Each type of compensation conversation has a different centre of gravity. Knowing which one you're in helps you prepare the right thing.
Delivering a pay review
Lead with the outcome, then the reasoning
State the outcome clearly at the start — don't build to it. People can't process the reasoning until they know the number. Give the increase (or explain the no-change), then explain what drove it: performance, market data, band position, or budget. End with what the path forward looks like.
"I want to start with the outcome: your salary is moving to [X] from [date]. Let me explain how we got there and what it means for where you sit in your band."
Responding to a raise request
Take it seriously before you respond to it
Acknowledge the ask before you answer it. Ask what's driving it — is it market data, a life change, a feeling of being undervalued? Understanding the source changes how you respond. If the answer is no, explain specifically why, and name what would need to change for the answer to be yes.
"Thank you for raising this directly — it's the right thing to do. Can you tell me more about what's prompted this conversation? I want to make sure I'm responding to the right thing."
Explaining a no-increase outcome
Be honest about the reason — don't soften it into vagueness
Vague explanations feel like deflection. If the reason is budget, say that. If it's band position, explain the band. If it's performance, say so clearly and make sure this isn't the first time they're hearing it. Then name — specifically — what a different outcome would require.
"There's no increase this cycle, and I want to be honest about why. [Reason]. That's the real answer. Here's what I think changes it: [specific path forward]."
The "am I paid fairly?" conversation
Don't dismiss it and don't over-promise
This question usually means something — a comparison they've made, a market check, a feeling of being undervalued. Ask what's behind it before you answer. If you genuinely don't know how they sit relative to the market or the team, say so and commit to finding out. Don't guess and don't make promises you can't keep.
"That's an important question and I want to give you a real answer. Can you share what's prompting it? And if I don't have everything I need to answer it fully today, I'd rather come back to you with the right information than guess."