.
When discussing salary expectations early in a negotiation, I focus on leveraging all of my information as well any balance I have with the employer during that time. In doing so, I know the number they will present first creates the foundation for me to negotiate against as both the candidate and the employer, and therefore avoid being emotional or losing money in this process. For example, I will say, "I am flexible however, given my past experiences and what I have researched in today's market for this position, my numbers fall within the range X to Y. I'd still like to know the full responsibilities of the position and performance expectations before discussing final numbers, totally firming up numbers." This approach keeps our conversation strategic, creates a level of confidence around my range while re-establishing clarity around the role being filled and allows me continue to shift part of the conversation back towards clarification of the role. From an employer perspective, candidates using this approach appear more prepared and business-savvy as compared to candidates discussing compensation transactionally.
When they bring it up early, don't give them a number. That's how you start boxing yourself in. Keep it simple: "I'm excited about this opportunity, but I'd like to understand the whole scope and benefits first. Do you have a budgeted range?" That keeps it positive and puts it back on them. When they continue to press, give them a range, not a specific number. And the lowest number in that range should be a number you're comfortable with. No selling yourself short. Keep it a business conversation.
When compensation comes up early, I try to answer in a way that keeps trust high and options open. I don't want to dodge the question, but I also don't want to guess before I understand the real scope of the role. A title can mean very different things across companies, especially when the expectations, decision making authority, and growth goals are not yet clear. My approach is to be transparent about that while showing I'm serious about finding a fit. I usually say something along the lines of: "I'm definitely open to discussing compensation, and I want to be respectful of your process. At this stage, I'd prefer to understand the role in more detail so I can give a range that matches the level of responsibility. If you have a salary band in mind, I'm happy to respond to that." This phrasing keeps the conversation positive and practical, and it often encourages the employer to share their range first. If they need an answer immediately, I provide a considered range instead of a fixed number and make it clear that it depends on the full package and role expectations. That helps protect my position without creating tension, and it shows I'm approaching the discussion professionally rather than treating salary as the only factor.
I'm the founder/CEO of Evolve Physical Therapy in Brooklyn, and I've hired across new grads to senior clinicians with competitive salaries, incentives, health benefits, PTO, and 401K--so I've been on both sides of the "say a number early" trap. The best outcomes happen when expectations are anchored to role scope and total comp, not a single number blurted out in minute five. If they press early, I keep it positive and conditional: "I'm flexible on base depending on caseload expectations (1:1 vs high-volume), mentorship, growth path, and total comp (benefits/PTO/401K). Can you share the budgeted range for this role?" If they won't share, I give a tight range tied to market and my must-haves: "Based on Brooklyn PT market and my experience, I'm targeting $X-$Y base, assuming full-time, benefits, and clear productivity expectations--does that align with your range?" Concrete example from my clinic: when candidates ask "Is this one-on-one care or churn-and-burn?" before talking numbers, comp conversations go smoother because we're pricing the actual job. A new grad might accept a lower base if there's structured mentoring and a real ramp; an experienced PT usually values autonomy and a defined upside path--so I match offers to what the role truly demands. One thing that protects you: ask for the range, then trade--not plead. "If we're at the lower end, I'd need ABC (PTO, CEU budget, mentorship, or a review at 90 days); if we're at the higher end, I'm comfortable committing to XYZ (schedule, caseload, leadership responsibilities)." That keeps it collaborative and stops you from negotiating against yourself.
When a recruiter asks for salary expectations early, I focus on shifting the conversation from numbers to value and fit. Instead of giving a figure upfront, I start by asking about the scope of the role, responsibilities, and success metrics. This helps me understand the context and positions the discussion around what the company truly values rather than a single number. I use phrasing like: "I'm flexible depending on the responsibilities and the growth opportunities the role offers. Can you share the budgeted range for this position?" This approach keeps the conversation positive, signals openness, and invites transparency from the recruiter. It also protects my range because I'm not committing before understanding what the role demands. Another tactic is to frame the discussion around mutual value. Highlighting how your skills align with their needs shifts the focus from negotiating a number to evaluating a fit. For example, discussing past experiences that solve key challenges for the company demonstrates why your range is appropriate, making the conversation collaborative rather than transactional. The key takeaway is to control the timing and framing of the salary discussion. By understanding the role first, asking thoughtful questions, and positioning your value, you create a constructive dialogue. This ensures that when the number comes up, both sides are aligned on expectations and contributions, which makes negotiations smoother and more positive for everyone. This approach transforms what can feel like a tricky question into an opportunity to build credibility, demonstrate insight, and keep the discussion constructive.
