Whenever a recruiter ask about your salary demands...flip the question back on them and ask for the position’s pay range.
I want to add on besides validating the salary range with the recruiter
check glassdoor
check H-1B salary https://h1bdata.info/
Whenever a recruiter ask about your salary demands...flip the question back on them and ask for the position’s pay range.
. You need to focus your energy on getting a job instead of trying to discourage brehs from getting into techI have no doubt I was underpaid at two jobs in particular , but I actually negotiated for both.....just had no idea where to start because I didn't know any one else in tech I could really talk to beforehand and coworkers usually be vague as shyt when you try to talk about money
Not sure if you in tech but there is a site that opened my eyes to how much people were getting paid : Levels.fyi | Salaries & Tools to Level Up Your Career
Last go round I straight up told a couple companies nah no thanks when they tried to act like xyz was the most money they could offer.
The issue is , black people most likely won't negotiate cuz they'd be lucky to even get a job interview, let alone get the actual job. We're in no position to negotiate shyt.

Bad advice. If you do this you are:Whenever a recruiter ask about your salary demands...flip the question back on them and ask for the position’s pay range.
DING DING DINGAint nothing new. We usually start lower because we didn't negotiate or know our value in the first place. You either get lucky, find out what others make, and have the balls to call your PM out on it in hopes he values you enough (I did this) or leave/job hop.
Learned this the hard way. I was so eager to get out of a fukked up situation that I just took the first offer. When I started I found out what everybody else was making especially those that were nowhere as good as me. I was literally making less than EVERYBODY. I was sick. Now I demand what I want and I've been getting it too.I am in the field, and the worst thing you can do for yourself is not negotiate your salary and take the first offer. I have worked with people making 10-30k less than me doing the same job, but did not take the risk of saying no.
That is his MO. He couldn't make it in IT. He wanted to be below average and coast. Possibly got into it for the wrong reasons. When he realized you got to pay some dues and put in some work, this is the energy you get. You got to be an idiot to not see through the multiple threads he has made on this. Projecting his own failures under the guise of "we" and black cant waste timeWater is wet brehs. This is America and ALL industries under pay us.
OP you make the same thread every day. You need to focus your energy on getting a job instead of trying to discourage brehs from getting into tech
. Motherfukker didnt even know what a fukking clearance is. Not one single significant accomplishment but thinks he can talk on it like he has. Moved on my ass...this nikka clearly would love to do what most of us seasoned in the industry do right now if he could.I am in the field, and the worst thing you can do for yourself is not negotiate your salary and take the first offer. I have worked with people making 10-30k less than me doing the same job, but did not take the risk of saying no.
Bad advice. If you do this you are:
1. Allowing the recruiter to set the range. They will tell you whatever is advantageous to them.
2. Exposing that you don't know the salary range for the position, which will make #1 easier.
As an alternative you should know in advance the salary range for the position and take the high end + some percentage so you don't end up midrange if they try to talk you down. (and you should be resistant to being talked down and willing to walk away as well)
This is basically me. I know for a fact now that people who work with me make more, but I took the first offer I received. I had been passed up for the position in the past, unemployed and most importantly, I was a black woman without a college degree. I felt like I was in no position to bargain. I found a job in the tech industry in a non-tech position and for the past two years, have been absorbing as much as I can about coding, participating in tech related projects, and went back to school to finish my degree, pivoting from Caribbean studies to computer scienceI'm sensitive to this, i really am. Its obviously much easier to negotiate when you currently have a job vs looking to be employed with bills stacking up.
How about this comprimise?
You take that first job at the pay that is clearly below what you're worth. But then, a year later, instead of waiting until you quit, you actually start looking while being employed. Now you have an extra year under your belt, and you aren't negotiating from a place of need but rather a position of strength.
This way you're not always feeling like "I NEED THIS JOB NO MATTER WHAT!"
(and my job offers tuition reimbursement) !