How to negotiate salary with HR?
Short answer: Treat HR as a partner who must balance budget, internal parity, and candidate closure timelines. When you understand these constraints, your ask becomes easier to approve. Lead with business outcomes and role fit, then discuss compensation structure logically.
Step-by-step approach
- Ask HR how compensation is split across fixed, variable, bonus, and long-term benefits.
- Position your request around role scope, risk ownership, and measurable delivery record.
- Use a calm, data-backed narrative instead of competitive pressure language.
- Negotiate sequence: fixed pay first, then one-time bonuses, then review timeline.
- If numbers are frozen, request an early performance review clause in writing.
- Confirm final details by email to avoid misalignment before offer acceptance.
Real-world example
Neha was interviewing for a platform lead role at Razorpay while employed at Flipkart. Instead of saying "another company is paying more," she explained that she would own migration risk and 24x7 availability for critical services. Arjun from Zoho helped her rewrite her talking points around business continuity and release stability. HR could not change total CTC much, but increased fixed pay and added a 6-month review commitment, which Neha accepted.
Mistakes to avoid
- Speaking aggressively and turning negotiation into confrontation.
- Skipping structure details and focusing only on total CTC headline.
- Assuming HR can always revise numbers without policy limits.
- Accepting verbal promises without written confirmation.
Follow-up questions you may get
- If HR says the budget is frozen, ask: "Can we agree on a written review checkpoint after 6 months based on defined KPIs?"
Negotiate in layers: fixed, bonus, then review cycle.