Most Indian engineers accept the first number a company offers. That's a mistake that costs ₹4–12 lakh per year — compounding over every future salary hike and job switch. A competing offer is the cleanest, most honest form of market validation you can bring to any negotiation. This guide shows you exactly how to use it in two scenarios: negotiating with your current employer, and maximising what a new employer pays.
Part 1: Using a Competing Offer at Your Current Employer
When This Makes Sense
| Situation | Worth Trying? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| You genuinely want to stay but are underpaid | Yes — ideal scenario | Counter-offer is most credible when you actually want to stay |
| You're already planning to leave regardless | Maybe — use carefully | Counter-offer buys time but doesn't change the root issue |
| You've been promised a hike that keeps getting delayed | Yes | Creates the urgency your manager needs to escalate |
| You just want validation you're market rate | Risky | Employer may call your bluff and lose trust even if they match |
| Your company is in financial trouble / layoff mode | No | No budget to counter; you may be placed on a watch list |
The Conversation — Step by Step
Step 1: Get the offer in writing first. Never raise this conversation before you have a signed offer letter or formal email from the other company.
Step 2: Request a 1:1 with your manager. Don't do this by email or in a group setting.
Step 3: Use this script:
What Happens Next — 3 Scenarios
Scenario A: They Match or Beat the Offer
Congratulate yourself — this works more often than people expect, especially for engineers with 3+ years tenure and strong performance. Before accepting: get the counter in writing, check if it affects your bonus/ESOP schedule, and clarify whether this is a one-time adjustment or reflects a permanent band change.
Scenario B: They Offer a Partial Match
They offer ₹[X] when you asked for ₹[Y]. Don't immediately accept or reject. Say: "I appreciate this — can I have 48 hours to think it through?" Evaluate: Is the gap too large? Does staying offer non-monetary value (WLB, team, learning) that justifies it? If the gap is within 15–20%, staying often makes sense for relationship continuity. If it's 30%+ below the offer, leave.
Scenario C: They Cannot or Will Not Match
Some companies have rigid salary bands. If they genuinely can't match, don't burn the bridge. Say: "I understand — I appreciate you being transparent with me about the constraints. I'm going to have to make this difficult decision. Can we discuss a transition timeline that works for both sides?" Leave gracefully. The Indian tech world is small.
Part 2: Using a Competing Offer with the New Employer
Step 1: Get Multiple Offers if Possible
The ideal position is having 2+ offers simultaneously. Run interview processes in parallel — time your final rounds at multiple companies to fall within the same 2–3 week window. This gives you genuine alternatives, not bluffs.
Step 2: Don't Reveal Your Other Offer's Number First
When a recruiter asks "Do you have other offers?", your answer shapes the negotiation. Here's the right approach:
This confirms you're in demand without disclosing numbers, which keeps you from anchoring too low.
Step 3: Once You Have the Initial Offer — Counter Using Your Competing Offer
What to Actually Ask For
| Your Competing Offer | Counter Ask | Likely to Get | Walk-away Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| ₹20L base | ₹23–24L base | ₹21–23L | ₹20L (match minimum) |
| ₹35L base | ₹40–42L base | ₹37–40L | ₹35L |
| ₹50L base | ₹56–60L base | ₹52–57L | ₹50L |
| ₹80L base | ₹88–95L base | ₹83–90L | ₹80L |
Handling Recruiter Pushback — Scripts
Negotiation Tactics by Company Type
| Company Type | Flexibility | Best Lever | What Rarely Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| FAANG India (Google, Meta, Amazon) | Medium on base; High on equity | Competing FAANG offer; level mismatch argument | Arguing about market rates without a real competing offer |
| Tier-1 Indian Product (Flipkart, Razorpay, CRED) | High on base; Medium on ESOPs | Any stronger competing offer; timing (end of quarter) | Emotional arguments; "I deserve more" without data |
| MNC India GCC (Microsoft, Walmart) | Low on base; Medium on bonus | Competing MNC offer; grade alignment argument | Competing startup offer (different band structures) |
| High-growth Startups (Series B–D) | Very High on everything | Competing offer + deadline urgency + ESOP comparison | Overplaying hand — they may rescind if you seem uncommitted |
Common Mistakes in Competing Offer Negotiations
| Mistake | Why It Backfires | Do This Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Using a fake or inflated offer number | Easily verified; destroys credibility permanently | Always negotiate with your real number |
| Revealing your competing offer number first | Anchors the negotiation too low | Let them give the first number; then use your offer to counter up |
| Negotiating via email for big asks | Easy to say no over email; hard to say no in a call | Always have final negotiation conversations live (call or video) |
| Accepting a counter-offer without getting it in writing | Verbal commitments from HR don't survive manager changes | Always ask: "Can you send me the revised offer letter?" |
| Making ultimatums you won't follow through on | If you say "I'll join them" and then don't, you lose all leverage forever | Only state a walk-away point if you're genuinely willing to walk away |
| Negotiating too many things simultaneously | Comes across as high-maintenance; HR gets defensive | Lead with base salary; only bring other elements if base is stuck |
The Decision Framework: Counter-Offer or Leave?
| Factor | Stay and Counter | Leave |
|---|---|---|
| Salary gap (competing offer vs current CTC) | <25% gap → counter makes sense | >40% gap → very hard to counter fully; leave |
| Primary reason you're interviewing | Only salary → counter works | Growth, manager, culture → counter won't fix it |
| Your tenure at current company | <2 years → consider WLB of staying (ESOPs vesting) | >3 years with no promotion → leave is overdue |
| ESOP vesting cliff status | Within 3 months of cliff → finish vesting, then leave | Already past cliff → negotiate without time pressure |
| Company financial health | Stable → counter credible | Laying off / struggling → leave; no budget to counter |
