The tactical playbook for getting 20-40% more comp (without sounding greedy) | Jacob Warwick (Executive Negotiator)
Transcript
What's the most common mistake that people make when they're negotiating their comp? Often will hide behind the easiest communication channel possible. I might email you my demands. The problem with that is I can't control tone. If I push back and the CEO that reads it's in the airport security line and pissed off and they read it, they might be like, that bastard wants more money. A lot of people listening to this are just afraid to ask for more. I'm gonna come across as greedy. It's all gonna fall apart. But when you look at the money that the company is making in comparison, like, you're not being greedy. It doesn't have to be such an aggressive thing. It doesn't have to be confrontational. The simplest advice is what's the chance there could be a little more? That's not greedy at all. The core to your philosophy is make it very clear to the company, here's the pain I will solve for you, and here's why it's worth paying me this much more. These companies have significant leverage over you. They know what people make. They know what others make. They know what they'll accept. You have to understand what value you can create. And if you understand that value, you can have that conversation with confidence. Today, my guest is Jacob Warwick. Jacob is a professional negotiator. He works behind the scenes with his clients, mostly senior tech execs, professional athletes, and Hollywood celebrities, and he helps them navigate their most complex career negotiations, including their comp, their bonuses, and investments, also M and A and takeovers and enterprise sales deals, and more. He's helped his clients secure over $1,000,000,000 in additional comp, and he's told me that he's negotiated against a number of guests on this podcast. He is very much under the radar, is not on social media, rarely does interviews, and in this exclusive conversation, we get super deep on the specific tactics and psychology of comp negotiation, including why you should never negotiate over email, who should speak first when the question of comp comes up, the most common and costly mistakes that people unknowingly make when they're negotiating comp, and so much more. Jacob is also just a truly stellar human, and I'm very excited to be sharing his story. Don't forget to check out Lenny's productpass.com for an incredible set of deals available exclusively to Lenny's newsletter subscribers.
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Just visit Mercury dot com to learn more and apply online in minutes. Mercury is a fintech company, not an FDIC insured bank banking services provided through Choice Financial Group and Column NA Members FDIC. Jacob, thank you so much for being here. Welcome to the podcast. I'm very happy to be here, and, thank you for interfering with my sleep all week out of my excitement. Usually, it's my newborn and toddler, but this time I was waking up at three in the morning thinking about and it's gonna be a great chat. So I'm very excited. Thank you for having me. I really appreciate that. It's gonna be worth it. It's gonna be worth it mostly to us to to extract all this wisdom from your head. So we're gonna be going deep on negotiation, how to better negotiate for comp, and this will translate into all kinds of other ways of in your life beyond comp. This is something I've personally been very, very bad at in my career. Like, I don't know if I like maybe one time I pushed back and negotiated a higher comp, but I just like, I've always been really nervous to do this and just really bad at this. And I imagine most listeners are nervous and bad at this. You do this for a living. You help people negotiate, which I don't think people even know this is a thing that exists, that somebody's out there that can help you negotiate. And so you've seen a lot of negotiations up close. Most of the people you work with, just as a context, are very senior people, but a lot of the stuff we're gonna talk about is gonna apply to anyone at any level. Let me start with this question just to keep people or frame a reference. How much comp are people generally leaving on the table when they don't even try to negotiate? Yeah. So typically what I've seen is even without my help, just general pushbacks, not aggressive, a simple what's the chance there could be more here kind of pushback. I mean, that's about as easy as it can get. You get the offer, you say, what's the chance there's a little bit more? Almost always see a 20% improvement on that. And that is across the board from earlier stage positions. Let's say they gave you a $100,000
offer. 120 could be there just from a simple pushback, which is when you're making that kind of money, that's life changing. Right? I've noticed that when you make a million dollar w two, same pushback, 20, sometimes more, just on the what's the chance depending on how well you kinda navigated that interview process. Now on average, when I'm calculating out, what I'm looking for with clients is about 40% movement on an increase. We have seen as much as 100, 200, 300, 400% increases from initial offers. Most notably, breaking salary bands, which we all treat as gospel, which is something we'll probably talk about through the course of this this podcast today that, you know, those that challenge authority and challenge in a meaningful and collaborative way will win more than those that don't. And what's interesting is I found that product, product leaders, engineers, designers, some of the more tend to be more introverted and thoughtful types negotiate more poorly than the obnoxious marketers and revenue leaders and the more extroverted types. And it's frustrating because if you look back at the last, say, twenty five years or so, product has really defined the tech generation in so many ways. This isn't to discredit marketers or or anything like that. It's just to show that there's a couple of sides of the business, and and everyone tends to negotiate a little differently. So you're looking back at your career and say, you know, the great Lenny had a tough time pushing back. I think that's that's actually inspiring for a lot of the listeners to see that you're not alone in feeling this. It doesn't have to be such an aggressive thing. It doesn't have to be confrontational. The simplest advice that I can give you is what's the chance there could be a little more? That's not greedy at all. That's just a simple ask. And even that, 30%. So, again, a lot of people listening to this are just, like, afraid to ask for more. There's like, I'm gonna come across as greedy.
I'm gonna it's all gonna fall apart. They're gonna be like, what are you what are you talking about? No. No. Forget it. Or the you know, they join. They get better comp, and then they're like, everyone kinda they know that I pushed all this, and I'm this kinda greedy person. Now the expectations are higher. What do you tell people to help them get past that and actually negotiate and actually go for it? Yeah. A couple things here. So first of all, usually, a company is extracting much more value out of you naturally, like five to one, ten to one, a 100 to one. Right? If you're I know the audience is primarily product here. I mean, you're developing products that have infinite scalability in some capacity that's gonna make the company a lot of money, and you're a big piece of that. And product tends to be rewarded fairly well. Right? But when you look at the money that the company is making in comparison, like, you're not being greedy. And if you understand that value exchange, you can have that conversation with confidence. That's not to say that being a tall poppy isn't risky. That's the term. You over negotiate. I would rather my clients over negotiate, reach a couple rungs up on the ladder, and they get slapped down. They're still failing forward, and they're growing in some capacity. And if you can ideally align work that doesn't feel like work, it feels a little bit more like play with strong compensation, you don't always need to negotiate hellaciously for the top of the band or break the bands just because you can. Right? This isn't to be greedy. Right? But it's just to understand that this value exchange isn't fair for you regardless of how it works. It's the path to wealth is through ownership. Right? And as a w two employee, you're being taxed heavily, and it it makes sense to push a little bit in this context. So that's typically where I start. I want you to just have the confidence to know that it's okay. Let me come at it from the other direction. A lot of people listening to this podcast are founders or hiring managers, managers. They may not be super excited to hear or giving people advice on how to negotiate harder for higher comp.
What could you say to them to make them feel a little bit better about us sharing this sort of advice? So I will challenge them as well. Now I how important of a priority is top talent in maintaining and retaining top talent to you? Right? When we're thinking about how quickly the speed of innovation is happening. You've had a lot of great AI guests on the channel recently. Right? Like, the exponential curve of growth is increasing. If you hope to stand a chance, you need to attract the top talent, and you need to keep that top talent because it's very expensive to replace them. I'm not suggesting that people beat you up for the sake of beating you up. So this is a myth about negotiation that's adversarial. What I teach is how can we be more collaborative? So the conversation is, look, Lenny, as a founder, can you help me understand what's important to you? The value that this work will drive, and then naturally, we'll come to terms that make a little bit more of a value exchange. Makes sense there. So oftentimes, some of the ways that we're breaking the boundaries of compensation isn't necessarily advocating for a busted base comp level and bonus percentage. Oftentimes, we're putting performance incentives, milestone triggers. If the company grows to a 100,000,000 ARR and I contributed this to it, what would that outcome look like? Would that be another tranche of stock, or would that be cash, or would that no. We are getting more creative here. And so what's interesting is for the longest time, I had a I had a difficult time advocating for this. And having been a CEO and founder myself, I understand why you don't wanna do it because it's hard. It's hard to make this, and everyone also thinks they're top talent. And when everyone thinks they're top talent, somebody's gotta be lying. Right? It can be difficult to understand that. So those that I found are more confident to push towards performance based tend to have more skin in the game, tend to wanna stick around and see that success happen. Those are the types of people I want working for me if I wanna be a very competitive organization.
I have started to have these conversations with a couple Fortune 500 companies as well as some talent consulting companies, think big recruiting firms, where they've brought me in to advise on the comp committees so that they can get more creative with their structure so they don't lose talent. Because nobody wins when you hire a top performer and they leave in ten months. The recruiting firm loses their pay, right, their performance pay. The company now has to go back and replace that person. This usually costs hundreds of thousands. And in some of the realms that we navigate in the Fortune 500, it will cost millions, if not tens of millions, to replace the lost IP there. So the argument here is it's okay to get creative. Reward it when you see it. Right? I'm not suggesting give everyone everything in the company and and totally ruin your business model. But if you wanna be competitive, be competitive with your pay as well. That's a great answer. And we were chatting before we started recording this, and you shared that you've helped people negotiate with many guests on this podcast, like people that they were hiring and you helped them get higher comp. I won't mention any names. Some recently were in in the realm of 10,000,000 plus on increases in compensation across a a team of just a handful of folks. Again, Fortune five hundred, but the alternative was lose them to competitors and have the stock drop after the CEO made announcements publicly in their earnings calls. And so they don't know that they may have cost them 10,000,000 today, but it saved them 300 plus 300, 500 in this business process. So the success will be there. And I would say almost anybody would pay 10 to save 300. And the way you operate, just so people understand is you're very behind the scenes. You work with clients, and you advise them you're never involved in the negotiation. You just give them advice on how to approach it. I would call it fingerprintless,
and there's a reason for this. So it's it's not yet popularized. Maybe it will be with some of these, in in AI ICs and these hot scientists are pulling down $100,000,000 contracts. Maybe this will change soon. In Hollywood, you have an agent negotiate on your behalf, and they kind of are serving as that middle mediator. That's not common in the corporate corporate America right now. Right? Now if that happens, it almost dilutes the leadership and presence of the executive. And so how I work is similar to an attorney where all correspondence goes through me before it goes to the end recipient. So let's say that you're gonna talk to the CEO, You call me first. We prepare the game plan. We strategize. You then perform, then we debrief. Then the CEO sends you an email. That email comes to me. We draft it together. I usually test my client's instincts first rather than just doing the work for them. Test their instincts, polish the language, because every step of the way is a negotiation. Now this also slows the process down. We want to go slower, and I'm sure we'll talk a little bit more about that in the podcast too. Haste equals risk. So as you slow down, oftentimes, we wanna take a couple of days to respond, not to be a jerk or belligerent or to manufacture some fake urgency, but it shows a little scarcity and thought process to your time, and we get to calculate and collect information through the process. This is so interesting. What what's the most common biggest mistake that people make when they're negotiating their call? They don't understand when it starts. So the it starts much sooner than you think. So I've I've got myself on hot water with this before too because a like, a LinkedIn profile in your resume is a snapshot of what you've been in the past, but it doesn't help you negotiate in the forward.
