Join Our Membership Learning Community for High Achieving Women!

Follow Us On...

Free worksheet:
GET WHAT YOU'RE WORTH!

Sign up for THE TUESDAY MUSE and we'll send it to you.


Tips, tools and invitations in one tiny blast. Promise.

Search this Site
« she's angela haskins and she negotiates for women lawyers | Main | Sara Caputo Teaches "Busyness in Balance" at She Negotiates University »
Wednesday
Sep152010

forget the recession ~ now's the BEST time to ask for a raise or increase your fees

What does this man have that you don't?

A year-end 2009 salary of $21,340,547 during one of the worst year's in the history of his industry ~ banking.

Listen!  The recession is just another excuse for not paying you what you're worth.

How do we know?

Because the most effective negotiators on the planet ~ corporate CEO's ~ are finding the downturn to be the best time to squeeze every last living dollar out of their employers.

If they can do it, so can you, sister!

 Here's the evidence:

Bank of America Corp.
Thomas Montag
2009 Total Compensation: $29,930,431
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
James Dimon
2009 Total Compensation:
$9,274,494
Citigroup Inc.
John Havens
2009 Total Compensation: $11,276,454
Morgan Stanley
Walid Chammah
2009 Total Compensation: $10,021,969
The Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
Lloyd Blankfein
2009 Total Compensation: $9,862,657
Wells Fargo
John Stumpf
2009 Total Compensation: $21,340,547

 

Whhaaaaaatttttt? do these men have that you don't have?

  • Social networks with rich and powerful people who sit on their Boards of Directors and influence policy makers and Wall Street power brokers
  • The self-created illusion that they are "too big to fail" /1
  • The persuasive argument that only they, with their unique combination of experience, education, knowledge, savvy, can-do-spirit, and leadership qualities can pull these banks out of the sinkhole of the recession.
  • Friends in very high places.
  • Chutzpah and shamelessness (not that we'd want to encourage this second character flaw in our readers).
  • Self-satisfaction.
  • Entitlement.
  • An employment history of asking for and receiving increasing levels of compensation based upon their salary negotiations at every career point possible (and every career point impossible)
  • the demonstrated ability to produce results (our readers do possess this strength but haven't used it to their greatest advantage yet)
  • the tendency to measure their market value by their value in the hands of their employer, not by what they "need" or what they are "worth" according to some internal metric that depends upon how they feel about thier accomplishments.

__________________

1/  This is where collective action comes in.  When we aggregate together America's employees, small business owners and homeowners, we get a non-corporate "entity" that is waaaayyyyyy bigger than some little piss-ant bank and it is we, ladies, who are too big to fail.

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

References (1)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Cross-posted at She Negotiates What does this man have that you don't? A year-end 2009 salary of $21,340,547 during one of the worst year's in the history of his industry ~ banking. Listen! The recession is just another excuse for...

Reader Comments (1)

Wow. This is exactly what I needed to hear.

Let's get organized, ladies. Let's stop taking "I can't" and "I'm sorry" for an answer to our negotiation discussions when certain other individuals (see above list) are taking our raises -- our financial futures -- and playing golf with them.

BASTA!!!

It's time to claim and rename TBTF from Too Big To Fail in the big boy sense to:

Tenacious B*itches Think Fast
Terrific Bosses Thank Females
Tough Broads Target Finances

Once again, thank you Vickie.

September 15, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterRoxy

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>