5 Fierce Ways to Increase Your Salary This Year

Money. Need it. Want it. Gotta have it. Love it. Hate it. That pretty much sums up my relationship with money — until I decided to get fierce about it. I’m a 20-something girl like many of you. I’m a born and bred New Yorker, daughter of a lawyer, privately-educated with several tens of thousands of dollars in debt from said education. I was taught that if you do well, you will be rewarded for it. And if that isn’t a total misrepresentation of adulthood, I don’t know what is.

You don’t just excel at life — like we’re taught in every level of education — and suddenly get the salary you deserve. You get the salary you ask for, the salary you, more times than not, fight tooth and nail for. I tripled my salary in four years after graduating from college, and by five years — by going out on my own and starting not one but two businesses — I made another five-figure jump.

How did I do it? I got fierce about negotiations, deals and research. I started talking to my friends to see what they felt was a “good salary”— and then, when I went out on my own, I price shopped the competition like a woman on a mission at SoulCycle. You may not have the desire to go out on your own (although I highly recommend it, because it was the best decision of my career) but even so, there are ways for you to earn more without hating your life, alienating your friends or living at the office. Here are five ways to get fierce about your salary and make more this year!

1. Do Your Homework

Talk to friends, research your title online and ask people around you in your office what they make. Yes, I mean ask your colleagues, friends and the Internet. Talking to friends about money can be hard, but it doesn’t have to be. If you work in the same field, this is a crucial step in determining what other companies pay employees with the same responsibilities. And let’s break that down even further — most job titles today don’t necessarily include all of the tasks that you’re responsible for. So let’s say you have friends in industries that are similar to yours but your titles don’t match up — talk responsibilities and see if you can come to an average number for each of the “jobs” you hold. That will help you when you’re doing research on sites like Salary.com and when you’re talking to your boss or supervisor.

2. Build a Mastermind Group

Pick five friends with whom you can have a frank conversation. For your purposes, it’s probably best that they’re all women — as we all know, male salaries are generally $.78 higher to the $1 every woman makes, so they’re great for comparison but not necessarily your strongest argument. The Mastermind group should include women who are more advanced and less advanced to help you get a sense of the pay scale progression. It helps if you, at the very least, complete similar tasks. This group can be a Facebook group, a weekly Skype call or an email chain — as long as you’re regularly discussing money matters (among other things), it’s a great way to get a “real life” example of salary possibilities and expectations.

3. Work on Your Mindset

“Money flows into my life with ease.” “Everything I desire is coming my way.” “I am valued by my bosses, colleagues and friends.” These are just a few of the mantras I’ve used over the years to get over my guilt of discussing money and asking for more. At times, I even got more specific, subbing in actual numbers, job titles, locations and desired start timelines. Vision boarding helped me land one of the biggest jobs in my career — a digital producer for LIVE with Kelly and Michael at a salary that made me feel, at the the time, wildly successful, valued and that my career was on the right track.

It wasn’t until much later in my mindset work that I realized salary doesn’t define you, and that’s when I truly unlocked the keys to being fierce about making money. I started side-hustling and the money just started coming in, effortlessly. I got clear about what I wanted — my own company — and in one summer, I had built something that allowed me to keep living the lifestyle that I had. When I stopped thinking about it in terms of what I wanted and more of what I needed, that’s when I got what I actually wanted (and needed!). It’s a lesson you’ll learn as you grow, but you have to give yourself the space to grow. Be kind, it’s a process (another mantra I have on a purple sticky in my apartment!).

4. Have a Plan B

Getting a counteroffer isn’t comfortable. In fact, when you’re contemplating leaving a place you’ve worked for a long time, it can be downright exhausting! It is, however, imperative that you have a Plan B before you have “The Talk” with your boss or supervisor. Why? Because in order to have an effective negotiation, you have to be ready to “blink” first. What do I mean? I mean that you have to be able to walk into that meeting, ready to say “Okay, I quit,” if you don’t get your desired increase. Because, at the end of the day, how much longer will you really stay in a job that doesn’t pay you a rate you deserve and desire?

Even if you don’t quit, the day of your Talk, you’ll probably be very ready to leave in the coming weeks or months (if you wait that long), so you need to be prepared for the no, and be ready with a Plan B. In all of my job hopping, I never went into a salary negotiation without having another offer under my belt, and that was what allowed me to be fierce, because I had all my bases covered.