Right? So if somebody can say, oh, I'm looking at Lenny, and I'm looking at product manager. If that's all they saw, they're not gonna know all this work that you're doing in the future moving forward and what your vision's, things like that. So they stamp you as product manager Lenny. Right? Now your media mogul icon, whatever. Right? But there's a gap to have to fill. Right? So the things you say on LinkedIn serve as a perception. The headshot that you have serves as a perception. I used to joke that I could scan profiles. I would know how much money someone made by the quality of their headshot. And you can see, and it would like, it was wildly consistent. It was almost frustrating. But, anyway, what you're putting out into the world, the narrative you share publicly starts to become how you're known, your reputation. If you're positioned as a commodity, you will be treated like a commodity. Right? So oftentimes, the less you share is better because when you're on the phone with somebody, you can correct the narrative and steer the conversation where you want it to go versus have to live by the sins of what you did ten years ago as an example. So the things you share with recruiters, they take notes. When a recruiter calls you and says, hey, Lenny. How much money do you expect to make? And you say, oh, you know, $2.25. That sounds fair. You know, five years later, they call you and they expect you to make $2.25 again, not recognizing that you've grown exponentially since then. So everything you communicate starts to serve as that value chain across the board. Another mistake that people make, and you mentioned this a little earlier, it feels uncomfortable to get, quote, unquote, confrontational or to feel like you're asking for too much. So often we'll hide behind the easiest communication channel as possible. So I might email you my demands demands, right, or my negotiation. And the problem with that is I can't control tone. I can't control
especially when you're negotiating at high levels. If I push back and the CEO that reads it's in the airport security line and pissed off and they read it, they might be like, that bastard wants more money. That's all they take away. Even if you perfectly worded it, you got it all, you know, as clean as it can be. If you catch them at the wrong time, you have no control over how it's received. Right? So it's always better to have at least a video call, if not in person, so you can share tone, you can read body language, you can correct every step of the way. Oftentimes, we also try to negotiate through recruiters. Right? You could do that. Jake I did the thing, Jacob. I talked to a recruiter. I spent a half an hour explaining it. Problem with that is you're playing a game of telephone. So the same thing happens. I I explain it to the recruiter. I get the tone right. The recruiter goes to the CEO and says, that bastard wants more money, and that's all they communicate. Right? So people negotiate with the wrong folks. You have to go to the one who has skin in the game. Who controls the P and L? Who controls EBITDA? What what's what's their motivation? That's who you wanna talk to. And so some people might also have a concern with, well, how do I go around the recruiter? I don't want them to look bad. We have to do that respectfully, and now we need to plan what that communication looks like. And so the important thing here is just because it's uncomfortable doesn't mean you don't need to do it. It just means you don't know how to do it. So when something's uncomfortable, you have to run towards that because that's where the growth happens. I love how tactical we're getting here. So following this thread. So the advice here is when you get an offer and you want and you should basically, you're saying you should always negotiate in some way. You should push back. Your advice here is don't do it over email. Make sure you find a way to do a video call with essentially the hiring manager or the person that is has skin in the game, the like, the finances and the budget. There are situations, especially at high levels. More deals are closed on the golf course than they are in a boardroom. Right? So there are situations where you pull someone into a different element. This is called home field advantage.
Right? So if you go to a company to have a conversation, you're out of your element in in a situation where you may not perform your best. The other thing people don't do is they don't control the time of which they have a conversation. CEO wants to hop on at 06:00 in the morning. Get your ass up, get that presentation, and go. You need to say, I'm not available at that time. I'm and and you read your own body language. I'm strongest between the hours of 10AM and and 1PM. I want a meeting in that time. So I will say, I'm unavailable until that time becomes available. That also communicates scarcity and that you won't get pushed around. Right? So it's scary to do that to say no to the CEO. I'm actually only available here. That also creates a rubber band effect that makes you more attractive. Right? And so oftentimes, it actually OpenAI did this, which is funny. I I didn't realize what the reason was, but I had some clients interviewing for c suite roles at OpenAI. And so pushing Sam Altman around a little bit, which I'm okay with. I'm okay with that. But so they used to walk outside of the office and just walk downtown San Francisco instead. Right? You take someone out of the element. You get the endorphins going. You're walking and talking. You're the important piece here is instead of you and I being confrontational, like negotiating between each other, we're locking walking side by side. So it's almost like you could put your arm around the other person. You're solving the problem together. These sound like minor things to consider, but the body language and the tone and the collaboration and the energy starts to flow more naturally when you do this. This all behavioral psychology. Right? And so what funny story. Why I found out OpenAI did that was because they didn't want any executives going into the office because it was such a mess. It was like the biggest startup you've ever seen. So I used to joke that it was, two midgets in a trench coat pretending to be a real company. Right? And,
so, anyway, the point was let's take them to a place where we can control and have an advantage over the conversation. So that's a way that you can think about where are you gonna feel most comfortable? What hours of the day are you most comfortable? If you can bring someone to a lunch or a coffee where you're on even playing field or even your home field, you will perform better in those situations, and you have more control over that than you may think. So the advice there is try to get this conversation out of their office. It can be. You know? But if I'm a product manager and I'm talking to a director, that may not be possible. Right. Right? It might just say, look. You gotta come into the office. You gotta do this. Right? I'm pushing like, when I'm talking about a C suite level, like, could pull them out of the office. Hey. Let's go get drinks. Mhmm. Like, sometimes these deals are closed at 08:30 at night after a concert or something like that. So it's easing that situation. That being said, it doesn't mean you couldn't try. It's like, hey. I've got a couple of questions. Are you open to, you know, take a walk down AT And T Park and and have a conversation about it? If you could pull them out of that, you can start to build a stronger relationship through that, and you're more likely to get your way. Talk us through this the kind of this the process you would recommend from, I get an offer, recruiter sends me, here's your offer, 300 ks salary, some kind of equity. What's kind of like the step by step you'd, and I know this is depends on the role, seniority type of company, PE, VC backed startup, because it's very scary to push back and be like, oh, I want more. What's like that first email slash reply to that email look like typically? Like, what are some phrases maybe you'd use? And then what's the how do you open up a conversation where you plan to ask for more if you're meeting in person especially? Because that feels so scary. So first, we wanna approach with gratitude. Right? We're thankful that we wanna move forward. Right? So, Lenny, I appreciate you making me an offer. Right? I'm excited to work with you. We wanna show enthusiasm, which also shows some confidence. We have to show that the deal's going to get done even if you're on the fence about it.
Right? Now it's not to say you're so excited that it's a sure thing, and you're not showing that you're disappointed even if you are. Right? So I'm grateful. I'm looking forward to working with you. I wanna review this over the next couple of days. Right? I'll talk to my wife about it. You know, talk to an adviser, so and so. Later on, when you're a high level executive, you're talking to legal, you're talking to advisers, you're talking to a coach. Like, you may have five or six people see that. Right? Employment lawyer, all that. That stuff is expected. Right? So you're going through the process. I'm gonna take a couple days to process this. I'll get back to you. I may have a couple of questions. Right? But we'll loop back, and it shouldn't be a problem. I imagine we start working together in a couple weeks. Right? So the point is you have to sell that the deal is gonna be done, which helps them feel like it's gonna move forward regardless. Right? So any ask that you make is not gonna be egregious. Now oftentimes, the higher you anchor, the better you're gonna perform, which can be frustrating because you don't necessarily wanna be like, oh, I increased it 40% or anything like that. Now this is where a lot of nuance comes in. So we might say, you know, come back three days later, wanna have the conversation. Let's take a walk in the park and talk through it. Right? You know, I gotta be honest with you where this offer stands right now. I don't feel comfortable moving forward. It's a little lighter than I expected. Right? I may start saying something like that, and then just wait and see what they have to say. Maybe they say, well, what did you have in mind? It's like, well, what's the chance you can share what the range looks like for this and what type of performance did you expect for each of these levels? Right? Or they may say, we we've comped you in the middle part of the range. Right? You might say, what does the top end look like? You know, what what must I do to fit those needs for you? Can you help me understand? Now for a lot of folks, especially in this market and this if if we talk about what it was like in 2021 versus what it's like now, there's some over leveling that's happened. So there are people that are c suite going back to VP, and VP is going back to directors, especially as they go to bigger companies.
Oftentimes, I'll say, you know, as we had this conversation, I I'm likely a little more horsepower than you anticipated. Right? What's the chance we can come in and restructure the comp for the type of talent we're bringing in here? And so this is a line that we used. There was three folks last year that were in ranges of a 185 to two eighty five. That deal landed at 1,100,000.0 when we were done with increases in stock, big cash increases. Two deals that were comped at 600 that landed at one point one and one point two. So doubled from that. And these were situations where the role started at senior director and were up leveled to VP because they were reaching for top talent in that situation. So there are opportunities where it's easier to steer if you're really, really good. Right? I can see why some listeners are like, well, I'm not there in my career yet. In that case, this is just how it gets done. Right? This is how bigger moves happen. It doesn't mean you can't push for maybe 20% more naturally. Nat, I would start with, what's the chance there's a little bit more here? I was expecting this. Right? Again, more nuances because if you open up what you're looking for too early in the conversation, that can be difficult to come back from later on. It's not entirely egregious, but one of the first things out of a recruiter's mouth is how much money do you want to make, Which is eerily similar to an illegal question, which is how much money do you make? Right? But if you say, what do you want to make? Then it's okay. And that's where a lot of people get hung up as well. I love that phrase you just shared of what's what's the chance there's a bit more here as expecting number x? Is that is that the phrase you recommend, that approach of just a soft pushback just to see? Sometimes. Again, it it really depends on the leveling. If you're very senior, I I typically don't wanna re anchor with a number because you should ever be so sure of what you're worth that you wouldn't accept more.
Right? And when you anchor, that's the ceiling. And what often happens is naturally, they wanna split the difference. And so I'll have a quick there's a quick Hollywood story here. So we had a writer who had a $700,000 contract. Right? So 700, and the agent that I was working with was was saying, like, this, this writer has the most aggressive attorneys in LA. Right? They're super aggressive. And I said, well, how do you know? First of all, well, if that's what they're perceived as. So the production studio offers this writer 700. The attorneys come back and say, we want 1.3. Right? 1,300,000.0. And the studio says, fine. We'll do a million, and they settled at a million. And I find that really interesting because the studio came up 300,000 and the attorneys lost 300,000. So you split the difference right in the middle. So if the attorneys said 1.5, would the deal have come in at 1.1? If the attorney said 1.7, would it have come in at 1.2? Right? How do we know? The way I see it is those attorneys weren't aggressive enough. We didn't find the ceiling there, did we? Like, that was lazy negotiating. Right? So it still made the client 300,000. They were excited. Right? The attorneys were excited. They made more on their commission. The agency was excited. They got 10% of that, but we didn't find the ceiling, did we? That was lazy negotiating. Right? So those are things that you gotta slow down to really understand where is the value being made here. And that movie, like, that movie could make $50,000,000. You think 1,000,000 for writing was worth it for someone who controlled the creative there? I don't know. A 50 to one value exchange, why not push for more? Why not put some milestones in that if this movie makes more than 50, my milestone is increased? This is how, like, Tom Brady had his contract at Tampa Bay. Right? Win eight games, get a half $1,000,000. Win 12 games, get a million 5. Go to the playoffs,
get an extra this. Win the division, get this. Get this get to the Super Bowl x. Win Super Bowl MVP, 2 and a half million more. Like, so performance based triggers. I love just how how much you love this. It's just clear this is so interesting. It's so it's really nerdy. I know. Like, I I'd, like, obsess over it in a in a weird way, but, I don't know. It's it's been kinda baked into my my psyche for a long time, probably because I I felt so powerless growing up that I'm so interested in how how power works. And I was so scared to advocate for myself, and I was the least assertive person that you knew until I met my wife. And she taught me how to be assertive, and now I'm, like, off to the races. So that's been helpful. On that note, do these tactics work on on kids and wives? Is this something that translates Absolutely not. I would not recommend that, especially if your wife knows what you do for a living and hears you on the phone all the time. And you try to say, what's the chance? And she's like, no chance. What's don't don't pull that on me. I know what you're doing. Right? And toddlers are terrorists, so I don't I haven't figured that one out. I I've resort to bribes, and maybe that is a little Machiavellian on the on the toddlers. You can be you can be out of your mind working on that, but, yeah, don't recommend it with your spouse. I would pay a lot of money for a version of you for toddlers. Oh my god. It's like I try to negotiate with the older kid. I'm like I'm like, three minutes. He's like, six. I'm like, four minutes. No. Six. He never budgets. He's always Five minutes. He's like, eight. Although sometimes does that too. Yeah. I I go, do you do you want a binky? And he goes, five binkies. I go, I don't know if we have five. And he's like, 10 binkies. Like, whatever you need, I'll get it if you go to sleep. Yeah. Yeah. Please sleep. Yeah. Yeah. We need we need this for toddlers. I would I would I would subscribe.
