The 2 Essential Questions to Ask When Your Salary Request Is Denied
It's standard advice to advocate for higher pay during salary negotiations—but the conversation shouldn't end when you hear "no." In fact, that's often when the most important dialogue begins.
Ron Seifert, senior client partner and North America workforce rewards leader at Korn Ferry, recommends that candidates and employees always follow up a denied raise request with two strategic questions. These aren't about pushing back defensively; they're about gaining clarity, building alignment, and positioning yourself for future growth.
Question 1: "How does the organization make compensation decisions for this role?"
Seifert advises asking specifically about the factors that inform pay: market data, internal equity, performance metrics, scope of responsibility, and timing.
> "This is not about challenging the employer defensively. It is about understanding whether the decision is grounded in a clear framework."
Why this matters:
- **Transparency reveals philosophy**: Well-managed organizations can articulate the principles guiding their compensation strategy. If they can't, that's valuable information about company culture.
- **Risk awareness**: If you're materially underpaid relative to market rates or your contributions, it creates retention risk for the employer—lower engagement, reduced effort, or increased openness to external opportunities.
- **Self-reflection prompt**: Asking this question encourages employers to pause and consider whether they may be undervaluing your potential impact.
Question 2: "What would need to be true for my compensation to be revisited—and when should we agree to revisit it?"
A "no" today doesn't have to mean "never." This question shifts the conversation from rejection to roadmap.
Seifert emphasizes that simply meeting expectations rarely justifies a raise. Instead, ask about:
- Specific, measurable outcomes that would trigger a review
- Expanded responsibilities or scope that warrant reevaluation
- Performance milestones or tenure benchmarks
- Market shifts that could affect compensation bands
> "That gives the employee a clear set of expectations and creates a natural point to reopen the conversation."
Pro tip:
Document the agreed-upon criteria and timeline. A brief follow-up email summarizing the discussion ("Per our conversation, we'll revisit compensation in six months if I achieve X, Y, and Z") creates accountability and professionalism.
Strengthen Your Position: Align Raises with Goals
Bringing goalposts into salary discussions doesn't just help you—it helps your employer justify investing more in you.
- **John Gates**, founder of Salary Coach, recommends tying raise requests to specific, business-aligned objectives. When your success directly supports company priorities, compensation conversations become collaborative rather than confrontational.
- **Patrice Lindo**, CEO of Career Nomad, notes that demonstrating measurable contribution to organizational goals makes it far easier to advocate for increased pay.
This strategy scales: Even Elon Musk's landmark Tesla compensation package was structured around ambitious, milestone-based triggers—aligning extraordinary reward with extraordinary results.
Before You Negotiate: Do Your Homework
Seifert stresses that preparation is non-negotiable. Before entering any compensation conversation:
✅ Research market rates for comparable roles in your industry and region
✅ Clarify the unique value you bring—quantify impact where possible
✅ Understand the company's business model and current priorities
✅ Frame your ask around data, context, and delivered value—not just personal need
> "Keep bringing it back to the data, the situation, and then your value being delivered and created for the organization."
A denied salary increase isn't a dead end—it's an invitation to deepen the conversation. By asking *how* compensation decisions are made and *what* it would take to revisit them, you transform a moment of disappointment into a strategic opportunity.
You gain insight into company values, establish clear expectations for growth, and position yourself as a thoughtful, data-driven professional. And in today's competitive talent market, that clarity benefits both you and your employer.
*Remember: Negotiation isn't just about the number you walk away with today. It's about building the foundation for the career—and compensation—you deserve tomorrow.*
