Throughout her life, Vicky Nguyen has navigated her way through difficult situations. She and her parents fled Vietnam when she was an infant. She lived in a Malaysian refugee camp. She got her first job in journalism by convincing a station manager she didn’t know to watch her tapes. And as a senior investigative reporter and anchor for NBC Bay Area, she routinely asks pressing questions to people who don’t want to talk.
But it was a salary negotiation in 2015 that “felt like an out-of-body experience” for Nguyen, who led a team that recently won an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award.
“I re-read my negotiating books, I practiced in the mirror, and yet my heart was still pounding,” said Nguyen, 40. “I was about to march into the general manager’s office and ask for an astronomical raise,” or about 50 percent more than her current salary, she added.
Nguyen said asking for the raise was a major Know Your Value moment in her life.
I stuck to the facts of what I’d done; it wasn’t ego and it wasn’t emotion. It was like, ‘I did this, and this and this … I deserve that raise.’
Vicky%20Nguyen
Yes, Nguyen was nervous to approach her boss, but she knew the conversation was necessary. After all, she had been at the station for a few years and had been quickly promoted from a general assignment reporter to covering special projects. But the new gig came one day after Nguyen had signed a new contract, so there was no raise. A few years later, she was promoted again, this time to her current role.
Nguyen was under the same contract, so initially she kept quiet and worked hard for the next two years. She covered a number of high-profile stories, including Sysco Corporation’s unsanitary food handling, which landed her an Emmy.
When it was time to renew her contract, “I had to fight for what I deserved,” Nguyen recounted.
Nguyen’s boss was shocked at her sizable ask. Negotiations were contentious at times. The general manager and assistant news director were eventually brought in. Nguyen was willing to walk away, she said, which helped firm her resolve.
“I stuck to the facts of what I’d done; it wasn’t ego and it wasn’t emotion. It was like, ‘I did this, and this and this … I deserve that raise,’” Nguyen said. “I threw in analogies: ‘I’m a stock you invested in at a great price and I’ve paid dividends.’ Looking back I can’t believe I actually did it.”
But she did – and she won. Nguyen didn’t receive the major raise right up front, but she and leadership agreed to a deal that was structured to get her the amount she wanted over time.
“It was an out-of-body experience, and a tough one – but it was well worth it,” Nguyen said. “I look back and I am so proud that I stood my ground for what I deserved.”