Miss Rachel's the closest thing we got. Yeah. Okay. So coming back to this conversation number. So you've touched on this a bit, and I think this is an important part of your advice is when the number question comes up, who should speak first? What should your approach be if they ask you this question of how much do you want to make? Yeah. There's there's a decent amount of nuance in this too. So one thing you should realize is that, especially earlier in your career, they're gonna push on this harder. Mhmm. And that indicates that the person asking is really more looking for a a commoditized or a price sensitive hire. Right? That can be okay. Right? There's nothing wrong with with sharing your number and getting a deal that that moves the needle early in your career or even middle of your career. That changes the higher up the ladder you go. And this is one of the reasons I wanna share this is that what got you here won't get you there. Right? So things start changing as you mature in your career. And so when you're working with a top recruiter, they don't ask you about comp. They won't. The problem is top recruiters only reach out to you when you're very well known, and they don't reach out to you very often. It's like you it's very difficult to optimize for inbound attention the higher up you go unless you become very popular. Right? And then what happens is you share less information because people come to you in a different capacity. Right? So nine times out of 10, a recruiter reaching out to you is gonna ask that number. Right? One time out of 10, they're gonna just focus on the value creation. Those are the ones you wanna focus on the best possible. But it could be confusing because so often you get a different side of the story, more of the commodity type stuff. So, typically, I'd recommend you answer. Right? I don't talk about compensation until we're ready to make an offer. It sounds like we're pretty far away there. I'd love the opportunity to learn more about the team, understand where the value comes in, and proceed kinda down that path to make sure we're a good fit. Is that gonna be a problem?
And then typically, they'll say, yeah. It is gonna be a problem. I just need to know a number. Right? Now, I mean, this is what it's very uncomfortable to do this back and forth and to say no, especially Americans have a hard time saying no. I have noticed that other cultures can be more direct and just say, no. I'm not gonna do it. Right? So be it. Right? So culturally, there's a lot of differences in how this conversation happens. And so they say, look. We we we need a number from you. You might say, look. I'm uncomfortable doing that right now because I don't understand the scope of the role. Can you help me understand what you had in mind? Right? The reason I learned this is I used to be a marketing manager making $12 an hour in Downtown San Francisco for series a companies. Not knowing that $12 an hour wasn't a lot of money. I just didn't know any better. But then I looked up marketing managers, and I saw that they made $60 a year, and I was suddenly got offended at how little money I was making. Right? Then I got promoted to director in that period and was making $14 an hour. Good for me. Right? And then I saw that marketing directors were making a 110,000 at the time. So when a recruiter called me, I pulled that. I didn't wanna tell him I was making $14 an hour. They'd be like, who is this kid? He's not very good. That's fake title. And instead, said, what did you have in mind? They And said, oh, we're looking at a 110 to a 130. And I'd say, oh, I'm on the upper end of that now. And so I went from $14 an hour to a $120,000 a year in a single month a single jump. Just like that. That changed my life. One negotiation. It's one of the reasons I'm so passionate about that. I hated the marketing work for what it's worth, but I thought, like, if I made a lot of money, it would make that pain go away of not liking my job. Turns out that was a fool's errand, but that's a story for another time. Do things in your experience ever fall apart when you try to do that? Because that is a scary thing to push back on, just like, no, I'm not gonna tell you number. And you're giving us advice on how to say it in a nice way. And then just like, what did you have in mind? The fear is like, okay, they're gonna hate me and they're gonna be like, oh, it's not worth it. We're gonna move on. Has that ever happened? What are the odds that might happen? A couple things about power.
Right? So if you have the ability to say no, you have infinite power. Right? The nuance changes when when you don't have a job and you need to pay your mortgage, you might answer that differently because you want something. Right? Now this isn't to shame somebody who's feeling that way. Right? Like, if you're out of work for six weeks in San Francisco, you're homeless. Right? That's just the reality of the situation. So if I gotta say a number to get a job, I I think that's fine. Right? But understand that once you're employed and somebody's asking you and your needs are already getting met, why do you need to get pushed around? Right? This is one reason that it's easier to find a job when you have a job. Now I think this is a myth for what it's worth, but this is easier because naturally your needs are getting met financially to a degree. So naturally, you negotiate more confident. When you're out of work and you have the uncomfort of being out of work six months, twelve months, eighteen months, you have an identity tied to a chief product officer role or a VP of product. Like, that's your identity in our country. We don't ask who you are and about your kids. We say, what do you do for a living? And when you are stripped of that title, it's uncomfortable, and we want that pain to end. And so we give in to these demands because it's an authoritative figure, and we want that pain to go away. If we have the finances and the luxury of being able to say no, we increase our power. If we have the ability to push back and practice these difficult conversations, you will increase your power, and you'll you'll land at a higher rate because of it. So can it get frustrated? Absolutely. But if somebody disrespects you through that process, doesn't that give you an indication of who the company is working with? Right? Now, again, I might accept that because I need the money. I understand. Right? But it's very telling how somebody's gonna treat you depending on very simple pushbacks. And one behavioral psychology hack here is we give someone a a positive reputation that they want to withhold whether they deserve it or not. So in this instance, you'd say the recruiter,
I wanna thank you for being an advocate for me and for respecting that I won't share compensation figures right now. I appreciate that. And then they're trapped. They have to say, no. I don't respect you. I have to do this. Or they have to say, you're right. Like, that makes sense. Let me move you forward or not. Right? Another option, you don't necessarily know if you're the best solution for that fit or not. And so we're obviously very ingrained when a recruiter reaches out to you and they say, look. We're gonna pay $1.20, and you make $1.50, and you're like, oh, I'm not interested. That's not even close. I would recommend continuing that process anyway to see as practice what you can negotiate, and you can always say no later. Right? Just because having that practice is gonna make you hundreds of thousands, if not millions more in your career. Alternatively, if you feel bad about, oh, I wasted their time because I was too much for what they needed, make recommendations for them. So when the offer comes in in usage, they gave us a senior PM role and what you've realized is the JD and all of the work that you did is actually a director role, but they're not gonna pay for a director role. Right? How often does that happen? You get to say, look. You know, this role isn't in alignment with where we're headed. Right? Would you like me to make an introduction to somebody that's a better fit? So you still get to help them. You remove yourself. And then sometimes they say, no. Actually, we do want the role to be more senior. We're gonna extend for you. Like, my first VP role came out of turning down a content manager position for 70,000, and six months later, I landed a VP for a quarter million. Like, that was my my first realm into VP. The initial offer was for content manager. So they came three, four levels up the food chain. That was a long negotiation, but these things can happen if you don't say no too quickly. So along these lines, wanna touch on it feels like maybe the core, approach you take, kind of the core to your philosophy,
which is to kind of break out of this idea of some benchmark for a specific role and instead make it very clear to the company, here's the pain I will solve for you that is really important to you, and here's why it's worth paying me this much more because it's such a big problem for you. Talk about just that mindset. So this really comes down to having curiosity and showing curiosity about the actual problem. Because usually, if I'm speaking to a room of 400 people, right, which I I'll occasionally do with some communities, I'll ask them, who is actually doing the job that's on their job description? Nobody will raise their hand. It's not like you have your job description right there, and that's what you do. Right? There's always so much more that's not documented. Right? Now when you're going into a position and you see a JD, you're like, yeah. I could do all those things, but there's so much more. Right? This is another reason that anchoring to a number too early is tough because you anchor to, oh, this is this is fair for a senior PM role. Right? This is fair. Then you go through the process of the interviewing. It's very clear that it's a director role. You're gonna leave five people. They scoop another team under you. Oh, we're gonna put a product led growth motion under you too. There's an whole engineering pod, and there's this, and there's this. All of a sudden, that's called scope creep. Right? So they scope creep the role. They talk about how they want a senior hire. They're excited about you. They get you excited about it. And then then they give you the offer, and it's actually 20% under the number you originally shared. And then you say, okay. Well, this looks like a director role. I want x. And they say, but you said you only wanted one forty. Now they're using a number against you, and it's very awkward to come back from that. And so that's why we don't wanna anchor too early. We wanna understand. And so this is one thing I wish, especially product engineers, designers, that side of the the the product stack. I would love for you to treat more of these like a sales conversation. Right? You are an enterprise solution, a consulting solution. That is several $100,000,
if not millions of dollars a year. If you were to sell that product into an organization, think enterprise b to b deals, and I know I'm getting a little buzzword here. Think an enterprise b to b deal to Salesforce, and you're gonna sell a million and a half dollar product. It would take you eighteen months to develop the relationships and close that deal. You have to develop champions in the organization. You have to understand what value you can create for each of those people so that they can advocate for you. You don't come in and pitch them the price right off the bat. You need to understand the value. So through the process, it's a discovery process. Why am I here? What gets you excited about me? Right? That's how we start a conversation. Too many interviews start with, you know, tell me about yourself. Tell me about this stuff in the past. If you're talking about your past, you're on the back foot, and you're losing that conversation. You're the one revealing information. You're not getting anything. We instead wanna have a conversation and say, look. Some of the best interviews I've always had felt a little bit more like consultations or brainstorming sessions. Are you open to having a chat like that today? That's the first step. Typically, say, yeah. That sounds way better than me trying to drill you with questions. So let me ask you. Like, what are some of the things that you're excited about? I imagine, Lenny, you're excited to talk to me because I can help some of your audience negotiate. You've seen proof where dozens of your subscribers have made more money with the article we wrote together. You've even seen that some of your guests unknowingly have been negotiated against with some of the work that I've done. Is there anything that I missed? What's exciting to you? So I wanna clarify why I'm in the room with you. Right? So we do that as a PMO. Sounds like now we move to labeling. It sounds like you have a challenge with this product line. It sounds like we need to move or ship product faster. It sounds like AI has been a problem, and we need to shift towards native AI. Is there anything that I missed? Right?
