When a deal stalls on pricing, /sales-negotiator builds your BATNA and counter-strategy, so you can close without unnecessary discounts. — Claude Skill
A Claude Skill for Claude Code by Nick Jensen — run /sales-negotiator in Claude·Updated
Plan B2B negotiation tactics, handle discounts, and navigate procurement.
- BATNA development with walk-away thresholds
- Discount ladder with reciprocal ask pairing
- Procurement objection response scripts
- Multi-party negotiation role mapping
- Contract redline prioritization
Who this is for
What it does
Run /sales-negotiator with the RFP terms to get a clause-by-clause concession plan — teams report 12% fewer unplanned discounts.
Feed /sales-negotiator your renewal context and competitor quotes to get ranked alternatives and walk-away points.
Use /sales-negotiator to map each stakeholder's priorities and draft tailored value propositions — covers up to 6 buying-committee roles.
Paste the buyer's discount ask into /sales-negotiator to receive reciprocal trade options that protect margin while showing flexibility.
How it works
Describe the deal context: deal size, stage, stakeholders, and the buyer's latest position or objection.
The skill analyzes leverage points, identifies your BATNA, and maps the negotiation landscape.
It generates a strategy document with concession tiers, reciprocal asks, and talk tracks for each stakeholder.
Review the output, adjust thresholds, and use the talk tracks in your next call.
Example
$120K ARR renewal. Buyer requesting 25% discount citing competitor quote. 3-year customer, 40 seats, champion is VP Ops but CFO now involved. Renewal in 18 days.
Walk-away threshold: $96K (20% discount max). Below this, propose seat reduction or shorter term. Your leverage: 3-year usage data, 92% adoption, switching cost ~4 months.
Tier 1: Offer 10% discount for 2-year commit + case study rights. Tier 2: 15% for 3-year commit + reference calls. Tier 3: 20% only with upfront annual payment. Always pair discount with reciprocal.
Lead with TCO comparison: switching cost = $45K migration + 4 months productivity loss. Frame discount as partnership investment, not price reduction.
Metrics this improves
Works with
Sales Negotiator
Strategic negotiation expertise for B2B sales teams — from preparation and psychology to closing techniques and win-win deal structuring.
Philosophy
Great negotiation isn't about winning. It's about creating value that makes agreement inevitable.
The best B2B negotiators:
- Prepare obsessively — The negotiation is won before it begins
- Understand interests, not positions — What they want vs what they say they want
- Expand the pie before dividing — Find value neither side saw initially
- Walk away when necessary — A bad deal is worse than no deal
How This Skill Works
When invoked, apply the guidelines in rules/ organized by:
preparation-*— Pre-negotiation research, planning, BATNA developmentpsychology-*— Buyer psychology, stakeholder mapping, emotional intelligencetactics-*— Anchoring, framing, concession strategy, silencepricing-*— Discount handling, value justification, creative structuringmultiparty-*— Procurement, legal, multi-stakeholder negotiationsclosing-*— Timing, techniques, commitment gaining
Core Frameworks
Negotiation Phases
| Phase | Activities | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Preparation | Research, BATNA, objectives, limits | Know more than they do |
| Opening | Anchor, frame, set expectations | Control the narrative |
| Exploration | Questions, listening, interest discovery | Understand their world |
| Bargaining | Concessions, trades, package building | Create and claim value |
| Closing | Commitment, documentation, next steps | Lock in the win-win |
The BATNA Hierarchy
┌─────────────────┐
│ Walk Away │ ← Your power base
│ (Best Alternative)
├─────────────────┤
│ Resistance │ ← Fight hard here
│ Point │
├─────────────────┤
│ Target │ ← Aim here
│ Outcome │
├─────────────────┤
│ Aspiration │ ← Start here
│ (Anchor) │
└─────────────────┘
Value Creation Model
- Unbundle — Separate components to trade differentially
- Logroll — Trade low-value for high-value items
- Expand — Add scope, terms, or timeline to create value
- Contingency — Use performance-based terms when certainty differs
Stakeholder Power Map
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ DECISION DYNAMICS │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Economic Buyer (signs check) │
│ ┌─────────┐ │
│ │ CFO │ ← Money authority │
│ └─────────┘ │
│ Technical Buyer (says it works) │