Salary expectation questions often appear earlier in the hiring process than candidates expect. Whether on an application form or in a first-round screening, the question can feel like a negotiation before mutual fit is established. Platforms like LinkedIn and salary data from Glassdoor have made compensation more transparent, but transparency does not eliminate strategy. The key is balancing preparation with flexibility. The first step in deciding what to share is research. Candidates should understand the market range for the role in their region, factoring in company size, industry, and level of responsibility. Public salary benchmarks, recruiter conversations, and job postings with disclosed ranges provide useful context. Second, assess leverage. If the role strongly aligns with your background and you bring niche skills, you may have more room to anchor confidently. If you are pivoting industries or roles, a broader range may protect optionality. Third, avoid prematurely locking yourself into a number without understanding total compensation. Base salary is only one component. Bonus structures, equity, benefits, and flexibility all affect overall value. Framing the conversation around "total compensation" keeps it holistic. A candidate asked about salary in an early screening responded: "Based on my research and experience, I'm targeting a range between X and Y, but I'm open to discussing total compensation and learning more about the full scope of the role." This phrasing signaled preparation and confidence without sounding rigid. It also redirected the conversation toward mutual fit rather than a transactional exchange. Research from the Pew Research Center shows that workers increasingly value flexibility and benefits alongside pay. Additionally, surveys conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management highlight that many employers now budget within predefined pay bands. This means anchoring within market data—rather than guessing—protects credibility while aligning with structured compensation systems. When asked about salary expectations early, preparation is your strongest protection. Share a researched range, reference total compensation, and maintain openness. The goal is not to win the negotiation in the first conversation, but to position yourself as informed, collaborative, and aligned with market realities. A confident, flexible response preserves both your range and the relationship.
When a recruiter inquires about your salary expectations early in the process, you should be cooperative in your response, but there is no reason to anchor to a particular number too early in the process. Therefore, take some time to perform a market review before responding; then, develop a target salary range and your final walk-away number. After that, ask the recruiter for details about the level, scope, location, and total compensation for the position in order to gain an understanding of the compensation range available for the position before providing your numbers. If you provide a salary number, provide a very narrow range (approximately 20-30 percent wide) that includes all total compensation, and not just base pay. Examples of how to do this are: "I am flexible on how to compensate this position based on level, scope and total compensation; therefore, do you have a range of total compensation you have allocated for this position?" or "I am seeking a range of $X-$Y based on my knowledge of the market, but this is a function of the level of the role and the total compensation. I am confident we will be able to agree on a number that will work for both of us if we agree on the role."
When salary expectations come up early in the interview process, the key is anchoring the discussion in market intelligence and value alignment rather than emotion. Compensation data from Glassdoor and Payscale consistently shows that candidates who provide a researched range—typically within 10-20% of verified market benchmarks—are more likely to secure offers aligned with industry standards. A strategic response frames salary as part of a broader value conversation: referencing role scope, impact expectations, and market data helps protect earning potential while signaling flexibility. A phrasing that maintains positivity without underselling might be: "Based on market data for comparable roles and the scope of responsibilities discussed, a range between X and Y reflects the value typically associated with this position. That said, total compensation structure and growth opportunities are also important considerations." This approach keeps the dialogue collaborative rather than transactional. In a competitive hiring landscape where nearly 73% of professionals say transparency around pay influences trust in an employer (LinkedIn Workplace Insights), clarity combined with diplomacy strengthens both negotiation outcomes and long-term professional relationships.