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Placement Services
Your decision to change careers can affect every dimension of your
life. That's why our recruiters spend time getting to know you,
your needs and your goals. Confidentiality is a main focus and because
our recruiters are specialists who often have extensive work experience
within their focus areas, we can help you discreetly connect with
the leading companies in your industry. Search
jobs to view examples of our current openings.
Placement
Fees
All fees are paid by the employer. There is NEVER A FEE to you.
Career
Planning Services
We offer the following assistance to help you maximize your career
potential:
Career
Planning.
We help you achieve both your personal and professional
goals.
Protecting
Your Privacy.
Our secure database is accessible only to
our professional career consultants.
Resume
Tips.
Create a winning resume. What to put in, what to
leave out.
Interviewing.
Prepare for the interview. What to ask, what you may be asked.
Interviewing
Do's and Don'ts.
A checklist to help you succeed in the
interview.
Resigning
Gracefully.
Resign from your current job without burning
bridges.
Counter-offers.
Counter-offers can be flattering, but are they in your best interest?
Counteroffers: How to Tell If the Grass Will Be Greener
By Gaston F. Ceron From The Wall Street Journal On-line
Take the money and run, or take the money and stay?
It's a choice
you may well face at one point in your career: Whether to jump
to another company that's trying to seduce you with a fatter paycheck
and better perks, or use the job offer as leverage to
push your current boss into producing a package that would make
it worthwhile to stay.
For most employees,
this sounds like a dream scenario, allowing them for once to
turn the tables on an employer and come out ahead. But
it's a path fraught with risks, and employees looking to play the make-me-an-offer-I-can't-refuse
game must tread carefully.
"It can
be done," but "it
is sort of a dicey and delicate thing to deal with," says
Bill Coleman, senior vice president of compensation at Salary.com,
a Needham, Mass.,-based on-line provider of pay information. "
It's the equivalent of holding a gun to your employer's head," adds
Steve Hall, director of professional recruiting at FGP International,
a staffing and executive-search agency in Greenville, S.C.
The Worst Case
Recruiters
caution against doing it without thinking about consequences
first: Don't say you're thinking about leaving unless you mean
it, because your manager may call your bluff. "Sometimes
when you go to your boss and tell them you got a better offer,
they wish you luck," says
Mr. Coleman.
If you're prepared
to proceed, job experts recommend that you be as specific as
possible with your current boss on what it would take
you to stay. Robin Ryan, a career coach based in Newcastle, Wash.,
says it's important to do this because in these types of negotiations
time is often an issue -- the outside company that is trying
to lure you wants to hear back soon, and your current boss will
need at least some
time to see if the offer can be matched. "There's usually
a time crunch," says Ms. Ryan, so "phrase it in a way
that states what you want" --
for example, saying "for me to stay here I need a $12,000
raise or that title that I've been wanting."
For employees
who want to stay with their current employer, provided that a
competing offer can be matched or even topped, career experts
recommend giving their supervisors ammunition they can use to
help sell an improved compensation package to their higher-ups.
Ms. Ryan recommends that employees spell out the value they add
to their organization and why it would make sense to keep them,
even if it takes a raise or promotion. Tell your manager, "These
are the three things I'm going to work on the next six months
that are going to add to the bottom line," she says.
Ms. Ryan recalls
a woman working as an office manager for a hospital clinic who
had an outside offer and wanted to see if her boss would match
it. "She told me, 'I really would like to stay,' " Ms.
Ryan says. " I told her, 'When you talk to the person you
must tell them why you're worth it.' " The woman took Ms.
Ryan's advice, writing a letter that highlighted her contributions
to the company, and she ended up keeping her job after her employer
countered by offering a salary increase.
Getting the Boss on Board
It's
important to justify why you're seeking a counteroffer -- and
get your boss on board with that rationale -- because even if
one is
made and you stay, you could still be viewed with suspicion. Your
managers and fellow employees may question your loyalty to the
company.
"Companies
don't like to be fired, they like to do the firing," says
Mr. Hall, FGP's recruiting director. "Anytime you show up
late in the morning, anytime you're not viewed as a team player,
there's tremendous resentment by the boss," Mr. Hall says.
Perks you negotiate as part of the counteroffer could make co-workers
jealous. "If you're
now getting Friday afternoons off, you're going to be resented
by your teammates," he says.
If a counteroffer
does surface, employees should think before taking it. It's natural
to view salary as the ultimate reason for employment,
but there are many reasons aside from pay that make employees think
about leaving a company. So even if your current boss matches
that rival offer, it's wise to think about the other, less tangible
qualities that make one employer more attractive than the other.
Kimberly Walker,
division director at the Chicago office of Creative Group, a
staffing service owned by Robert Half International Inc., says
employees should review all the reasons that originally made
them consider leaving before accepting a counteroffer. "It's
not always compensation," she says. "Is that really
the reason why you're unhappy? It might be that there's not more
of a challenge from a work
perspective. Counteroffers don't always address all of the issues
that prompted a person to seek other employment in the first place."
Mixed Message
Sometimes
a counteroffer sends a different message than the one intended.
Mr. Coleman, at Salary.com, recalls an incident that occurred
several years ago when he was working at another company. "I
had had a performance review and was told I was doing very well,
everything positive, 'you're a keeper,' that kind of thing. I
questioned my salary, and I was told budgets were tight. Completely
coincidentally, I got a call from a recruiter with an opportunity.
I went on the interview and got an offer that was effectively
a 35% salary increase without negotiating," Mr. Coleman
says. "I
went back and gave my notice. Within half an hour the salary
was matched." Mr. Coleman was taken aback at his employer's
abrupt about-face just weeks after being told that tight budgets
precluded a higher salary. "I questioned the previous conversations," says
Mr. Coleman. "I felt like I was
being cheated and lied to." So he left.
Career experts
recommend that employees put their managers on notice that they're
unhappy with their jobs before looking for outside employment
and seeking a counteroffer. Mr. Hall recommends sitting down
with your boss and telling him or her that you feel undervalued,
explain why and ask if there's anything that can be done.
Don't Burn Bridges
It's
also important not to burn bridges. If you take a counteroffer
from your current employer, the other company that was recruiting
you may feel it was used as a negotiating pawn. Reputations can
be lost in these types of situations if officials of the other
company feel you weren't honest with them, recruiters warn.
When negotiating
a counteroffer, many employees will try to milk the situation
for all it's worth. But that, too, can be a mistake.
The tables could turn again, and someday, if the job market cools,
you could find yourself at your boss's mercy -- and he or she may
remember you played hardball earlier.
"It's
a tough balance to achieve," says
Mr. Coleman, since people want to be paid what they're worth.
But he cautions against asking for so much that you price yourself
out of the market. If your boss agrees today, your high pay may
be held against you when raises or bonuses are parceled out in
the future -- or even when it's decided who will lose their jobs
in a round of layoffs. Over time, says Mr. Coleman, " companies
generally tend to take outliers and put them back in line."
Confidentiality
We treat your resume confidentially and will not forward it to anyone without
contacting you first to discuss the opportunity. We are an equal opportunity
employer and expect that the companies who use our services are too.
Submit
Your Profile
Getting started with us is as simple as submitting your profile
and resume in a Microsoft Word Document to resume@cooperstaffing.com.
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