# How Not to Ask for a Raise & the Best Way to Go About It

Here are some tips on what you should do and not do when the time comes to ask for your money.

Date21 Jan 2021Category[Career Development](https://jobicy.com/blog/category/career-development.md)
[Pay and Benefits](https://jobicy.com/blog/category/money-legal.md)AuthorJobicy TeamReading time≈4 minutes

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It’s natural to want your compensation to reflect your growing skills, but there is a right way and a very wrong way to ask for a raise. Strolling into your manager’s office and demanding more money because your rent went up is a fast track to a “no.”

To secure a pay bump, you need to treat the conversation like a B2B sales pitch: you are the business, and you need to prove your ROI to your employer. Here is the actionable blueprint on what to avoid, what to prepare, and the exact scripts to use when negotiating your salary.

## The “Don’ts”: How Not to Ask for a Raise

Before diving into the strategy, eliminate these common career-limiting mistakes from your playbook:

Don’t leverage your personal life: Your mortgage, credit card debt, or upcoming wedding are not your employer’s responsibility. Compensation is strictly tied to the market rate for your skills and the value you bring to the company.
* Don’t issue an ultimatum (unless you are ready to walk): Saying, “Pay me $10k more or I quit,” forces your manager into a corner. Even if they concede, you’ve damaged the trust and may be first on the chopping block during the next round of layoffs.
* Don’t ambush your manager: Springing a salary conversation on your boss during a busy Monday morning stand-up or casually by the coffee machine guarantees a poor response.
* Don’t complain about a coworker’s salary: “But Sarah makes more than me!” makes you sound petty. Keep the focus entirely on your performance and your market value.

## The “Dos”: The Best Way to Go About It

To get a “yes,” you need to build an undeniable business case. Here is your step-by-step framework.

### 1. Master the Timing

Timing is half the battle. Don’t ask for a raise two months into a new role. Instead, target these strategic windows:

* During annual performance reviews: This is when budgets are actually being allocated.
* After a major win: Did you just close a massive client or streamline a process that saved the company 20 hours a week? Capitalize on that momentum.
* When taking on new responsibilities: If a coworker leaves and you absorb their workload, or if you are given a new title, your pay should scale accordingly.

### 2. Build Your “Brag Document”

Do not expect your manager to remember every great thing you did this year. Come to the meeting with a one-page summary of your quantifiable achievements.

* Weak: “I work really hard and help the sales team.”
* Strong: “I implemented a new CRM pipeline that reduced lead-response time by 15% and directly contributed to $50,000 in Q3 revenue.”

### 3. Bring Hard Market Data

Never ask for “more money”—ask for a specific figure backed by data. Utilize tools like Glassdoor, Payscale, Levels.fyi, or industry-specific salary surveys to find the median pay for your exact title and location.

Standard Raise Benchmarks:

* Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA): 2% – 3%
* Standard Merit Raise: 3% – 5%
* Promotion / Major Role Change: 10% – 20%

## The Blueprint: Exactly What to Say

Want to know how to actually initiate and navigate the conversation? Use these templates as a baseline.

### Step 1: Setting the Meeting

Send a formal calendar invite. Do not hide the agenda.

>

“Hi [Manager’s Name], I’d like to put 30 minutes on the calendar next week to review my performance over the last year, discuss my career trajectory, and talk about my current compensation. Let me know if Tuesday afternoon works for you.”

### Step 2: Making the Ask

Start with your achievements, present your data, and make a clear request.

>

“Over the last 12 months, I’ve taken the lead on [Project A] and [Project B], which resulted in a [X%] increase in [Metric]. Because I’ve consistently exceeded my KPIs and taken on the responsibilities of a mid-level manager, I’d like to discuss adjusting my salary to reflect this output. Based on my research for this role in our market, a salary of $XX,XXX would align with my current contributions. How can we get there?”

## What to Do If the Answer is “No”

If your manager declines, stay perfectly calm and professional. A “no” today is often just a “not right now.”

Your immediate follow-up should be:

>

“I understand that a raise isn’t in the budget right now. Can we work together to outline specific performance milestones I need to hit over the next 6 months to make this raise a reality at our next review?”

If they refuse to set milestones or consistently deny your requests despite stellar performance, you now have the most valuable piece of data of all: it is time to take your polished resume and update your LinkedIn profile.

You might also like: [Why Burnout Isn’t a Badge of Honor](https://jobicy.com/blog/142261-why-burnout-isnt-a-badge-of-honor.md)

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