5. Prepare for The Talk

Write out what you want to say. Practice it on your roommate (or even your pet). Record yourself and listen to how you sound. Are you uptalking? Are you looking around the room when you should be looking into the camera (which stands in as the eyes of your boss, supervisor or interviewer)? Get on the line with one or all of your Mastermind, and talk it out with them. Then, walk into the room and be ready to talk it out rationally. No defending yourself, no justifications —just cold, hard facts. And if they say no? Go to your Plan B. If leaving your job isn’t an option, ask for feedback and steps to turn your salary desires into your salary realities.

The most important thing to remember? It takes work to #werk the corner office, and you have to think of your mindset, negotiation skills and your ability to say “no” as a continually evolving practice. Only you can make yourself stronger — and each time you repeat the exercise, you’ll do better than the last!

Got any tips for getting a raise? Tweet us @BritandCo and let us know!

This post was previously published on Levo League by Victoria Reitano.

Photos via Getty.

Emma Mackey and Glen Powell are proving Barbie summer and Twisters summer really can last forever. The two actors are starring alongside Jenna Ortega in J.J. Abrams' new film and I'm absolutely losing my mind. All three actors are truly comedy geniuses with super dramatic acting chops to boot, and I just know their scenes together are going to be cinematic gold. We don't have too much information about the movie just yet but I've scoured the internet for every little detail you need to know — keep checking back here for updates!

Keep reading for everything we know about J.J. Abrams' new movie starring Glen Powell, Jenna Ortega, and Emma Mackey.

The untitled Warner Bros. movie will start filming in early-2025, which means we could see it in 2026. The movie was rumored to have a time travel plotline but that's not actually the case, according to The Hollywood Reporter. We also know that J.J. Abrams is serving as both writer and director (slay), which he's done on Mission: Impossible III, Super 8, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (double slay).

In addition to this new movie, Glen Powell's also eyeing a reunion with Tom Cruise for Top Gun 3, while Jenna Ortega's Wednesday season 2will hit Netflix in 2025. Warner Bros. is also giving us Margot Robbie's Wuthering Heights, which is another win for Barbies everywhere.

In addition to Barbie, you can watch Emma Mackey in Sex Education, Emily, and Death on the Nile. Glen Powell proves his rom-com capabilities with Set It Up on Netflix, while Jenna Ortega totally wowed us in Beetlejuice 2.

Are you excited for this brand new, ever so secretive movie? Check out 11 New Movies Coming In December To Add To Your Calendar ASAP for more titles you can watch starting next week!

When you're often the life of the party and happen to be partnered up and in your 30s, you'll instantly turn heads when you say no to booze. I can personally attest to the difficulty of this. As someone who loves happy hour and has a particular affinity for lemon drop shotsin totally inappropriate settings, there was no way I could get away with *not* drinking without inviting questioning looks.

Before I give you the guide to fake drinking when you're secretly pregnant, let me take this moment to make a PSA. If you see that a female friend of yours isn't drinking and she usually does, try not to ask her if she's expecting in front of everyone. She might be secretly pregnant, taking fertility drugs that can't be combined with alcohol, just trying to lower her dosage of alcohol with the hope that it helps her get pregnant. There's also the chance she might just be…not drinking. Be as it may, no one wants to be bombarded with pregnancy questions.

Of course, not everyone is going to take my PSA seriously, so I've got some tips and tricks for all you pre-reveal preggos. These same tips apply to gals who are not drinking because they are trying to conceive. I was personally in this non-drinking camp for about five months before getting pregnant.

And how's this for proof? I organized and attended a bachelorette party for two of my very best friends with about eight of my other besties present — and no one had ANY idea I was pregnant. So, trust me — I'm a bona fide pro at fake drinking.


Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Keep reading for the best tips to happily sip drinks in a way that won't make your besties raise an eyebrow

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Opt for canned beer

This was one of my earliest discoveries in the world of fake drinking. No one can see your drink when it's in a can. You might read that and think, yeah so? Well, take that can with you to the other can, and dump it out in the sink. Fill it up with water and no one will be the wiser. In fact, they'll think — wow, she's really blasting through those Coors Lights. Pro tip: Be sure to wipe any water drips off the can before you leave the bathroom, and rinse the sink so there's no errant beer foam floating around.

