Pricing + negotiation

Every dollar conceded in a deal is a dollar of margin that's gone for the life of the contract. Most sales teams give away too much, too easily, too early, usually because they never agreed internally on what was worth trading for what. Good negotiation is 80% preparation, 20% at the table.

Know your walk-away

Before you enter negotiation, decide:

Without a walk-away, the negotiation has no floor. You'll keep moving because it "feels close." The walk-away is written down before the call, not invented during it.

Know what you'll trade

Four primary levers. Know the order you'll move them in:

  1. Price, always the last thing you cut
  2. Term length, trade longer commit for better price
  3. Scope / features, remove things from the deal
  4. Payment terms, annual upfront vs quarterly

The concession hierarchy matters: trading a price cut for no counter-concession teaches the buyer that your prices are negotiable. Trading a price cut for a multi-year commit or upfront payment teaches them that value-for-value is the deal.

The concession rules

Tactics buyers will run

The "one more thing"

After everything is settled, they come back for a final discount. Counter: "That would require us to reopen the deal. Are you sure you want to do that?" 80% of the time they back off.

The "good cop / bad cop" procurement handoff

After you've agreed with the business buyer, procurement comes in asking for 10% more off. Counter: never re-open price to procurement. Their job is redlining paper, not re-discounting.

The "we need a quick answer"

Fake urgency designed to prevent you from thinking. Counter: "I understand. Let me check and come back to you in 24 hours." Urgency is 95% tactical.

The "your competitor is $X"

Maybe true, maybe bluff. Counter: "I'd be surprised, our value vs theirs is materially different. But if that's the final ask I can't match it. If price is the only thing, you should go with them."

The walk-away move

The most powerful tool in negotiation is the ability to credibly walk. "We appreciate your consideration but we're not going to get to a deal", said calmly, without emotion, often unlocks better terms immediately. Only works if you mean it. Only mean it if you've actually hit your walk-away.

The discount ladder

Pre-authorize discounts by size:

Every discount over 10% requires a written justification. If 60% of deals are getting over-10% discounts, your list price is wrong.

Contract terms beyond price

Things that matter more than the deal price:

What good looks like

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