Then they're revealing information. You take control of that conversation. And then we wanna share, what have you done about it? Like, how big of a problem is this in the organization? This is basically a SWAT analysis. Like, what are some of the things you've done well? What are some of the areas that the team failed? What are some of the things we should be doing that we're not? And what are some of the things we absolutely shouldn't touch? So I wanna add I wanna ask all these discovery questions. They're like, oh, look. It's a it's a $10,000,000 problem where we've we've gone through five different PMs in six months, and you're starting to understand where the dirty laundry in the company is. Then we get to sell the vacation. Right? Then we get to say, look. Alright. So fast forward six months from now and we're working on this problem together, and we've solved the churn in the engineering department or in the design department or whatever. We've solved that, and we've got two product launches under our belt. When you head into that board meeting next, how can we ensure that your head is held high? So what I'm doing is I'm psychologically walking them to a position of, like, a painless position. I've removed the friction and the pain from their shoulders, and I force them to visualize a utopian situation and who is right next to them doing that. I was. So when it comes to your competition, there is no competition. I'm the only person who walked you into a vacation that you want to be in looking forward to your head held high in a board meeting that's usually stressful, but instead this time because you worked with me, it's not stressful. Then all of a sudden when it comes to the offer stage, there may be five other PMs, but I can only imagine working with Jacob. And so when I push back, the likelihood that I break the rules is significantly higher than if I hadn't done that. This is amazing. So trying to just summarize what you're sharing here, and I think it's important for people to also note, like, you can do it in your own words. This is likely not something you'll just be able to pop out and do. Like, this is something that takes time to do well, and it feels awkward probably. And that's why people work with you that feel like you probably role play in all these things, but still, like, there's things people can pull out of this that they can do on their own. It it could be tricky to understand where your value is. Right? Because you're so close to it. You just do this every day. And for,
you know, product folks that only listen to product folks and and are in the product ecosystem in your bubble, Lenny, they're not seeing the impact on marketing. They're not having those conversations necessarily. So ingrained in everything that you do that you could functionally be excellent. But in order to break these boundaries, you have to be cross functionally understanding how it impacts others and the motivations of others. That's when things really start to unlock. And that's where just understanding a little perspective can be helpful in that outside influence there. I I think this is important to just briefly summarize your approach. So the idea here is, figure out in many ways what matters most to them, what problems do they have, what they see in you, just like understand the landscape of where you could bring tons of value, help them see that, like here's the problem that I can help you with, here's the problem that you have that we need. Like, here's the many problems that we can help you with. And then help them visualize. You you described it as sell the vacation, help them visualize. Okay. Now that this was solved, how is how how awesome would that be? And part there's, like, all this psychological stuff you're throwing in there just like how do do it? I can really make this concrete with a quick story. Let's do it. So there's a very famous musician who was born the same year as me for those super sleuths out there who had a tour, a billion dollar tour, and a documentary. And the director of said tour was a hot commodity in Hollywood. Every agency wanted to sign this director. This director didn't wanna just do movie documentaries. Right? Wanted to start producing actual movies. Like, that's the dream. Right? So every agency wanted to sign
this hot director who just did this billion dollar deal with people already know who it is. Right? And so my client, the agent asked me, like, we gotta sign this. Like, it would be stupid to go to any other agency. Right? We've done this. We've done that. We've represented Julia Roberts and and Matt Damon and all this. It's just naming name dropping. Right? Now this is actually a problem because if we're leaning on logic and credibility, we're losing. Right? We need to sell the future and and own the emotion. And so he she just asked me, how do we close this deal? And to me, this was very simple. I said, if you already had the job, who would you introduce him to? If you already had it, the deal's already signed. So put yourself in the position that you're already doing the job. That's why in interview process, if you treat it like you're consulting, you're doing a value exchange, you're increasing your value, and you're asking the right questions. If you feel like you're on the outside and you're having to say, well, look, Lenny, I did this and I did that. You see I have, you know, 3,000,000 words written? Like, why wouldn't you wanna be the guest? Like, I don't care about what you've done. I care about what you'll provide my audience. Right? So in this deal, we get into the meetings big day. Right? And I said, make the make the schedule the appointment already. Work with the assistant, schedule the appointment, right, with whoever it is that needs to be. It needs to be a big name person. So we go into that interview, and inevitably, the conversation goes, why should I sign your agency? And so my client says, what are you doing on Friday? I cleared a lunch with your assistant. And he says, well, I guess I'm going to lunch. And she's like, great. I'll have you meet Steven. And he said, Steven who? And she said, Steven Spielberg. And then some form after that, it was where do I sign? Because the meeting was already set with Steven Spielberg. For somebody who wants to get into film production, what better meeting to have. Right? So for the other agencies, they're like, we're the greatest thing. Like, we've represented this director that did this media tour, we did that. They lost
because we sold a vacation, and we made it a reality right then and there. And the value was clear. So there's both this mindset shift of I am I'm gonna try to actually help you figure out where I can be helpful and where the problems are and then start actually thinking about how to fix this. And, also, there's, like try to even do it. It sounds like you could just If you can do it. So one of the tricks of my business is, like, I I can plant seeds with my clients really easily because I'm on the phone with somebody, and I'm understanding who they need to connect with. And so they they might say, oh, I need you know, I've I've been interested in getting to to Google or whatever. Let's say they're in product. I said, oh, I I have somebody in product at Google. Let me make a text for you real quick, and I'll just do it while I'm on the phone with them. Just hold on a second. Hold on. And then what happens is they get the beep. That's reciprocity. Like, I'm triggering a reciprocity imbalance. And then I'm making another one for him. So I'll sometimes do two or three introductions right then and there, and they see the value before I'm even off the phone. What I've also done is I've given three different touch points where I can make sure that that person is following through. I can get a three sixty degree view of that person. I can ask one of those people to prompt them to close with me if I need to sell a deal. I'm getting a reciprocity imbalance. So what I wanna do is show that I have the resources to support them whether they sign a contract or not, and that's where we go. In in this instance, like, if you wanna role play with me for a second, something that would be really exciting. Like, Lenny, I wanna understand what's exciting to you. If today's podcast was the best podcast, the highest performing podcast that had ever happened, right, what would that mean to you? And, also, what did we do to make it so successful? What are the comments that people had to put down below? Like, what are the things they said to make you feel like my conversation with Jacob was the best conversation I had all year? What would that look like to you? Like, I immediately love this question as a
you know, like, sounds to people like this is manipulative and like, it could come across as that as an external observer, but to me, I'm like, this is exactly what I want to achieve and I love that you're thinking about this and I want you to be focused on this and I would do a lot to help make this happen. I guess to answer your question, I would just love it to be very concrete tactical advice that people can use to help negotiate their comp. And they spread this with all their friends. They're like, this is the best thing I've ever heard around comp. And one of the things that we can do is that we plant what you want someone to say in that conversation as well. So when I'm talking to these executives and I'm making the introductions, sometimes I'll ask or an introductions come to me. I'll be curious. Like, when you go back and you share with a friend, what are you gonna say about me? Are you gonna say Jacob was really helpful, or are you gonna say that Jacob was an asshole? Right? I'm curious. And sometimes I just make a complete reframe, so there's no other option. Right? Well, I'm obviously not gonna say you're an asshole, so I'm gonna say you're the great thing that I want you to say. I'm controlling the narrative I want them to perpetuate. So in this instance and maybe some of your readers are gonna be like, this guy's a total manipulative. Right? I will say, I hope that you use this for good and not evil, but this is just the way power works. Right? I would hope that in the comment section, you say, Lenny, this was such a refreshing and energetic podcast. Like, this is what we want more of. This is exciting. We've done a lot of stuff in AI. This was very cool and different. Right? So I'm I'm suggesting if you felt that way, share something like that below. Right? Too many YouTube videos are like, oh, like and subscribe. That's all they do. Right? Which does trigger action. It's a very simple thing. But when it comes to navigating your net worth and negotiating for power, these executives at the top control what every other person is saying naturally. They know when somebody's talking about them when they're not in the room, and they've not only know about it, but they know what they said about them. Similar to when somebody's like, oh, Lenny, we're gonna do reference checks on you.
What's the first thing you do? You call all those references and you say, what are you gonna say about me? Right? Ideally, you can control that to some capacity and improve the likelihood of you moving forward. So we already do this. We just have to integrate it into some everyday conversations, and you could better control outcomes. It's the same interview process. When you go back to your committee, are you gonna say, Jacob solved x y z and we're excited? Like, slam dunk. Let's move forward. And I like really quick slam dunk. Right? Easy to remember. Or are you gonna say there's a couple gaps here in some of the competitors that we have or some of the competition seems more fulfilling? And I wanna ask for that feedback while I'm still on the call with you. I don't wanna wait for an email to say, I'm sorry. You're not a fit. And then you ask for feedback, you don't get any. I have to do it while we're live in person because you can't deny me in that moment without it being awkward. So what are you gonna say? Is this a slam dunk? What's one thing I should've asked that I didn't? What are some areas that the other candidates excelled that you wish I showed more of? Right? I wanna understand where those gaps are so I have an opportunity to address them. And then if I didn't make the mark, I'd say, I'd love to have a conversation with you next Thursday to talk through that in more detail. Thank you for bringing that to my attention. If you close the next conversation, you don't give up necessarily. You know, that that was another monologue, but that was a that was a little bit inside the mind how I think about these things. No. This is so awesome. So, you know, if you think about a hiring manager, having someone like like, I don't know. I don't know. Let's imagine I'm interviewing for a role. If I come to them, if and say, here's the problem. I'm gonna solve churn for you. I'm gonna fix your onboarding flow. I'm gonna figure out how to level up your design experience because I know that these are big challenges for you right now. Like, if I was the hiring manager, I'd be like, holy shit. This is awesome. This is I just need someone to come in and solve these problems for me. This is why deliver.
Right? And you And that's the other thing. It's it sounds like if this guy can't deliver Mhmm. It's not gonna happen. Or if this gal can't deliver, that's frustrating. Right? I'm not suggesting go so far outside of your comfort zone that you feel like you can't deliver. Right? Because that reputation will haunt you. Right? You have to really understand. And I would also add that I wouldn't be so sure that I'm gonna fix the onboarding flow. I wouldn't be so sure that I'm not so sure that you know that's the problem yet. The longer we can drag out the hiring process and this sounds like pulling teeth, especially when you're unemployed. Like, I just want the pain to be over. I'm asking you to slow it down. The more you slow down the process, the more you fight back about the manufactured urgency of us needing to get into that role sooner, the more information you're gonna understand about that company and how you could really help. Right? So you could say, you know, Lenny, I hear that you wanna fix the onboarding flow. I hear that. I hear this. But it sounds like that product might be deprecated anyway in this wave of AI. Is that a possibility? What I don't wanna do is prioritize something that the team's gonna cut. Right? That's gonna hurt the p and l or whatever. Now I can only ask that question if I've truly asked the right questions to understand. Right? So you may come in. This is the same concept as never be so sure of your worth that you wouldn't accept more. You're so sure of the job description that they need these three things that you don't even try to ask the questions to understand what the deeper problem is. And this going back also to why founders might be frustrated with my talk track. I'm not asking for you to take your pie and give them a bigger slice. I'm asking for you to work with somebody to expand the pie so everybody gets bigger slices. That's the that's the plan. And if you train your candidates and you're more revealing and if their performance is tied to it, naturally, they need to ask more questions to understand how to make it true. That's what we want. That's putting companies up into the right. I like that you went there around don't
overpromise because it's easy to say, hey. We're gonna solve all your pain for I'm gonna I'm gonna be the best for Underpromise, over deliver. Always. Mhmm. Under promise, over deliver. This episode is brought to you by Omni. Many product teams today are in the process of debating how to ship AI analytics. The hard part is obvious. Having an LLM guess at SQL in production is a huge mess and just a bad idea. Omni takes a different approach. They have a semantic layer built in so that when you embed their analytics, the AI actually knows your business definitions, not just your raw tables. You can test queries, validate the reasoning, and lock down permissions before anything hits production. If you want AI analytics in your product without building the whole stack from scratch, check out omni.co/leni for a free three week trial. Companies like Perplexity, DBT, and BuzzFeed use Omni to ship analytics their customers can trust. That's omni.co/leni. There's this balance of being confident in your abilities to achieve something big and solve problems. And then there's this other piece of just don't over promise. Is there anything you help people do to help feel more confident about they will actually be a huge asset to this company and they're worth all this extra money. How do you is it like a pep talk? How do you help people? Yeah. Part of my hat is hype man hat. Right? You gotta be a hype man to a degree. And I work with some of the most privileged and successful people in the world. Right? It's not that hard to say, look at your life and look at your choices. Most of the things you've done have been good. Right? At least financially. Right? We could debate about the ethics of the companies they work for and those things. Right? Now most of the decisions that you've made in your career have made you a top tenth of a percentile of the earners on the planet. Don't tell me you're not confident. Like, you can't pull that. Another thing that I do is that I put it I I reframe everything in a language they understand.
