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The recruiter called my salary expectations "cute." I closed the Zoom. Did I overreact?
"I've been job hunting for 4 months. Fully remote only, which already cuts the pool in half. After weeks of ghosting, you get genuinely desperate when something finally lands on your calendar.
Got a screening call for a mid-level role at a startup that looked decent on paper. I researched them, prepped my answers, joined early.
About ten minutes in, the recruiter asked about compensation. I gave a completely standard range based on my experience and the market. She literally laughed and said "that's cute, most remote candidates aren't expecting that kind of number."
I asked if there was flexibility or equity to offset it. She said "we offer a great culture and a lot of autonomy."
I said "I don't think we're aligned, thanks for your time" and hit leave."
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Let's talk about the word "cute." It's a perfectly fine word in most contexts. Puppies are cute. Baby shoes are cute. The way someone laughs at their own jokes before finishing them is cute. A candidate's salary expectations, stated clearly and based on market research after four months of job hunting, are not cute. They are a number. A reasonable one. And calling them cute is not feedback, it's a power move dressed up as a giggle.
This is the job market in 2026. You prep for weeks. You research the company. You join early. You answer every question thoughtfully. And then, ten minutes in, someone laughs at you for knowing your own worth. Not because the number was unreasonable, it wasn't, but because apparently remote candidates are supposed to be grateful enough for the privilege of working in their own homes that they negotiate against themselves before the conversation even starts.
She didn't. She asked about flexibility. She asked about equity. The recruiter offered culture and autonomy, which are two things that have never paid a single bill in the history of employment. And so she said the four most powerful words available to anyone in a job interview: I don't think we're aligned. Then she left.
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"Now I'm second-guessing myself. The market is brutal right now. Remote roles get 400 applications. Maybe I should have stayed on and tried to negotiate using ace. But I'm so tired of companies using "flexibility" and "culture" as a substitute for paying people properly.
Has anyone else just walked out of an interview over something like this? At what point do you stop swallowing it and just say no?
EDIT: Update - just got an offer!! Honestly didn't expect it to happen this fast. Not even from the company I posted about, a completely different one reached out. And the salary? Higher than what I was originally asking for."
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Now, the job market is brutal and everyone knows it. Four hundred applications per remote role. Weeks of silence followed by a screening call that goes nowhere. The pressure to stay on the line, to smile through it, to find some way to make the numbers work when the company has already decided they won't, that pressure is real and it wears people down in ways that are hard to explain to anyone who hasn't been in it.
But here's what happened next. A different company reached out. Made an offer. The salary? Higher than what she'd originally asked for. The number that got laughed at turned out to be the floor, not the ceiling. The job market is exhausting and often deeply unfair. But every once in a while, walking away from the wrong opportunity is exactly what creates space for the right one to show up. She knew her worth. She said it out loud. Someone laughed. She closed the Zoom.And then she got paid more anyway.
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Wow. Dodged a bullet. Great culture? Yah, ok. Calling something “cute” is so condescending. Don’t second-guess yourself. I’m also interviewing for remote roles and I just won’t settle for companies that feel a bit off, no matter how bad the market is.
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No, you didn't. You don't want to work at a workplace where you have to deal with humiliation and condescending behaviour in the first call already. Just imagine how they're gonna treat you AFTER hiring you?! There are different and more respectful ways to phrase "your salary expectation is beyond our planned budget for this role".
The market is awful, but we shouldn't lower our standards for politeness because of that. A great culture and autonomy are also no benefits and are claimed by everyone - because it's an easy unmeasurable lie later on. Should've responded "Cute, most companies don't present the basic minimim as part of the compensation."
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Of course you didn't over-react. They literally laughed at the range you deserve, and as recompense offered you 'great culture.' Be glad that you didn't end up working for that toxic waste dump and move on.
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that's cute, most remote candidates aren't expecting that kind of number
"Most candidates aren't worth it"
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Should have asked what their range was. Not that it would have changed ANYTHING else, because you were totally right, but it would have been nice to know
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No, she was rude. I had a conversation with someone the other day about what it would take for me to go in house and they were clearly shocked by how much I would expect but they were completely polite about it. My expectations were about double what they were offering. They just explained that the Level I was expecting would be a completely different position in their company and we agreed that that was not a position that I was interested or willing or able to do.
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She made fun of you and then talked about "culture"? That's rich. I'd leave them a review.
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I have stood up and excused myself during in person interviews. I know what I want, and this ain’t it.
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“Cute” is offensive and demeaning. Not professional
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Do you want to hire people who know their worth and can project that confidence in their work, or do you want someone you can lowball who will burnout quick
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The disparity in expectations is one thing, but you're completely in the right to leave because of the disrespect.
If you're being belittled and dismissed during an interview what do you think is gonna happen when you get there?
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Terrible culture if a recruiter thinks it’s ok to talk to you like that. You did not overreact.
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You did the right thing. If more people reacted like you did, companies might not be able to keep getting away with BS like that.
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Naw. So many recruiters have an ego. That type of bullsh*t behavior blows my mind yet, some of those recruiters also make the most commission/bonus. They attract clients, candidates, hiring managers of the same mindset and good for them. They can all be cute in their own cute little world.
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Nah ive genuinely laughed myself out of a meeting room after hearing the salary they were going to offer.
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Yeah, when I realized I was screening them as much as they were screening me it made a huge difference in my career. I wanted make sure the company was up to my standards instead of the other way around.
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I block anyone who uses words like gurl, girlies, cute, etc. in reference to myself. It’s a sign of an extremely entitled, abusive personality disordered person. Just to give you an example, p!mps use this kind of language to disempower women they traffic on the street.
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You did the right thing. Don't stand for manipulative tactics.
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Check what's posted for your role and stick to that. It's an employers market and a very f*cked one overall. Forget your salary history, lie if you need to, your can renegotiate or move in a year or two or whenever things get less bad
Sorry if that's a bummer, but talented people are going extended periods unemployed waiting for a prestige salary, and that's only cute until you're in survival mode
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You did the right thing. Whatever number you put out, they were going to pay half of that. Glad you know your worth. Her dismissal with the word “cute” is condescending and not a place I’d want to work for.
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