Let's Study English

Let's Study English

Sunday, December 6, 2015

What to Do Once You Receive a Job Offer


1. Get It In Writing
A verbal job offer is nice, but it’s only as strong as the paper it’s printed on. If you want to protect yourself, then ask for the job offer in writing. Most companies will send an offer letter to go along with the verbal offer. Wait until you receive the offer in writing before you do anything.

2. Go Over the Written Offer with a Fine-Tooth Comb
Your offer letter should include important points such as your position title, your salary, any bonuses you may be entitled to, explicit guidelines on how to achieve those bonuses, benefits, vacation time, sick time, personal time, and your official starting date.

3. Present a Counteroffer
You like the company and you cannot wait to start doing the job, but the salary seems a little low to you. Should you just take the offer and be happy that you’ll have a job?

4. Negotiate Your Final Offer
To be honest, professionals are almost expected to submit a counteroffer and negotiate for a better deal. Negotiating your final offer is where you can show the company how decisive and reasonable you truly are. It also gives you a chance to craft the job offer that you really wanted and go into your new job with a sense of confidence.

5. Send Thank-You Letters
One of the most important steps to accepting a job offer is to send a thank-you letter to everyone that you talked to during the interview process. As soon as you sign your offer letter, you should send out cards or hand-written letters that let each person you spoke with know just how much you appreciate the opportunity.

6. Always Check the Final Offer Before Signing It
Here’s a nightmare scenario: the conditions of the original offer letter weren’t included in your employment contract—but you unknowingly signed it anyways. Instead of assuming that the contract’s worded properly, you need to stop and read it before you actually sign it.

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