So if I'm working with a sales leader, a job search process is an enterprise sales process. Like, if you understand enterprise sales, you understand how to do this. You just don't know how to do it for yourself. If you're in marketing, you should know about positioning and market research. That's the same thing as going into a job market and understanding what to do. You understand that an inbound lead is much easier to close in an outbound lead. If you're in product and you're orchestrating a PRD, right, it's the same thing. You're understanding the user's demands. You're creating for those demands. You're opt like, you're developing the right flow. You're making the design as simple as possible. You're eliminating friction. That's a term I use a lot, which I know product leaders will use also. We wanna eliminate friction. Right? How does that look in your job search? Well, what does the customer want? Who's your buyer? The buyer is the hiring manager. Maybe it's the chief product officer. Maybe it's the CEO. What do they care about? When you're doing it for a company, you know which customers to interview. You know how to do that. Well, you need to interview lots of CEOs. You need to interview lots of salespeople who are trying to solve this growth problem or lots of AI side. And, it's not just product. Right? So you're now interviewing your customers. You're understanding their needs. Now you're designing solutions for their needs. Now how do you make it as frictionless as possible so it's a no brainer and they go through your user flow as easy as possible? So for product folks, instead of thinking, wow. This stuff sounds like Machiavelli and manipulation, and it sounds like a power trip, and it sounds like something I could never do because I'm not maybe I'm not as gregarious, and maybe I'm not a six foot three tall white dude in California who's got the sales persona and he's got that extraversion. I'm not that. Don't don't be me. Don't be Jacob Light. Be you, your authentic you, and apply it to what you already know. You know how to do this in product, design it for your career. And you remember the early days of writing PRDs and how rough it was? Remember how rough it was to go back to the engineering team and just little by little get product sprints out where the product is just moving a little bit at a time? Remember how hard that was? The early days of managing your career like this will feel like that too.
But you also know that if you're ten years in your career, this stuff becomes second nature. Right? So I wanna reframe to the experiences that you already know, and that will develop confidence. I like this framing you're referencing here for product people of this idea. Like, you're basically trying to position yourself the way you'd position a product, kind of the value prop of the basically, as a product team, you're trying to sell people on, here's why this product is worth paying money for. And in this and you do that by understanding you do use research, you understand their pain points, you understand how to position it so that you make it clear this will solve your pain point. Essentially, that's what you're describing from when you're interviewing is think about it that same way. The part I don't wanna gloss over is making it frictionless. Right? So interviewing is a skill on both sides. Most people don't know how to interview very well. It's tell me about yourself. Like, tell me about this product you built. Tell me about that. How'd that look? You don't get anywhere talking about the past. Like, you you might build credibility and and all that great. You don't start solving problems in that process. So they're like, okay. Well, I saw that. Now you're gonna go on to the next person. They're gonna do the same crap. Right? Same thing. Same thing. Same thing. So you repeat your story ad nauseam, and you never learn anything, and you never grow. So how do we make this frictionless? Well, I wanna make it cognitively easier for you to have a conversation with me by leading. That's why I had that framework I was talking about earlier. Like, why am I here? What are the problems you have? I suspect it's this. What have you done about it? What would it look like if we solved it? Now I'm taking so much of the pressure off of you. I'm controlling the narrative, and I'm collecting more information while revealing none about my comp expectations. And what I'm focused on is creating as much value as possible. Now there are situations where companies don't have the budget. Right? Like, this isn't a miracle drug kind of thing, But I'm making it frictionless
to at least get to the part where they want you. That's the first step. They have to want you for you to have any leverage. Right? Then even in the interview processes, I might say, hey, Lenny. You know, I suspect the next person I talked to from your ecosystem is Marc Andreessen. Right? Can you give me some advice on how I should work with Marc? I want you to coach me on how to deal with Marc. That's gonna make it more frictionless. Right? Now I also wanna put you in a position to be a coach because coaches want their players to succeed. So if I'm having you coach me, psychologically, you're gonna go talk to Mark and you're gonna say, hey, Mark. You're gonna have to talk to Jacob for all these reasons. Right? Then when I talk to Mark, I get to say, you know, Lenny shared that I should talk about x y and z thing. Are those is that really what you care about? I'm making it frictionless across the process, and I'm closing the next part of the conversation regardless of whether you wanted me to introduce me to those other people or not. So you might say let's say you're interviewing for product role. I suspect you want me to talk to the head of engineering. I suspect you want me to talk to Clay, the VP of marketing. And I suspect you want me to talk to Catherine, the VP of sales. Right? What would you like me to say to them? What's the message you want me to share? And they may not have had them in the interview process in the cycle, but I'm putting them in the cycle. Like, I'm making it easier for you to know who to introduce me to next, and then I'll even go as far as saying, I'm not available again until Thursday. What's the chance that time works? So I'm building scarcity about my time. I can meet with this VP then, but I'm making myself stickier in the organization. I'm getting more knowledge about what people need. Right? So this is similar to selling an enterprise deal. You're building champions in the organization that love you, and they're all coaching you on how to coach you, like, to work with each other. So you're getting the inside scoop on how to navigate that. That's how you become hyper valuable. You need to create that leverage if you wanna take that standard 20% we talked about
and make it 40 or more. That's why it starts much sooner because if you're not doing that, if you come to me and you're like, Jacob, I have an offer, I can get you maybe 40. Right? If you come to me sooner, I might have elevated that initial offer 40 without you knowing it, and then we moved it even further. Right? So it's a big process that we need to be mindful of. So it seems like a big part of your process and advice is to flip it, flip the interview as much as you can to extract information so that you can build a case of how you will solve their pain. Say you're like an IC product manager interviewing at Meta. What are the odds you can kinda flip these conversations or take a big chunk of that talk from them asking you, you know, their standard questions to you, asking them what problems what are the biggest problems? What would be awesome if I came in? Like, all that stuff you shared about to extract to build this case later. One of the things I found frustrated about IC roles is they're not often rewarded as well as leadership roles, which is frustrating because there are a lot of very talented ICs. Now I have seen specifically with Meta. I actually interviewed for a Meta IC manager role, like, an I nine that was, like, 1,200,000.0 a year. They were specifically hiring former CEOs, and I found that to be interesting. They hired a 150 growth PMs at this I nine level, and they were rewarding them very well. I don't think it changes. I think that whether you're a leader of people or you're a leader of process, you're still a leader. And the reason I propose taking ownership of the conversation isn't to be steamrolling or talking over people or or completely like, I'm not saying do this devoid of context. You don't just blow out and, like, talk over somebody and ramble. Right? Which I'm one to talk apparently. But, you go into this conversation and you ebb and flow with them. Right? But you the reason I want you to take ownership is because I can't control who you're gonna get on the other side of the line. I can't control the mood they're in. I can't control their motivations. I can't so as a coach, I can't control how they show up,
but you can control how you show up. And we can work to navigate. And then you start to get some, I guess, nuance skills where you read body language and you feel comfortable saying, you know, Lenny, I saw that that maybe wasn't the right thing to say. Can you tell me more about that? Then you start getting confidence. And I say assertiveness, not aggressiveness. There's a difference. And so that comes across as confidence. And so I don't think there's a difference between being an IC and being a leader in terms of how you approach this, but I have noticed a difference in the pay, and that can be frustrating. So that means that if I were working with more IC folks, I would ask questions like, it sounds like, you know, independent contributor roles are very valuable at Meta. Can you share a little bit about how they're valued compared to leaders on the team? I might ask a question like that. Because, again, they can't say we value you less. I've given them a reputation where they have to say we value you. Then you get your offer. You check levels or you check some of these benchmarks because we all do it. Right? We look. We wanna know. Right? Maybe we call about a couple friends that are similar level. Then you can use objective criteria against them. You're like, you know, you mentioned that you valued ICs as much as leaders. Right? And I just got curious, so I did a little digging, and it it looks like this this is, like, about 30% under what a leader would make. Is that is that normal? Right? I appreciate you being an advocate for me and pushing back. Can you help me understand if we could lift this to be, more equitable? Right? I'm using information I gathered for them, and I'm not just beating them up with it. I'm just saying, like, you said, we treat this fairly. Prove it. Or prove to me that you lied. And this and this works is what you're saying because that like, if I was the hiring manager, it'd be like, no. I'm sorry. That's just not how it is. I mean, in in many cases, it can be. Right? But I'm trying to I'm trying to open up an emotional conversation more so than logic and credibility because you lose. You'll always lose the logical and credible argument against the company. There's information asymmetry here. Meta negotiates
thousands of times a day. You negotiate four or five times in your career. That's it. Right? Thousands of times a day. Recruiters, thousands of times a day. You are at such a disadvantage. This should also give you confidence to negotiate in the first place. You are at such a disadvantage. Right? I just wrote an article on, the game of werewolf as an example about how important information is. So the game of werewolf is pretty simple. Say there's 12 people sitting in a room. Two, three of them are werewolves. Right? They draw a card at random, three people, two people, whatever. They get their card, and they know they're werewolves. There's a day and night scene, and the werewolves get to reveal themselves to each other. So they say, oh, you're a werewolf? Yeah. Okay. We're werewolves. Right? Then they go round by round and they politic to vote somebody off of the table. Right? Only two two, three people understand. Right? When the werewolves reach parity with the villagers, the werewolves win. Right? In even a, like, a six to one or a five to one situation, werewolves win 70% of the time. Right? It shows the power of information. They understand everyone else is clueless. They know who's dangerous. They know who's not. And that's just a that's a outnumbered situation. Now these companies have significant leverage over you. They know what people make. They know what others make. They know what they'll accept. They know their budgets. They know how to change the budgets. And what I find interesting, especially with executives, they push back on this process. And I'm not gonna lie. It's much easier for executives to do this than it is for middle managers or lower. So if you are hiring manager Lenny and you put your director hat on, like, it's easy to deny somebody like that because it's a little bit easier to find another product manager a little bit. Right? If we do our job to differentiate, then we're doing better there. But executives that are afraid to push back, like, your job is to make these rules.
