For those of you in HR, when you make an offer to a prospective employee, how much room is there for negotiations? Is it unheard of to negotiate?
I have an interview tomorrow, and the company is moving pretty fast because they have a contract coming up that they need to hire somebody. I have a pretty good job now (pay could be higher) and would probably have to relocate about 2 hours away if I take the new job. If I'm not thrilled about the initial offer, would they laugh if I made a *reasonable* counteroffer. Obviously I'm not going to ask for 10k or 20k more. But I'm just trying to get an idea if this is standard practice or not.
edit: I'm pretty sure they're going to make an offer, this will be my third interview in about a week's time. Also, should I have a counter offer ready for tomorrow, or should I take their initial offer, think about it for a day and then propose a counter offer with something like "I've evaluated the cost of moving, blah, blah, blah, and give me more money."
I have an interview tomorrow, and the company is moving pretty fast because they have a contract coming up that they need to hire somebody. I have a pretty good job now (pay could be higher) and would probably have to relocate about 2 hours away if I take the new job. If I'm not thrilled about the initial offer, would they laugh if I made a *reasonable* counteroffer. Obviously I'm not going to ask for 10k or 20k more. But I'm just trying to get an idea if this is standard practice or not.
edit: I'm pretty sure they're going to make an offer, this will be my third interview in about a week's time. Also, should I have a counter offer ready for tomorrow, or should I take their initial offer, think about it for a day and then propose a counter offer with something like "I've evaluated the cost of moving, blah, blah, blah, and give me more money."