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

If you have to order a real drink, choose a clear cocktail. This is the classic move. You creep over to the bar when no one else is around, and order a club soda with lime. Think of it as a mocktail. Be sure to ask the bartender to serve it to you in a cocktail glass — a giant water glass or plastic cup is a dead giveaway.

If it's impossible to get alone time at the bar, order a vodka soda (or gin and tonic). Then take it to the bathroom, dump out the liquid (use a straw to keep the ice and any garnishes in the cup), then fill it with water instead. Complain about the soda or tonic being flat if anyone questions your drink's lack of tiny bubbles.

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Make friends with bartenders. At first, bartenders give you a bit of side-eye when you ask for a club soda in a cocktail glass. They won't ask you what the deal is, but you can let them assume what they like — especially when you order that second or third club soda in a cocktailglass.

If you're feeling cavalier, and you and the bartender have really hit your stride, you can even say, “I'll take anything non-alcoholic that looks like a cocktail." I actually made SUCH good friends with a bartender at a wedding where I was fake drinking that every time I came over to the bar, he immediately winked at me and gave me “my regular." My friends guffawed at the fact that I was already friends with the bartender. Pro.

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Allude to a possible tannin allergy. Wine is the toughest thing to fake, so don't even try. Tell your friends about how, out of nowhere, you've started to get headaches immediately after drinking a glass of wine. When they're like, “Is it just when you drink red?" reply with a frustrated sigh, “No, both red and white make me feel crappy — maybe it's a tannin thing?" Then get your faux canned beer or clear mocktail, and call it a day.

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Ginger ale is a GREAT substitute for Champagne. Ginger ale looks like Champagne, it smells kind of like Champagne, and if your friends are tipsy enough and take a sip, they'll actually believe that it IS Champagne. Don't overdo this one though — too much sugary soda is not a good thing for you and your secret babe!

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Pretend to be getting over a cold (so no one asks for a sip). After all, it's sick season! [Insert fake coughs here]

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Always be the one to order or serve a round of shots. Shots are one of the toughest things to fake. Like, really difficult. And you might be thinking, who still takes shots anyway? Well, the answer is: I do. Or rather, I did. It would have been impossible to be at my two besties' bachelorette party without at least one round of shots. So what's a preggo to do? Serve 'em up, of course.

Because shots are best served as a surprise to inspire a second wind in any given party, you can creep into the kitchen to set things up. Pour all but one, and fill that one with a substitute. Ideally, it looks like what you're serving, and if that's not possible, make 3-5 of them vodka shots including yours, which is actually… water! If ordering shots at a bar, you're probably already friends with the bartender, so just ask him to make yours a fake one and to put a napkin or coaster under it on the tray that comes out.

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Keep a drink in your hand at all times. This is an obvious one, but it's worth mentioning. If you don't have a drink on hand, someone will either hand you one or give you a hard time for not drinking. DO NOT give them that opportunity ;)

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Never leave your drink unattended. Hopefully, you already have this rule in your wheelhouse from your college days. In this case, the key here is avoiding two things: friendly refills and someone accidentally picking up your drink and finding out it's phony.

Rosee Canfield for Brit + Co

Avoid being the first one to hit the hay. If you've already been squirreling around on the beverage front, the next clear sign that you might be secretly pregnant is when you're the first one to go to bed. So don't do that. Don't go to bed. Ever! Okay, at some point you'll need to go to bed because you need a TON of sleep in your first trimester, but avoid being the first party pooper at all costs.

And don't use getting up early “for a run" or “to do some work" as an excuse for going to bed — friends that know you will see right through that.

And there you have it, all you need to know about being a fake party animal when you're in the very early stages of expecting. Cheers! (But fake cheers, obvs.)

What are your best fake drinking tips? Share them with us @BritandCo!

TikTok sensations Barlow & Bear are no stranger to the spotlight. Besides the fact their Unofficial Bridgerton Musical won a Grammy (and basically broke the internet), popstar Abigail Barlow has millions of streams of her own, while Emily Bear performed in places like the White House and Carnegie Hall before turning 10.