You know who to influence to change them. You understand how the p and l works. That's what you do for a living, and you're telling me there's no flexibility? You built it. Humans built this. This is not concrete authority. This can be influenced. Why not try? Let's try to summarize maybe the top five tactical tips that you've shared. If we're just to kinda go through in bullet points, just things people should keep in mind when they're trying to negotiate. Like, one that comes to mind is don't speak don't share the number first. Try to get them to share a number first. Is that is that right? Yeah. You also have to know how to respond if they share the number first. I'd rather no numbers be discussed if you're open to just waiting it out and seeing. So important pieces, so the first one is you'd never be so sure of your worth that you wouldn't accept more. That's I think Chris Boss quotes that quite frequently. The other one is never split the difference, and I have a I have a good story about that. So just because somebody says, you know, you started a 100, they you say 200, they come in at one fifty, that's lazy. Right? One one brief example of this, I had a, chief revenue officer, and they were paid $350,000 base salary, 350,000 bonus. So 700,000 cash potential each year. So that's called on target earnings. They'll make 700. When we negotiated their severance, we said we wanted six months on target earnings. It was all agreed. Right? The paperwork comes back and it says six months base salary, not on target earnings. So that means six months of base salary is, like, $1.87 5. Right? So it cut his severance in half by doing that. Now his response was, I'll just tell the CEO, like, let's up that 90, and it'll be down 90. He was gonna split the difference to, like, $2.60 or something, whatever the mass out to. And I said, instead, simply ask, was that a mistake?
Right? You know, we had discussed on target earnings that was intentional. Was that a mistake? He said, oh, yeah. Must have been. Let me just tell the attorneys to fix it. Feel free to redline it. So he almost lost $90 just splitting the difference, if not more. Right? And then turns out twelve months later, he got fired, and then he was able to recoup $350,000 over six months. So little things like trying to split the difference too early can be painful. So that was two points, I think. I know you this is parts I'm bad at. Trying to get a list of five. This is great. Patience is more important. Like, things need to slow down. Haste equals risk. The slower you go, the more opportunity you have to collect information so that you can build a compelling case. Right? That's important. I am a big believer in Aristotle and his principles of rhetoric and ethos pathos logos. And so I've mentioned a little bit of this in their more common tone of, logic, credibility, and emotion. Timing is another one that we don't often talk about. Kairos is important. But too many executives lean on credibility and logic because we're trained to do that. We don't show emotion. We don't show the authentic side of ourselves in corporate. I think oftentimes because we're working soulless jobs that we don't believe in, and we're just trying to make do and survive for our families. I think there's a greater need. The emotional side is where a lot of deals get unfair. So if we understand how to tap into that I wanna say Chris Voss. I keep mentioning Chris Voss, but he I think he calls, like, tactical empathy. Right? Which does that sounds more Machiavellian than anything I've ever said. Right? But understanding those motivations and understanding how to play on that can be important. Right? So when we talk about giving people a positive reputation, we're playing into some emotions here. So if I'm a female negotiating with another female, I might say, you know, I appreciate that you've always been an advocate for women and you support one another. Like, that's something I respect about you. Right? And then their cop comes in lower than a man's cop.
You can call them out on that and say, if you were in my shoes, what would you do? That's one of my favorite lines. If you were in my shoes like, go backwards five years in your career. That's where I'm at right now. If you were in my shoes, what would you ask for? I love that when negotiations stall also. Right? Like, you know what's possible here. You know what levers we have. It sounds like we're capped out here. If you were in my shoes, what else would you explore? And you start to go that route as well. The other piece is this is a collaboration, not a confrontation. So if I could give visual advice, oftentimes this is why it's also can be difficult in a Zoom. Like, you and I are kind of face to face. Like, we have this problem between us. Right? That's an adversarial position. I want you to physically pretend that you're in the same room, and I walk to to your office and I put my arm around you, if you're comfortable with it, and I'm instead of us arguing over something, we're whiteboarding a solution together. I want collaboration in. That's how we break down walls and barriers because you're sharing information. I'm sharing information, those types of things. The I think that was four. Maybe it was five. Another one is make it about we, not about me. Right? So another severance conversation, with a chief marketing officer. This is a $102,100,000,000 dollar private company couple years ago. So she comes in. She gets offered $340,000 base salary, 30% bonus equity. Right? We tried to push on all that, and the CEO said, look. One of the things I pride myself in is that everyone here has $340,000 base, 30%, and the same equity package. Everyone on the executive leadership. Right? Now she was getting pulled from a hot company, which is risky because she was safe there. She actually was getting a raise coming to this company, so we didn't need to push on more money. What we went for was severance protections.
Right? And so we asked, like, standards about six months, maybe plus, another month for every year served. And the CEO's like, oh, we've never done that before. And so instead of it being like, you're negotiating the terms of your divorce before you get married, that's what's awkward here. We said, well, given that we've had a problem with talent being poached and going elsewhere, and we just did a big rift, wouldn't it make us look good to proactively give everyone on the executive leadership team six months to show that they're safe and committed to the company? And then we fed that idea to the CEO so the CEO could look like the hero. More importantly, when my client came into that company, she looked like a hero because everyone's like, that's the woman that negotiated us all severance protections. Right? So we made the company. We used the company's equitable policies to do that. Now I will say that's not common. Right? So if folks are like, damn, that's fantastical. That may not happen. Like, especially with private equity, it usually doesn't. Right? There are there are ways that we wanna appeal to humanity more so if we can. Bonus point. I know I'm monologuing a lot. Don't be afraid to get creative. Like, creativity is interesting. And one time we got someone at G Wagon after being, like, maxed out on comp. I like this story because it's so out of this world. You're not gonna get a G Wagon. I promise you, it is likely not gonna happen. But we had this CEO who had two offers that were both 2,400,000.0 and they were stalled. I got a first world problem. Right? Like, tiny violent. 2,400,000.0 a year, the CEO deal. And she told me and this was just a joke. Like, this wasn't some Machiavellian plan. She was like, look. I don't know which to choose. They're both maxed out. And I was trying to say which one would you like more? She wasn't giving me anything. Right? They're both fine. Whatever. I and I said, well, I don't know. What kind of car do you like? Right?
And, she she's, oh, I love Mercedes. Right? And I was like, tell them that, like, jokingly because they they inevitably came to look. What's it gonna take to hire you? And she's like, I don't know. Like, oh, maybe a company car. And they said, well, what kind do you like? And then she said, Mercedes. And they're like, done. What model? And then she's like, oh, a G Wagon. And what happened was all the budgets were capped, but it was a company write off to have a 6,000 pound vehicle. So it's a $350,000 car added to her contract. There was a company write off that reduced the tax expense. So, like, that's not gonna happen. I don't suggest people go ask for G Wagons, but the fact is we came to a stall point, and we found a solution for that. I love these stories. Another to be sure just that I wanna double down on is don't is don't negotiate over email. Make it in person as if possible or video call. Right? Yeah. Absolutely. Just you have to be more comfortable understanding the body language and the tone you're picking up these things that you can't control when somebody opens their phone. Like, the worst thing is they're on their way to pick up their kids at school, and they open your email, and it just doesn't sit right with them and they're in traffic. Like, you can't control whether someone's gonna do that. Or like I said earlier, being busy at the airport, rushed through security, or they just got off a call with somebody that's frustrated. But if I hop into a video call and I can see that you're visibly frustrated, like, if for whatever reason you look like your toddler kept you up all night, I'd say, hey, Lenny. Would you like to reschedule to a time that feels more comfortable for you? Right? So that we can get the most out of our time together. Like, that is a blessing. Right? You couldn't do that over email. Say things actually do fall apart. Say you just push too hard and they're just like, okay. We're gonna move on with another candidate. Where they make you an offer and they just they rescind it or they promise something and they don't deliver. How do you approach when things go sideways?
Couple couple elements to that story. One, the the not delivering pieces, that's more common. Rescinded offers, I have never had a client with a rescinded offer. What I will get is a no. This is the top. Take it or leave it. Right? Fine. They go they get a ultimatum. Fine. I have, however, helped somebody. They weren't a client. See, also a CMO, and she she was offered an $800,000 contract total cash wise, and it was rescinded. And so I I took this case on pro bono. I got a phone call. I was like, I I just wanna see how this plays out. Right? And she was in tears. She lost this deal. She turns out she had a career coach that said, you need to negotiate like a white man. Like, that was her advice. Like, you need to be aggressive. You need to do this. You need to do that. Like, you need to negotiate for your worth, which, you know, I understand the appeal of that as, like, if I would understand, like, a woman that wants to negotiate like a man and get hers, I respect that. Right? In this situation, the context it was missing is that she was negotiating with other women. So she was negotiating with this female CEO and three other females on the executive leadership team, and they rescinded the offer because it sounded like she was a bad cultural fit because she was acting like a man. If she wasn't being her authentic self, she was acting in this persona that she wasn't comfortable with. And to be honest, she said to me, I wasn't comfortable with that advice, but I did it anyway because women should stand up for each other. We should push. Right? And I commended her for that. And so what we did was I said, look. Call the CEO. Explain what happened, share that, you know, obviously, it's important that women take care of each other. Right? And it's clear to me that you have. There's that positive reputation. Right? I gotta be honest with you. I hired a coach to try to understand what to do because in the past, I failed.