│ ┌─────────┐ ┌─────────┐ │
│ │ IT │ │ Eng │ ← Veto power │
│ └─────────┘ └─────────┘ │
│ User Buyer (uses it daily) │
│ ┌─────────┐ ┌─────────┐ │
│ │ Ops │ │ Support │ ← Political │
│ └─────────┘ └─────────┘ capital │
│ Champion (sells internally) │
│ ┌─────────┐ │
│ │ Your │ ← Must enable, not replace │
│ │ Ally │ │
│ └─────────┘ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘
Negotiation Styles
| Style | When to Use | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Collaborative | Long-term relationship, complex deals | May leave value on table |
| Competitive | One-time transaction, commodity | Damages relationship |
| Compromising | Time pressure, equal power | Suboptimal for both |
| Accommodating | Relationship > outcome, minor issue | Sets bad precedent |
| Avoiding | Losing battle, need time | May miss windows |
Concession Patterns
The Diminishing Concession Pattern
First offer: $100,000
Concession 1: -$8,000 (8%)
Concession 2: -$4,000 (4%)
Concession 3: -$2,000 (2%)
Concession 4: -$500 (0.5%)
Final: $85,500
Signal: "We're approaching our limit"
The Package Trade Pattern
Instead of:
"I'll give you 10% off"
Use:
"I can reduce price by 10% if we:
- Sign a 2-year commitment
- Pay annually upfront
- Provide a case study"
Anti-Patterns
- Negotiating against yourself — Making concessions without counter-demands
- Revealing your BATNA — Telling them your alternatives or desperation
- Single-issue focus — Treating price as the only variable
- Premature closing — Pushing for commitment before value is established
- Win-lose mentality — Crushing counterpart damages long-term relationship
- Emotional reactivity — Letting frustration or ego drive decisions
- Ignoring procurement — Assuming your champion controls the deal
- Verbal agreements — Not documenting commitments in writing immediately
Reference documents
title: Section Organization
1. Preparation & Planning (preparation)
Impact: CRITICAL Description: Pre-negotiation research, objective setting, BATNA development, and stakeholder mapping. The foundation of negotiation success.
2. Buyer Psychology (psychology)
Impact: CRITICAL Description: Understanding decision-making psychology, stakeholder motivations, and emotional dynamics in complex B2B sales.
3. Negotiation Tactics (tactics)
Impact: HIGH Description: Anchoring, framing, silence, concession strategy, and tactical moves that influence outcomes.
4. Pricing & Discounts (pricing)
Impact: HIGH Description: Handling discount requests, value justification, creative deal structuring, and protecting margins.
5. Multi-Party Negotiations (multiparty)
Impact: HIGH Description: Navigating procurement, legal reviews, committees, and complex stakeholder dynamics.
6. Closing & Commitment (closing)
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH Description: Reading buying signals, timing the close, gaining commitment, and documenting agreements.
title: Closing Techniques & Timing impact: MEDIUM-HIGH tags: closing, commitment, timing, deal, signature
Closing Techniques & Timing
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH
Closing isn't a moment—it's a process. The best closers read signals, build momentum, and make commitment feel like the natural next step.
The Closing Mindset
Old thinking: "How do I get them to sign?"
New thinking: "Have we created enough value that signing is obvious?"
If you've done the work:
- Established clear value
- Addressed all concerns
- Aligned stakeholders
- Agreed on terms
...closing is just administrative.
Reading Buying Signals
Strong buying signals:
| Signal | What It Means |
|---|---|
| "When can we start?" | They've mentally committed |
| "Who handles implementation?" | Planning for ownership |
| "Can we pilot with one team first?" | Reducing risk to say yes |
| Involving finance/procurement | Moving to purchase process |
| Asking for references (again) | Final validation |
| Discussing contract details | Assuming the sale |
| "What happens after we sign?" | Visualizing ownership |
Warning signals:
| Signal | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Going quiet | Concern they haven't raised |
| "We'll discuss internally" | No clear next step |
| Asking same questions repeatedly | Not convinced |
| Fewer stakeholders in meetings | Losing momentum |
| "We're not ready yet" | Undefined blockers |
| Ghosting your champion | Decision made (not in your favor) |
Closing Techniques
1. The Assumptive Close
"Let's talk about implementation timing. Would a January start
work with your team's availability?"
