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14

www.fbinaa.org

M AY

2 0 1 5

J U N

www.fbinaa.org

M AY

2 0 1 5

J U N

15

Alan A. Malinchak

If you haven’t entered into a compensation

negotiation prior to their offer letter of employ-

ment, NOW and prior to signing the offer letter,

is the time to pick up the phone and ask for an

opportunity to discuss salary and compensation

packages related to the position.

Consider the receipt of their offer letter of

employment as the first, not final offer. There

are a multitude of items which can be negotiated;

below are examples of what can and should be

discussed. Know that your future employer will

almost always try to bring you in at a low base

salary – to help them meet their financial num-

bers, improve their margin, and save money to

increase net operating profit – and the base salary

is only the beginning of the items to negotiate in

a collaborative not confrontational setting.

As a former law enforcement professional

you know the value of a positive demeanor when

talking with others – that experience will pay off

nicely as you enter into conversational negotia-

tions with your future employer. Remember they

B

reathe that sigh of relief, you’ve made it

and are eager to begin working in your

new career. However, since your interview and

prior to learning you have been selected, did you

engage in a conversation with your prospective

employer regarding salary, bonus structure, va-

cation/sick days, 401K, executive compensation,

and a myriad of other benefits that are available?

If you have, we trust you had sufficient advice re-

garding what was and wasn’t negotiable and you

are confident their offer letter will include all the

agreed upon compensation – good for you!

Sometimes, a prospective employer will

send an “offer letter of employment” to review,

sign and begin your next career – it’s in their best

interest. You’re excited, anxious and so ready,

but not so fast – are you prepared to negotiate

before you sign that letter. If you sign and send

that offer letter without considering items that

are open for discussion/negotiation with your

new employer – realize you may be leaving sev-

eral compensation benefits on the table – regret-

tably, benefits that are no longer available once

you have signed and on-boarded.

Negotiations: The Key to

Positioning Your

Salary +

Benefits

in Your Post-Law

Enforcement Career”

continued on page 16

For those who have been following this FBINAA Career Transition Series

of articles to prepare you for your next career – we are now at the stage

where you have identified a position, targeted a company, networked

with past and current professionals, completed the application, prepared

for the interview, suffered through the long wait of others being inter-

viewed and just received the call – they want to hire you!