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The First Recruiter Call: Why "What's Your Salary?" Isn't Really About Salary



You get the call. A recruiter found your profile, likes what they see, and wants to set up a quick chat. Fifteen minutes in, they ask the question you've been dreading: "So, what are you currently making?"

Your pulse ticks up. Answer too low, and you've capped your next offer before a job even exists. Answer too high, and you might get quietly filtered out of consideration. Refuse to answer, and you risk looking difficult before you've even had a real conversation.

Here's the reframe that changes everything: that first call was never really about landing on a number. It's an audition for a second conversation. Treat it that way, and the salary question gets a lot easier to handle.

The Real Purpose of Call One

A first recruiter screen has one job: determine whether it's worth both of your time to keep talking. The recruiter is trying to figure out if you're a plausible fit for something on their desk. You're trying to figure out if this recruiter is worth your trust and attention.

Neither of those goals requires a locked-in salary figure. What they require is information — your background, your skills, what you're looking for next, and what the recruiter is actually working on. Salary is just one input among many, and it's the input everyone tends to fixate on because it feels concrete when everything else about a new opportunity is still fuzzy.

If you walk in treating this as a negotiation, you'll be guarded and transactional. If you walk in treating it as an information exchange, you'll come across as open and easy to work with — which, not coincidentally, is exactly what gets you to round two.

Buy Yourself a Room Without Being Evasive

You don't have to hand over your exact current salary, and in most places you're not obligated to. But "I'd rather not say" can land as cagey if it's your only move. Better to redirect with substance:

  • Ask them first. "What's the range you're working with for this role?" is a completely normal question, and it puts the ball back in their court. Most recruiters expect it.
  • Talk in terms of total compensation, not a single number. Base salary, bonus structure, equity, benefits, flexibility — mentioning that you're weighing the whole package signals sophistication, not evasiveness, and it naturally widens what counts as an acceptable answer.
  • If you're job hunting from unemployment or between contracts, it's fair to mention that you've been considering a range of arrangements — contract, part-time, full-time — which explains naturally why a single salary figure doesn't apply cleanly to you right now.

The goal isn't to dodge the question forever. It's to avoid anchoring yourself to a number before you know what the job actually is.

Get Specific About the Role Before You Get Specific About Pay

It's entirely reasonable to say: "I'm happy to talk numbers once I understand more about the role — can you tell me about the position first?" This isn't stalling; it's the logical order of operations. Compensation should follow from scope, not the other way around.

If a recruiter can't or won't describe the actual opportunity, that tells you something, too. Use the moment to vet them right back:

  • What kinds of roles do they typically place?
  • What industries, levels, or geographies do they focus on?
  • How long have they been recruiting, and what are they seeing in the current market?

A recruiter worth building a relationship with will answer these comfortably. One who deflects every question while pressing hard on your number is telling you how the rest of this relationship will go.

What a Good First Call Actually Sounds Like

The best exploratory calls feel like a conversation, not an interrogation. You come away having learned something about the market or the role. The recruiter comes away with more than your resume — they get a sense of how you talk about your work, what actually drives you, and whether you'd represent well in front of their client.

That's the real currency of a first call: trust, not numbers. A recruiter who knows, likes, and trusts you will fight for you when it's time to negotiate. One who only has your salary history has a data point, not an advocate.

Money will come up eventually — usually once there's a real role on the table, and both sides are genuinely interested. Let it wait until then. Your job in those first fifteen minutes isn't to win a negotiation. It's to earn a second call.