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How to Negotiate Salary Without Accepting the First Offer

Negotiating salary is about aligning value, context, and decision margin without rushing to accept the first offer.

Andrews Ribeiro

Andrews Ribeiro

Founder & Engineer

The problem

A lot of people negotiate badly for one very simple reason:

they mix relief with decision-making.

Getting an offer feels like the end of the test.

Then the person:

  • accepts too fast
  • responds without thinking
  • asks for any random number without criteria
  • or avoids negotiating because they are afraid of looking ungrateful

None of those paths is good.

Mental model

Think about it like this:

Negotiating salary is not about fighting for the last coin. It is about avoiding a decision made in the dark.

You want to understand three things before responding:

  • how much this role is worth to the market and to the company
  • how much this package makes sense for your reality
  • how much room seems to exist here

Mature negotiation does not depend on posturing.

It depends on clarity.

Breaking the problem down

Do not accept in the same minute

Even if the offer looks good, you gain nothing by deciding in shock.

A simple answer already solves it:

  • “Thank you. I want to look at the package carefully and I will get back to you by tomorrow.”

That gives your mental space back.

Look at the whole package

Sometimes the base salary does not explain everything.

It is worth looking at:

  • bonus
  • equity
  • benefits
  • expected scope
  • role level
  • work model and flexibility

Some offers look bigger in the number and worse in the full package.

Negotiate with logic, not theatre

You do not need to invent competition or act like you are in an auction.

The better path is:

  • thank them
  • signal interest
  • point out where the offer feels short
  • suggest an adjustment with a number or range

Clarity usually works better than dramatization.

Know your limit before the conversation

Bad negotiation also happens when the person does not even know what they want to accept.

Before responding, try to define:

  • ideal range
  • minimum acceptable number
  • the point where the offer stops being worth it

Without that, any conversation pushes you around.

A simple example

You get an offer for R$ 18k, but you expected something closer to R$ 20k for the scope and seniority.

Weak response:

  • “Can you improve it?”

Better response:

  • “I liked the proposal a lot and I remain interested. Based on the scope of the role and the level of responsibility, I would feel more comfortable somewhere around R$ 20k. Is there room to get closer to that?”

That is firm without being hostile.

Common mistakes

  • Accepting on impulse.
  • Negotiating without knowing the full package.
  • Asking for more without explaining why.
  • Using artificial threats.
  • Confusing emotional discomfort with an actual inability to negotiate.

How a senior thinks

Someone with more maturity treats negotiation as a natural part of the process.

The logic usually goes like this:

  • I am evaluating a career decision, not trying to please anyone
  • I need to understand whether the package matches the responsibility and context
  • I want to leave with a good relationship even if there is no adjustment
  • I prefer clarity now over resentment later

That way of thinking makes the conversation much less childish.

What the interviewer wants to see

When negotiation happens, the other side is usually observing whether you:

  • know how to position yourself respectfully
  • understand your own value without delusion
  • can talk about compensation without noise
  • make decisions with criteria

Negotiating well does not make you difficult.

In most cases, it makes you more professional.

The first offer is the start of a conversation, not a court order.

Good negotiation protects tomorrow’s agreement, not just today’s ego.

Quick summary

What to keep in your head

Practice checklist

Use this when you answer

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