| What
if a salary history is "required," and I don't send one?
Q.
In job announcements
in the newspaper and elsewhere I sometimes see "send resume and
salary history to..." If I respond, I respectfully decline submission
of the salary history information until I get more serious interest
from the prospective employer. However, I have yet to get an interview
from any of these employers, in spite of my apparent qualifications,
which in some cases have been significant. I think my salary history
is irrelevant, as I have recently completed a master's degree and
attained a related certification, though I haven't yet worked in
any position that called for these qualifications. Am I hurting
my chances by not providing this information? How does one best
handle this matter?
A.
You pose an
interesting question: do you hurt your chances for a potential position
if you decide not to disclose your salary requirements? To answer,
I'd need to know whether you meet the qualifications of the job
you're applying for. Remember, having a master's degree and a certification
does not necessarily mean you meet the requirements of the job.
Consider an experiment:
send your resume without your salary history to two or three companies.
Wait a couple of weeks, and if you don't get a response, send your
resume with your salary history and see what happens. If you do
get a response and are called into an interview, ask the recruiter
why they didn't call you for an interview without the salary history.
Remember that the
role of some recruiters is to screen and source applicants for positions
within a company. Some recruiters use salary requirement as a means
to screen candidates. Of course, this is never a good idea because
salary requirements don't tell you whether an applicant is competent
or has the experience to perform the job for which he or she is
applying.
Professional recruiters
with experience usually take the opposite approach; they typically
screen applicants based on experience and skill sets. If a candidate
meets the requirements, the recruiter will call and ask about experience
and then ask for salary requirements.
Good
luck.
-
Erisa Ojimba, Certified Compensation Professional
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