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Salary Negotiation Starts with Your Resume

Your salary offer is shaped long before the negotiation conversation. Here is how your resume sets the anchor — and how to maximise it.

Most professionals think salary negotiation begins when they receive an offer. In reality, the anchor for your compensation is set the moment a recruiter reads your resume. A resume that clearly communicates high value — specific achievements, measurable impact, prestigious employers, relevant skills — creates a mental price tag before the first conversation ever happens.

Your resume should make the answer to "What's their current compensation?" feel obvious and high. This means: quantifying the scale of what you've managed (team sizes, budget authority, revenue impact), naming recognisable companies and brands where possible, showing a clear upward career trajectory with progressive responsibility, and demonstrating skills that are in short supply. A resume that reads like you've managed $10M budgets, led 20-person teams, and driven 40% revenue growth positions you for a $200K+ conversation regardless of what your current salary is.

During negotiation itself, your resume becomes your evidence. Every number you quoted — the 34% sales increase, the 18-hour ticket resolution time — is something you can reference confidently. Vague resumes lead to vague negotiations ("I'm a hard worker..."). Specific resumes lead to specific negotiations ("As you can see on my resume, I've consistently delivered at scale — here's what I'd need to replicate that for you.").

Build your resume with negotiation in mind from the start, using AI-checker to craft achievement language that demonstrates unmistakable value.

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