How To Make A Job Offer With Example Email
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You’ve done a lot of hard work posting job descriptions, sourcing candidates, assessing them, and keeping them engaged throughout your hiring process.
The selected candidate is a great match, so you’d like to make them a job offer. Exciting times! But how do you approach the offer and potential negotiation?
Hint—the process started way back in the hiring process!
This is the guidance I give to both recruiters and hiring managers on how to make a job offer.
While the job offer is the end of the hiring process, closing candidates (i.e. making sure they accept the offer) starts from the moment you first talk to them.
The actions you take at each step of the process allows you to bring them to a "closeable", "Yes I want to work at company!" state of mind (or do the opposite and get them to self-select out, that is important too so neither party is wasting time).
Building a rapport and relationship with the candidate is the most important thing, and really getting to understand them and their motivations for a potential move.
While salary will always be an important factor (people have bills to pay!), there will likely be other factors influencing the decision. It’s your job to find out what they are so that you can see if your job offer matches those requirements too.
General motivators for everyone fall under a few categories (non-exhaustive list of course)—cash compensation, the scope of the role, company growth, culture (company and team), location, remote working, and industry.
A global study by Manpower Group found that 40% of candidates put schedule flexibility as one of their top 3 motivating factors when accepting a new role.
Here are some questions you can weave in from the first interview onwards:
A good tip is to get the answers to these questions towards the start of the conversation so you can subtly bring them up and address them (if applicable) during the part of your conversation where you describe your company and the role.
Example:
“Why do you want to move?”
“I'm at a big company now and I want to move somewhere where with less bureaucracy and barriers to making the decisions.”
With that information, when you make your pitch later on, you can focus on how your company is fast-moving and autonomous.
An important thing to note, though, is that you’re not trying to match everything the person says they’re looking for. You’re looking for places where what your company provides (your employer value proposition) and what the candidate wants overlap naturally.
It is perfectly OK to help people self-select out of the process.
For example, if a candidate is looking for entrepreneurship and autonomy, but you are a large enterprise where you need someone to operate in a role that they deliver to set parameters, it may not be a great match!
I am putting “selling” in quote marks because, while that is what you’re doing, in reality, this is quite different from selling tomatoes at the market!
First and foremost, your job should be to provide information.
Now that you have an idea of what their motivators are, here are some ideas on how to connect that with your company:
Your values
Talk about how you and your team live your values every day. Talk about a time when you or someone on your team went used your values to drive decision-making.
Candidates in some markets are treated like numbers in a lotto machine—hopefully you’re not going to do that!
Taking a little time to surprise the candidate can really set your offer apart from everyone else and can help it get accepted.
A few ideas here:
Do:
Don't:
If you feel like you don't have enough of a grasp on the candidate's expectations, you can certainly employ a pre-close call.
Ideally, you've built such a rapport already before the final interview that you know what the expectations are, but that doesn't always happen!
In decades past, pre-close calls were really aggressive tools used to pressure candidates into committing before you commit to them.
That is no longer acceptable. Instead, you should aim to level with the candidate and have a candid conversation on the situation so far and what they’re feeling.
Here is how you can start a conversation by stating excitement and hinting an offer is coming soon:
“We're doing a final team sync, but we’re extremely excited about you. Just wanted to take a second to chat about some final items.”
Then ask if they have any questions or feedback about the company or role, the process, and everything else so far. Give them the space to clarify any concerns they might have.
Here is an example conversation—not a script!
Pre-close statement: “Assuming we extended an offer to you that made sense financially, do you see yourself joining us?”
Potential answer 1️⃣ : candidate says "Yes"
If they did not hesitate, and you’re the first choice, ask these additional questions:
Potential answer 2️⃣ : candidate is unsure whether or not they'd join:
Potential answer 3️⃣ : Candidate insists that they want an offer first and then will consider things after:
For scenarios 1 and 2 above you may want to ask the below and gauge their reaction.
You can ask for scenario 3 as well, but don’t be surprised if this doesn’t yield a concrete answer. Instead, try to find out if there are other determining factors other than the numbers of the offer.
Ask them, "If we were to make you the following offer (state the offer in full detail, including cash, equity, benefits, etc), would you accept?"
If they say they’ll accept, you have a tentative agreement. If they’re still thinking about it, find out why by going through the above questions again.
I want to highlight that the above is an idealized call and it doesn’t always pan out this way.
Some candidates may not feel like they can give you a direct answer, so just back away and accept that you may have to make an offer without assurance.
It’s likely you’ll have an approval process for any offers, so please make sure that any offers you make are approved by all parties that need to approve them (Finance, Hiring Manager, CEO).
I’ve seen way too many recruiters with years and years of experience having to go back to candidates with their tail between their legs because they were too overzealous. Learn from their mistakes!
My advice is to go in with the best offer you can make. Because of all your great prep and pre-closing, you should have a really good idea of what it would take monetarily to close the candidate. Make sure to present that to the approval committee.
My recommendation is to schedule a call, then send an email as confirmation. As useful as email is, I am still a great believer in actually hearing/seeing the live reaction of people about an offer because that will tell you a lot.
Let's go and give the candidate the good news with a verbal offer!
Firstly, schedule the call with them over email rather than call them out of the blue.
This is because you want to make sure they’re in the right mental and physical space. You may want to hint in the email that it will be good news, and that way potentially gauge their excitement as well.
During the conversation, start by asking them how they thought the hiring process went so far and any thoughts and feedback. Listen first, so that you can gauge how to proceed.
After that, let them know you'd love for them to join and you’re having this call to make them a job offer.
Start by going through both your company and the particular role’s missions. That way you can walk them through the journey and the plan and help them imagine themselves already as part of the team.
Get them excited to come in and change the face of what their position can look like and create work that they can look back on and think—this is part of their legacy! (this might not work with every candidate, but just an idea).
Give them the verbal offer and explain it, especially if there are components like OTE or equity or benefits which can differ from company to company and need clarification.
Describe the process from here on in, making sure to touch upon:
This is dependent on acceptance and whether they’re able to join on the specified start date. You can mention something like:
"How do you think the conversation with your manager will go? - do you expect a counter-offer? - if yes - Why haven't they given you the (level, salary bump, promotion) before?"
Something to be aware of, but not necessarily mention, is that, while people are tempted by counter-offers, statistics are against taking a counter-offer.
The company now knows the person wants to leave and often they are looking to buy themselves time to find the person's replacement. This is a very old-fashioned attitude, but a lot of companies, and even individual managers, still think this way.
Something to note is that offer emails are binding in some jurisdictions, so please make sure to be mindful of that if you are not sending out unintended offer emails.
In places like the UK, and most of Europe, after the offer email you’d also need to send an Employment contract (unlike in the US where, more often than not, it’s only a formal offer letter).
Here is a sample offer email I send out:
Hi X,
Thank you for your time just now—it was great catching up!
As mentioned, we’d love to make you an offer for the X role at X company!
Please let me know if you'd like to accept the offer or if you have any questions. The above offer is subject to us carrying out 2 professional reference calls, one of which should be with your most recent manager. Please provide their contact details, including their email address and contact number, and give them a heads up that we’ll be contacting them shortly via either method. We will send you all the paperwork with the agreed start date of X. In order for me to prepare it, can you please give me the following details:
We're IceHrm very much looking forward to having you on the team!