Lead with a researched, confident range: “Based on scope and market data, I’d be comfortable between 140 and 160.” Immediately justify with impact and scarcity: “My last project reduced cycle time by 27%, and I’ve shipped at similar scale.” Anchoring early helps set expectations while inviting constructive dialogue. Keep delivery friendly, reinforcing partnership over positional haggling or pressured disagreements.
Present two or three packages you value equally: “I can sign at either higher base with standard equity, or slightly lower base with increased equity and signing bonus.” MESO reveals what the employer values and creates choice without escalation. It feels collaborative, shows flexibility, and accelerates discovery of a workable structure, especially when one lever is constrained yet others can move gracefully.
Use conditional phrasing that respects constraints while keeping progress: “If we can bring base to 150, then I can be flexible on start date. If base must remain at 145, a 10k signing bonus would bridge the gap.” Clear, calm conditional statements reduce pressure, signal problem-solving, and help stakeholders advocate internally with a tidy, repeatable rationale anyone can champion.