In the past, I haven't been my best advocate. In the past, I've done less. I suspect you know what that's like. Boom. Shared identity. Right? They all know all women know this together collectively. This is a shared identity tribe thing. Right? I made a mistake, and I I I disagreed with the advice, but I did it anyway because I had to try. And they brought the offer back on the table for her authenticity and transparency. It's like that was the path that we there was two phone calls to come up with that idea. She got that deal back on the table, is now happily making 800,000 Right? So when things go south, approach it with honesty, integrity. Say, like, I made a mistake. Take ownership. Extreme ownership really helps here. That could probably be one of those those points. When you fail to live to deliver, take ownership of that. Take that note. It may mean you're getting level set a little bit in your career. That's okay. You're still growing. That is so I I love that approach of just like, okay. I hired this coach. They gave me bad advice. It was an actual feel good too. I was like, shoulda hired me. It's interesting how negotiation is different if you're a man versus a woman. Do you take a different approach if it's a female client versus a male and it's just like, here's you should approach it this way, or or depends on the person. A different approach on every person. Yeah. So whether you're a product leader or a marketing leader or a sales leader or you're from San Francisco or you're from Dubai or you're from New York or you're from LA, like, or you're German or you're everybody is different culturally. So male, female, like, little nuance is is important. If you're, you know, you're gay or you're black or you're there are different challenges that everybody has to overcome. Right? And I remember this was a powerful one. I was speaking to chief. There's about 400 women in chief, and I'm the I'm the white dude mansplaining to all these women about negotiations. It's like the scariest position for me to be in. And I remember there was this African American gal,
and she said, Jacob, should we just negotiate for 84% because that's what we're gonna get anyway? Right? Like, that's defeatist. Like, that sucks to have that feeling. Right? Now I don't know what that feels like. Like, I have I have done fairly well for myself, and I there's some advantages that I had. But I said, look. Like, how many of you in here are mothers? Many of these women raise their hand. Right? How many of you are mothers to daughters? Right? Many of them raise their hands. I said, could you look your little girl in the eyes and say, sweetheart, just get 80% out there. Let's go after that. Right? And it kinda, like, shocked the room a little because I I can't compete on that level. Right? I don't know what that feels like. I can't do that. But I said, look. If we don't learn to grow together, we're never gonna solve this problem. So what we're trying to do here, and this is what I encourage all listeners to do, fight back. There's a big power imbalance. Right? Here here's the founders coming in again. Like, Jacob, don't tell him to do that. I don't wanna revolt. Right? Take care of them. Right? Push back because a rising tide raises all ships. Right? If companies wanna rely on precedent, have the audacity to raise the precedent because the next people in line will will do that. To the point about collaboration, this was actually with, one of your readers that read the that first article we did. We made a lot of money on this deal. And they came to you to work with you? Oh, I love this. Yeah. So this is fun. Mhmm. But so this is kinda like a private equity hostile takeover situation, and this reader of yours was getting pushed out of the company. And if you try to go head to head with the PE, you're gonna lose. Right? He had a great relationship with the CEO, ten year relationship. And but the CEO wouldn't take any action to support him. Right? Intel, we made it about we. The CEO had made comments that I'm probably gonna get fired too. Right? So what we did was we talked to the CEO and we said,
whatever precedent you help me deliver, you're gonna get two to three times that. So we need to set this up. Right? So then they were full on. You had the CEO and the CPO putting together a game plan to advocate against the private equity, right, to support that transition plan. We got a retention bonus and a severance bonus on the table because of that. Right? Because now the CEO is protected as well, can point back to some precedent. Right? So not everybody does it out of the goodness of their heart, not in a capitalist society. Right? You have to show them your motivations here are important. Right? So women negotiating, if you want women after you to have an opportunity, have opportunities and better opportunities than you have, you have to have the you have to have the guts to do that. And that's very easy for me to say. I'm not in your shoes, but, naturally, we have to be a rising tide. And there are folks that aren't gonna take that challenge, and that's okay. Right? Let's all push for those to help and make it easier for everyone. I love this point you made about how there's no one way to approach this. The way I was originally thinking we do this chat is like a step by step guide to negotiating. Here's what you do. One, two, three, four, and this is how your comp goes way up. And what you told me is that just doesn't exist. There's so many variables. There's so many types of companies, roles, seniority, people's backgrounds. Maybe speak to just, like, if you ever see someone telling you here's your steps to negotiate comp, just it's probably not real. That was one of the things that was hard about the article we wrote together was that I have gains. Right? It's a it's a process that I follow. It's not a concrete step by step process, but one of the reasons I'm so hesitant to go this route is because negotiation comes off so complicated. It's so complicated and so academic. When you look at the books that were written, you have well, Chris Voss has kinda popularized it lately, but it's like, imagine there's a gun to your head in an FBI situation. You're like, I don't have a gun to my head. I just am dealing with my boss, and I wanna understand how to do this. Or you read getting to yes. And it's like, what what you need is a strong BATNA and a good Zopa, and it's, like, very academic. And you're in the moment trying to have a conversation and have empathy and listen.
But then you're like, what's my zone of possible agreement? What's my best alternative to like, those things are all very true, but it comes off intimidating. Right? And when we when we try to focus so much on frameworks and and academic, we stop listening. And that's one of the most important parts is curiosity and empathy are the two things you need to have the most. Right? If you're reaching a block, why does that block exist? If you don't know the answer, you haven't asked the right questions. Right? You don't necessarily know. This is that information imbalance that you have. And, really, what negotiation comes down to information and timing. That's what creates power. Right? Those are the three things. That's all you need to know. You have to have the information. When we were talking about that game of werewolf, even when you're outnumbered five to one, if you have more information, the odds are you'll win. Right? So I don't want it to be overly complicated. One of the I I guess I have to say it. So I'm trying to write a book this year. I'm gonna write it. Right? I'm gonna write it. Now it must happen. Now it must happen. I know. Like, I just kinda clinched up a little bit because, like, I gotta I gotta do it. It's still early in the year. You got so much time. Oh, yeah. Thanks. Right? I I'm a prolific writer. I'll get after that. But the book title is called predetermined. And I wanted it to be predetermined, like, with a question mark. Right? Because none of these outcomes are predetermined. No matter what situation you are in your life, how you are raised, it will it it could be more difficult for you, but it's not predetermined. And it's it's one of the reasons I love this work is that I don't know what the outcome could be. We don't know. You should never be so sure because then you start putting a ceiling on your life. And one of one of my favorite things to ask somebody,
and they're like, oh, Jacob, I wanna do this in five years. I say, what would that look like if it was done in one? What must be true? And, like, truncating that experience just to think through it, not necessarily that I'm asking them to rush through it or whatever. But I have clients that they'll have 10 or $15,000,000 in the bank and they'll be in their late fifties, and they're like, oh, I need 10 to 15 more to retire. What? What do you mean you need 10 to 15? Like, if I had a million dollars, I would retire. Like, give me a break. Like, that seems like so much money to me. Why is that the case? Right? So I like to challenge those those notions there. Right? It's an important thing to think about. Like, it's not as step by step as it needs to be. Because sometimes, another one of my favorite questions, what would your life look like with less? Maybe a minimalist or stoic type philosophy. One of these Hollywood deals we did, we had a director and a Marvel superhero. They've gotten a spat on a big franchise. This is a estimated 500,000,000 to billion dollar franchise opportunity. This A list celebrity, and their writer, on this third installment of a movie didn't like it. So think celebrity kinda being a prima donna. I hate it. I don't like the direction it's going. They're not writing it right. Fire him. Right? Offended the original director because they wrote the first two movies, and they were very successful, right, to build this franchise. So pissed off. Right? Next writer comes in. This is worse than the one before. Can we just hire back the first one and get work through it? Right? So six months later, money production delays, all that. Go back to that original writer. And the agency's like, we gotta throw money at this guy, like, to get him to say yes. So here's a million more dollars. Right? Didn't do it. Like, a million dollars wasn't enough to mend this relationship. The important lesson here is it's not always about money. That individual is making $10,000,000 a year. A 10% increase to have to go back to somebody they didn't like, not powerful.
Right? My suggestion was, can you ask the actor, this a list celebrity, to humble themselves and apologize? And that is what moved the deal across the line. Actually came in and apologized for the behavior. It's not gonna be like that. That's what got the deal back together, and the million dollars was saved. So it's not always about money. I use a lot of money in the stories because it's kind of shock and awe. It's like, wow. Like, that's gonna have big impact. Like, at the end of the day, if you're making $18 an hour and you negotiate to 24, like, such a material difference in your life. That is so magical to maybe be able to afford gas for the first time. Right? And then I'm telling stories where people haven't thought about how much gas costs ever. Right? So, like, there are situations I remember that. I like, just ten years ago well, twelve years ago, I was homeless, like, fighting through all this stuff and didn't know if I could pay for gas. So it's one of the reasons I'm inspired to do that is that you can make a material difference and it compounds throughout your life, but it's not always about money. I wanna follow this Hollywood thread before we wrap up. I love that you work with Hollywood folks, celebrities, and also deck people, which is most of the audience here. Is there another, wild story from your Hollywood life, that might be fun to share? I think what's interesting about Hollywood is that it's so far fetched in you were talking about what happens when offers get rescinded. Right? And I before I was working in Hollywood, I would I would try to talk people into asking for $20,000 more. Right? Which after taxes is, like, 8. Right? And then when you look at it, it's like $400 a month or whatever. Like, you're you're struggling to maybe ask for $10.20 grand. Right? In Hollywood, like, we did this deal with I can't share who, A list celebrity. And
the company said, we wanna pay her $5,000,000 for this movie. And the attorney came back, we want $22,000,000. Like, talk about being aggressive. Right? And the production company's like, alright. How about 13? And this was in, like, a two day span. So they went from 5,000,000 to $13,000,000 in two days. And the other they're like, well, instead of 22, how about 18? Right? Like, they're moving $4,000,000 chunks at a time, and we're over here in tech going like, oh, I wonder if I can get 10,000. Right? So, like, that's something that I just find absolutely wild. The bigger the op like, this is just like, you wanna make money solve rich people problems. Right? That's what happens. Right? It's it's just escalated. I can only imagine what a negotiation with, like, Elon Musk would be like. Oh, throw a 100,000,000,000 at it. And you're like, oh my gosh. Like, I also found out that a million seconds is, like, eleven days. Have you ever heard this? A million seconds is eleven days. Do you know how do you know how long a billion seconds is? Like, probably hundreds of years. It's like thirty. Thirty years. It's thirty one years. So between eleven day that's the discrepancy between a million and a billion. Oh. Right? And so these are just like, these things scale so exponentially. It's just that what you say and how you negotiate just kinda changes. So if you wanna really increase your comp, you do have to move rooms. Right? You have to start networking and making connections with folks that can do that with you. Maybe as a last question, just to get very tactical, somebody that maybe is about to get an offer, got an offer, will get an offer in the near future. What's, like, what's the first thing they should do to help them increase the comp? Is it just reply with, is there room for more? What's, like what should they do when they get that email? Okay. You always give me these nuanced. So it's they get it from the recruiter or they get Let's say their recruiters. That's probably weird. Yeah. Recruiter's gonna again, they're probably gonna have that 20%. We have a room there. If you're okay with that, I might, again, just say, what's the chance we can we can bump? Like, this is what I was looking for. Right? I would probably
knowing that the recruiter is gonna split the difference, I would probably anchor higher versus lower. There have been some studies, and I was reading some I've read a lot of negotiation books. There's, like, one from the seventies on these negotiation games, and those who those who anchored egregiously high won 75% more than those who just try to be reasonable. Right? So it's like, look. I was hoping for a 150,000 more. Sometimes you get 70. Right? Sometimes you get 50. But if you ask for 50 more, you would have got 15. Right? So if you are gonna reanchor, just say, hey. I was kinda in the ballpark of this. Again, with the nuance, you may have already committed to a range before, and it can be difficult to have that conversation. Right? So I might say, hey. After we've had the conversations with hiring manager and yada yada, it sounds like the scope of the role has increased. Are you open to revisiting the comp structure on this? That's likely how I would respond. If the recruiter says, this is all we can do, and you have the audacity to do this, I may send a text message or an email to the hiring manager and say, hey. We're almost across the line. It sounds like we had a sticking point. Are you open to have a conversation? That's who I wanna close with. And I don't wanna put the recruiter down and say, just sounds like we're at a sticking point here, and I'm really looking forward to working with you. Are you open to chat real quick? I don't need to have a big laundry list of, I'm gonna do this for you, and I'm gonna do that. Like, that will not work. And I've noticed this in our back and forth in your emails. Like, you'll respond with two words. That's all you need. Right? You don't often need more. So, like, the more confident you get, the shorter your communication gets. And sometimes it can be as simple as texting the hiring manager saying, open to chat.
