6. Sell Yourself And Praise Your Accomplishments

Humility is the last thing that should be on your mind when negotiating a pay raise. This is the time when you need to sell yourself and praise your accomplishments to an even greater degree than your initial job interview. That doesn’t mean you should be rude or imply that the company would be worse off without you; just be sure that you mention every positive trait and accomplishment you can think of. Having a long list like this will make your case much more convincing, and it will also bolster your self-confidence. – Bryce Welker, The CPA Exam Guy

7. Speaks In Terms Of Experience

As an employer, I know when an employee knows their worth, that goes hand-in-hand with better work and more commitment. It also goes hand-in-hand with life experience. That’s a good thing! There are several aspects of negotiation. One is to speak in terms of the experience and value you bring to the role. Do bring in research about what’s commensurate with experience. Remember, this is a conversation that will make both parties a little uncomfortable, but discomfort is okay. Try to get clarity about what skills or experience would be worth more. That way, even if you don’t get a higher salary, you know how to approach the conversation about a raise. – Tyler Bray, TK Trailer Parts

8. Be Your Own Cheerleader

Be your own loudest cheerleader and come prepared. It’s easy to be driven by emotion when it comes to salary and compensation, but what we (or a company) think we’re worth is often juxtaposed quite harshly by what we can prove. It’s paramount that employees have a robust understanding of their personal finances and thoroughly research their fair market value before they sit down to negotiate. Canvas your professional network, use any number of free online tools and outline a detailed budget to uncover what your minimum figure is and an appropriate pay band commensurate with your role, experience, qualifications and sector. Most importantly, advocate for yourself — no one else will. If an employer refuses to meet you at a fair level, think strongly about whether your contributions are truly valued. – Rong Zhang, Hirect

9. Keep Track Of Your Output

Some employees tend to avoid the salary raise talk for fear of confrontation or rejection. Others ask for a salary raise in a way that doesn’t sell the tangible value they bring to the company. The truth is that it’s all a balancing act once you come out the door with the foundational mindset that you’re selling value you’ve consistently brought to the company. This brings me to the first step to negotiating a salary raise: Keep track of your output on a daily and weekly basis. Write it down in a journal and reflect on your progress as each week passes. Those meetings, projects, extra courses, extra hours and applied insights would come in handy when making your case to your boss later that year. – Samuel Thimothy, OneIMS – Integrated Marketing Solutions

10. Highlight Your Value

You always want to highlight the value you have added to the company over the past year. Elaborate on the goals you have for the company in the upcoming year. An employer may know that you do a good job, but they probably don’t know all of the details of your contributions or your future plans with the company. If you can express your future goals to the company they are more likely to invest in you to see your goals play out in the upcoming year. – Mary Harcourt, CosmoGlo