So, it’s safe to say these two know what they’re doing. But one thing they never saw coming? Composing a Disney movie — or becoming the first female duo to do so. But that’s exactly what happened when they booked Moana 2.

Keep reading for our exclusive interview with Abigail Barlow & Emily Bear.

  • Barlow and Bear composed Moana 2, in theaters November 27.
  • They're the first female duo to compose a Disney movie and they hope the experience shows young girls "that their voices matter."
  • The duo also spilled on how Lin Manuel Miranda, who composed the original, "empowered" them.

How Barlow And Bear's Bond Influences Their Art

“We have such a sacred sisterhood!” Abigail tells me over email. “We met and found musical soulmates in one another. It’s more than just special. It’s a once in a lifetime connection that laid an incredibly strong foundation for creation.”

“Most of my life I’ve been the only girl in the room writing with much older people,” Emily adds. “Honestly because Abigail and I are like sisters, it creates such a safe place to be vulnerable together and create without restraint. When writing for Moana 2, we leaned on that emotional connection to explore the complexities of the story and how much we see ourselves in Moana!”

And the empowering message of the film, which follows Moana’s journey through Oceania, actually influenced their art. “Every day that I worked on Moana, I was empowered to continuously choose who I wanted to be,” Abigail says. “A leader, a listener, and a learner. In being tasked to write for this movie, I was being asked to go past my comfort zones. I think by being completely open hearted to this experience, it allowed me clarity when crafting the lyric and melody with Emily.”

Moana 2 is a story about finding strength through vulnerability, and that message became a huge theme in the music,” Emily says. “All our characters’ journeys reminded us to embrace our imperfections and trust the process of growth — no matter how painful it may seem in the moment. Moana is THAT girl. No one defines her but herself and writing for such an inspiring heroine FOR SURE inspired us right back.”

Why Abigail Barlow And Emily Bear Loved Working On 'Moana 2'

Walt Disney Studios

But considering the fact these two women are huge Disney fans (Abigail tells me her favorite Disney movies are The Little Mermaid and Frozen, while Emily loves Hercules and Mulan), one of the most inspiring details about their involvement is the fact that Abigail Barlow and Emily Bear’s Moana 2 score marks the first time a female duo has composed a Disney movie — and it’s a moment they don’t take for granted.

“I hope this shows [young girls] that their voices matter,” Emily says. “Growing up, I barely saw people who looked like me in roles like this, so being here now feels surreal. I want girls and women to know that their stories are powerful and deserve to be told. I really hope that Abigail and I can continue to open doors for more female creatives in film and music.”

And Abigail agrees. “I hope our story encourages young girls and women to forge their own path, and to never let anyone tell them they can’t do something.”

But this unbelievable experience didn’t come without its challenges. “Imposter syndrome is so real and a part of life for every single creative, and anyone who tells you otherwise is lying,” Emily says.

“I’m just trying to enjoy the ride, trust the fall, and be so grateful for the opportunity to be a role model for any little girl who might have a song in her heart,” Abigail says. “It’s an absolute honor and privilege to show her that anything — even magic — is possible.”

And according to Emily, the challenge of imposter syndrome actually propels her forward. “I do feel like that little voice of self-doubt pushes me to do the best work I possibly can do…I zoom out and focus on the bigger picture: the little girls watching this movie and realizing they, too, can dream as big as they want.”

How Lin Manuel-Miranda Empowered Barlow And Bear

One friendly face that provided a soft place to land was actually the original movie’s composer, Lin Manuel-Miranda! To no one’s surprise, theIn The Heights and Hamilton writer had some wonderful advice for Barlow and Bear.

“He was such a wonderful resource especially at the inception of the project when we were just setting sail,” Emily jokes. “He urged us to lean into our heroes for inspiration!”

“He gave me a stack of books I needed to buy,” Abigail adds. “Finishing the Hat by Stephen Sondheim, LYRICS by Oscar Hammerstein, Lyrics on Several Occasions by Ira Gershwin to name a few. He empowered me to study the craft of musical theatre storytelling in a way I never had before.”

And thanks to Barlow and Bear, a whole new generation of young women will dream about musical theatre storytelling now too!

Check out Moana 2 in theaters November 27, 2024. Check out the latest news on the Live-Action Moana too!