← All stories
Money

Wall Street Executive Claims Women Approach Salary Negotiations Without Knowing Market Value of Their Roles

The Mel Robbins Podcast · The Best Career Advice for Right Now: The New Rules of Work, Confidence, and Success · June 12, 2026
Wall Street Executive Claims Women Approach Salary Negotiations Without Knowing Market Value of Their Roles
The Mel Robbins Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast
The Best Career Advice for Right Now: The New Rules of Work, Confidence, and Success
"Many of us go into job interviews so focused on getting the job that we haven't done our homework around the market value of the seat. You ought to know what the market value of the seat is. The problem is if you take the $150,000 when market value is $200,000 to $250,000, then you're sending some poor messages. The first is that you negotiate poorly. The second is that you'll take anything."
Harris revealed that women commonly enter salary negotiations uninformed about market rates, accepting offers significantly below industry standards. She provided specific scripting for rejecting below-market offers and demanding competitive compensation, warning that accepting low initial offers signals poor negotiation skills and creates permanent salary disadvantages throughout one's tenure.

About this episode

In this episode of the Mel Robbins Podcast, host Mel Robbins sat down with Carla Harris, former vice chairman at Morgan Stanley with over 35 years on Wall Street, Harvard graduate, and current chair of the National Women's Business Council. The conversation centered on how women can seize unprecedented career opportunities created by current economic disruption and technological change. Harris opened by declaring that all traditional career playbooks are obsolete, arguing that rapid innovation means no one has superior knowledge, creating a rare moment where anyone can design new professional paths rather than follow predetermined ladders. She revealed insider knowledge that every critical career decision—compensation, promotion, and opportunity allocation—happens in closed-door meetings without employee presence, requiring sponsors who spend political currency on one's behalf. Harris identified fear and fatigue as the two primary forces derailing women's careers at different stages, with early-career women paralyzed by self-doubt and senior women exhausted from decades of fighting for advancement, often stopping just short of breaking through despite needing only minimal additional effort. She provided tactical advice on salary negotiation, revealing that women commonly accept offers far below market value due to inadequate research, and coached listeners on building sponsor relationships, marketing visibility, and using AI to reclaim time. Harris emphasized that companies secretly hire top talent even during mass layoffs, using economic downturns as cover to upgrade workforce quality. The episode concluded with Harris urging women to stop giving away power unconsciously, own their capabilities, and give themselves permission to win rather than counting themselves out before trying.

Key takeaways

More stories More from The Mel Robbins Podcast