- May 21, 2001
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Background:
A company bought technology that I was significantly involved with. One of my coworkers was offered a full time position at that company with a decent salary, given his education and experience, but lower than what I would accept. Another coworker was offered a part-time consulting position at a very high salary. I was also offered a part-time consulting position, and signed a contract at a wage that would make me quite happy but without any assigned work (meaning I may never get paid anything).
 
Recent Info:
At the last meeting they pulled me aside and said that they want to hire me part-time instead of using me as a consultant since they didn't realize originally how much they would need me. They mentioned a salary range that made me quite happy (a bit less than the consulting fee, but I wouldn't have to cover insurance and as many taxes and misc fees). I said that salary would be acceptable. They told me they'd sent a formal offer later.
 
I just got the offer. While it is slightly more than what I make now, it is a pretty low offer. It is ~20% lower than what they verbally mentioned, I won't qualify for any benefits, it is in another city 40 miles away, and would have the hassle of being an hourly employee without the plusses of being an hourly employee (being part time makes overtime impossible). The offer is a little low for the typical person with my education and experience, however, I know they need my specific knowledge, otherwise they'll have to pay a fortune to hire others to relearn it all.
 
Questions:
Should I be terse and just specify that I want the salary that was originally offered? Should I elaborate on all the reasons why I deserve a higher wage? Should I stick to my guns and say I want to stay with the signed contract, even though that might result in no work at all? Any advice?
			
			A company bought technology that I was significantly involved with. One of my coworkers was offered a full time position at that company with a decent salary, given his education and experience, but lower than what I would accept. Another coworker was offered a part-time consulting position at a very high salary. I was also offered a part-time consulting position, and signed a contract at a wage that would make me quite happy but without any assigned work (meaning I may never get paid anything).
Recent Info:
At the last meeting they pulled me aside and said that they want to hire me part-time instead of using me as a consultant since they didn't realize originally how much they would need me. They mentioned a salary range that made me quite happy (a bit less than the consulting fee, but I wouldn't have to cover insurance and as many taxes and misc fees). I said that salary would be acceptable. They told me they'd sent a formal offer later.
I just got the offer. While it is slightly more than what I make now, it is a pretty low offer. It is ~20% lower than what they verbally mentioned, I won't qualify for any benefits, it is in another city 40 miles away, and would have the hassle of being an hourly employee without the plusses of being an hourly employee (being part time makes overtime impossible). The offer is a little low for the typical person with my education and experience, however, I know they need my specific knowledge, otherwise they'll have to pay a fortune to hire others to relearn it all.
Questions:
Should I be terse and just specify that I want the salary that was originally offered? Should I elaborate on all the reasons why I deserve a higher wage? Should I stick to my guns and say I want to stay with the signed contract, even though that might result in no work at all? Any advice?
			
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