You don't give him any reason. It's just open to chat, and then you control the conversation from there. Hopefully, that was tactical enough. If it's not, I do have a I have a lot of written scripts that are out there that you can copy and paste so you don't have to just rip the transcript down from all of Lenny's videos. Right? I do have written scripts and guides for this, and I have a free course on how to do this too that's on YouTube. So it's not like you're, if you need the actual specifics, there are a lot of scenarios I've already kinda covered. You can Amazing. And we'll link to all that. And I think it's I asked you what you were hoping to get out of this before we started recording. And just to be clear, you're not looking for new clients. You're booked up. You're you this is like, you share all of this stuff out there. You have this free course. You have all these Substack posts. So so that's what I love about you. It's not like, you know, you're trying to it's not like some deal deal lead flow here. My mission is to make what I've learned from very successful people more accessible. Right? And if you put a pay band on all of that, you're not making it accessible. Right? And my hourly fees are very high. Right? So it's like, I don't want to push for that and feel like I'm unobtainable, so I wanna give away as much as I can. And it's these things shouldn't be gatekept. They often are. But, yeah, I was mentioning a little bit in the green room. I just I felt a little powerless growing up. It was, like, some little substance abuse and trauma as as I was growing up, and I never felt comfortable or safe. And so when I became a little older, I started to understand psychology a little bit differently because the same fear I'd have as a child, I could see in the boardroom. I could see the same fight or flight mechanisms, but that was far less scary. Right? So it's just money. Money is like, I'm not gonna get hit. Right? Nobody's gonna get hurt here. Right? So I could start to see that, and I could see the body language, and I can understand when somebody was in a tense moment. And all I ever wanted to do, because I I felt that from a little kid, was help that person feel safe.
Right? Help them feel safe in that moment. And so I've been obsessed over how to solve that for my entire career. First for myself, and then what became natural for me is for other people because I could see their growth, and that's what became most fulfilling. There's a whole, other conversation we could have about that whole Yeah. Party. We gotta be careful about that one. Yeah. Alright. That one, I might start crying on that one. Okay. Well, that makes good content. That could be part two. Jacob That'll be the comments. Like, next time make Jacob cry, Lenny. Go for the kill. Go for the kill. I I hope not. I don't think my people want that. We'll see. Oh my god. Okay. Before we get to our very exciting lightning round, Jacob, is there anything else you wanna share, anything else you wanna leave listeners with? Just that if if you're gonna take a chance, take a chance on yourself. I'm sure a lot of these folks are parents or a lot of these people are are are parents, and you wanna you wanna be the best version of yourself and show that your kids that you could survive anything, you're gonna you're gonna get a couple bruises along the way. Right? Like, these are great first world problems to try to fight for. Right? Like, it's not it's not gonna it's not gonna take away your home. It's the thing is you're only gonna make life better around you. Right? If your cup overfloweth, right, you'll be able to give more to others. So it's not about, am I worth it? Is that it's like, if you are a generous person naturally, you can be more generous if you have more wealth. Right? If you're afraid of wealth, this is something that really screwed me up. Like, I used to despise wealth. It despised it. Right? And I don't know why. It was like miss like, I didn't trust people with money. I felt like they all had to be dirty or they all had to do something. And to be fair, a lot of people do things that are highly questionable and unethical. Right? And we see that in the world around us. But if you fear it and you don't understand it, you'll never have an opportunity to change it.
And so you need to take some chances on yourself with this. And if I hopefully, that's another piece. Just having the confidence to go out and try. Even if you fail, you're failing forward. You're learning. Right? You're gonna find a style that works best for you. It's not that Jacob Warwick style is the style that's awesome or Lenny's style is a style. You don't need to copy anyone else. You need to find that center that that works well for you and what you're comfortable. That is beautiful. I'm also realizing as we're talking, we haven't mentioned AI once in this conversation. No. No. Which is incredible. I love No. Listeners the listeners are like, oh, thank goodness. Yeah. That's how I feel. Thank goodness. Just once in a while. It's because I don't want AI to replace me, Lenny. I don't want it. I yeah. I don't like I don't even know. Anyway, we're getting to it. Okay. I got you speechless. That's the job. If you get the podcast host speechless, you're doing your job. That's great. Okay. Well, we did it. With that, Jacob, we have reached our very exciting lightning round. I've got five questions for you. Are you ready? Alright. I will I will do the best I can. Yeah. Here we go. What are two or three books you find yourself recommending most to other people? Influence by Robert Cialdini. Sweetness. That's the one. I that's the one. I mean, I like, Herb Cohen's You Can Negotiate Anything. It's a little dated, like, old white dude in the eighties dated. So be mindful. It doesn't suit all audiences, but it's what I like about it is they talk about, like, negotiating dishwashers and stuff, not, like, going to market with meta versus Instagram and the acquisition. Like, it's not complicated. It's like, here's an apple and here's an orange and here's the concept of negotiation really spelled out simple. I did just do a podcast with John Lowry, and he wrote a book called negotiation made simple. And I remember reading it, and I was pissed off because I'm like, I wanted to write a book a couple years ago, then I read his and said, this like, this is what I wanted to write.
So I was frustrated, then I was like, I'm gonna reach out to him because I have a lot of respect for him. So I did his podcast. That'll be live soon. But, yeah, that was negotiation made simple. It really breaks it down in a in an easy way, and I that could be like a a bible. Then I like radical candor. I know some of your guests put that on. I've met Kim Scott. She's phenomenal. Like, that radical candor really gave me the confidence to be assertive in the ways that I never had been before. So my wife taught me that. Kim Scott embraced it in the corporate world, and, like, those two pieces, like, really helped elevate my career. I think radical candor is the second most mentioned book on this podcast behind high output management. Yeah. I have not read that. Admittedly, I'm bad at consuming content. I'm not I I only create. I've got this rule that create 10 times more content than you consume. So I read, like, one book a year, and now apparently, I'm gonna write one book. So maybe that'll be the new goal. That's a great that's a great framework. Okay. Next question. Do you have a favorite recent movie or TV show you've really enjoyed? I've been really liking watching Luca, the Disney movie, having a toddler and a newborn. I really just watch cartoons now. So I I actually for low stimulating things, I really like miniscule. It's like a a YouTube short, that's, like, French made, and it's like spiders and flies and, like, bugs. Just very low stimulation hanging around. It sounds not not appealing, but No. That's why it's so good because you're so overstimulated having kids that it's so mellow. You can be like, oh, I actually get to think a little bit. You know? Like, you know, finding finding a little boredom and creativity. That's how you get creative. If you're constantly if it's like Coco Melon and Paw Patrol, and you're like, you can hear the beats in your head, like, you can't do that. I'm not gonna I'm not I can't do that to my kids.
Favorite recent product you've discovered that you love? Cloud Cowork. I mean, I Good one? I love Cloud Cowork. I'm sorry for mentioning AI, but, like, I really only use a handful of products. So Cloud Coworker is one of them and Macro Factor for macro tracking. And I got a whoop this last year, and I've lost almost 50 pounds just paying attention to my whoop stats and, like, trying to sleep. And you could tell I'm a pretty obsessive guy, so data, like, still geeks me out a little bit on that. But, those are the three products that I would use every day and and a little bit of Gemini too. Those are the two, in my opinion, winning the race. You have a favorite life motto that you find yourself coming back to in work or in life? Always give more than you expect to receive. It's like a golden rule plus plus. That's that's how networking works. You don't you don't network with someone trying to take. You say, how can I help you? And that's a that's a principle from Cialdini also. Right? And how to win friends and influence people. Right? That's not why I do it. I'm just I'm just suggesting. An area where you can read more on that. Final question. You've you're starting a foundation, a nonprofit. Yeah. I'm I'm working for or I I'm on the board of the Cody DeRuth Foundation, and that's in Bozeman, Montana. And what we do is, my son has cystic fibrosis. You know, and cystic fibrosis is a genetic condition. I'll actually talk a little bit more about it in predetermined because his life was, quote, unquote, predetermined. We were not really accepting that. But in with our foundation, we help rural parts of Montana and get access to the health care that they need. Yeah. And so they they got me with this. So, like, we we helped this family. This this woman, she had three boys. This is a sad story, so bear with me.
So one of her boys, 29 years old, needed a lung transplant. This is what cystic fibrosis does. So made it to 29 is good. Life expectancy used to be seven to 10 years old. So made it to 29, needed a lung transplant. She couldn't afford it, and her son passed away. She had two other boys with cystic fibrosis. And then so her 27 year old son, two years younger, needed a lung transplant, and she actually found out that our agency existed in that that period. And we funded the Life Flight to Denver Children's Hospital to get that life saving surgery and saved her son's life. And that sounds like a great story. The part that got me was that now the mama feels all this guilt because she could have saved her son's life if she knew we existed. In that part, like, I was in tears thinking about that. I did I've talked a little bit about my son's diagnosis. Like, it's not defining our life, but my wife and I prayed about this, and it was if it would happen to anyone, it should happen to us because of as soon as that happened, I I made a handful of phone calls. I've I did all this networking to be selfish and build my career and do these things. And in that give before you ask it to receive philosophy, I've always kinda lived by that, undersell, overdeliver. And within twenty four hours of his diagnosis, I had a phone call from the chief medical officer at Denver Children's Hospital at Stanford. I got a call from the FDA that said, don't worry. The son your son's medication is getting lowered to one year old, and the Trikafta is going from six to two. So he may never experience a symptom in his life because this has changed now. So, like, I felt this is immense blessing in support through that. So that's the foundation. We we support these rural areas that don't have access to that health care. And then I've also started conversations with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, which really helped funding they helped fund the life saving medication that changes the life expectancy from seven to 70 years old. Like, they are expected to have full lives now. So that's something that I'm very passionate about.
Incredible. Oh, man. There's so many so many topics and directions we could have gone with this. Jacob I know I blew you up. I blew you out of the water, man. Sorry. I I monologue like nobody's business. There's it's I've had I've had worse. Okay. Where can folks find you online if they wanna reach out? Maybe follow-up on some of this stuff. And how can listeners be useful to you? Listeners can be useful just by advocating for themselves. Rising tide forever. That's important. I don't I guess I don't really have social media. I deleted LinkedIn. The post I wrote about that kinda went viral on Substack, which is cool. I share I think I shared that one with you. I have execs and thecity.com, which, yes, is a play on sex in the city. It's kind of explaining some of the things that, people are afraid to talk about. So execs in the city is my substack, and I write once a week on Thursday morning, and I share little thoughts on what's happening. Occasionally, I'll share case studies on what clients have done. I'll share play by plays and the actual scripts. That's also where I have a free job search course. It's about eight hours that I filmed. I used to sell it for, a grand, and now I just give it away for free. That's also available on the YouTube, which is execs in the city, which I have, like, a 100 subscribers. So don't expect a lot of content from me. I'm not I'm not pumping out video content all the time. And then there's a a small paid tier if somebody wants to get discounts on coaching. They also get access to Jacob GPT. Well, so another AI mentioned that's digitally trained on I think you have one too. Right? Yep. Like trained on all my content. LennyBot. Yeah. So it's it's like a Jacob bot, which is a minor LennyBot. Right? Trained on my content. And, then I do some additional case studies for them. And then my actual business is think warwick.com, which just tells you outcomes that that we've been able to deliver. So I'm not gonna ask you for Instagram or anything like that. Just real simple.
Try to keep it at substack only, really. Jacob, this was awesome. Thank you so much for being here. Thank you, Lenny. I appreciate the time today. And, again, I was real giddy about it, and your motto was to have fun. I had a lot of fun today. Thank you. That's right. Here we go. People don't see this if they're waiting till the end of this podcast. I have this little pocket to show all the guests their goal is to have fun. So Easter egg. Alright. Jacob, thank you so much. Bye, everyone. Thank you so much for listening. If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review as that really helps other listeners find the podcast. You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at lennyspodcast.com. See you in the next episode.
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