Best when: Strong buying signals, relationship trust established
2. The Summary Close
"Let me make sure I have this right. You need [problem solved],
by [timeline], and we've agreed that [your solution] delivers
[specific outcomes]. The investment is [$X]. Have I missed
anything before we move forward?"
Best when: Complex deals, multiple stakeholders
3. The Alternative Close
"Would you prefer to start with the annual plan, or does the
three-year commitment with the additional discount work better
for your budget cycle?"
Best when: Decision made, finalizing structure
4. The Timeline Close
"Given your go-live target of March 1, we'd need to kick off
implementation by January 15. Working backward, that means
contract by January 5. Does that timeline work?"
Best when: Clear deadline exists, urgency is real
5. The Concern Resolution Close
"You mentioned security review was the final step. Now that
we've passed that, what else do you need to move forward?"
Best when: Known objections have been addressed
Good Closing Examples
Scenario: Deal is stalled, unclear blockers
Bad approach:
"Hey, just checking in. Any update on the contract?"
(Passive, no value add)
Good approach:
"I wanted to share something relevant. [Similar company] just
launched with us and saw [specific result] in 30 days. I thought
of you because of your [similar goal]. Is there anything holding
things up I can help address?"
(Adds value, creates social proof, surfaces blockers)
Scenario: Verbal agreement, no signature
Bad approach:
"Can you sign this week? I have quarter-end pressure."
(Your problem, not theirs)
Good approach:
"You mentioned wanting to launch before Q2. To hit that, we'd
need to start implementation next week. I've blocked our
best implementation team for you—can we get the paperwork
finalized by Thursday to hold that slot?"
(Their timeline, mutual commitment, real constraint)
Bad Closing Examples
Scenario: Premature close
Bad approach:
"So, ready to sign?" (After one demo)
Why it fails:
- Value not established
- Concerns not surfaced
- No stakeholder alignment
- Feels pushy, damages trust
Scenario: Weak close attempt
Bad approach:
"Let me know if you have any questions or want to move forward."
Why it fails:
- No commitment requested
- No next step defined
- Easy to ignore
- Shows lack of confidence
The Commitment Ladder
Build commitment incrementally:
Level 1: Information commitment
"Can I send you a case study?"
↓
Level 2: Time commitment
"Can we schedule a deeper dive with your team?"
↓
Level 3: Stakeholder commitment
"Would it make sense to include your CFO?"
↓
Level 4: Process commitment
"Let's draft a mutual evaluation plan"
↓
Level 5: Resource commitment
"Can your team do a technical review?"
↓
Level 6: Business commitment
"Let's discuss terms and timeline"
↓
Level 7: Contract commitment
"Here's the agreement for review"
Handling the Stalled Deal
| Symptom | Diagnosis | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Champion goes quiet | Internal politics or priority shift | Reach out directly, offer to help |
| "We need more time" | Undefined concern | "What would help you feel ready?" |
| New stakeholders appear | Expanding buying center | Embrace, don't resist |
| Repeated delays | Not a priority | Qualify harder, consider walking |
| Price concerns resurface | Value not established | Return to business case |
Creating Urgency (Ethically)
Real constraints you can use:
- Implementation team availability
- Price protection before increase
- Quarter-end processing time
- Product changes/version timing
- Their stated timeline/goals
Never use:
- Fake deadlines
- False scarcity
- Pressure tactics
- "My manager will never approve this again"
The Final Ask
When everything is aligned:
"[Name], we've covered a lot of ground. You've validated the
approach with your team, the business case is strong, and
we've agreed on terms. Is there anything else you need before
we move forward with the agreement?"
[Listen]
If clear: "Great. I'll send the contract today. What's the
best way to get this through your process quickly?"
If concern: "Tell me more about that. What would address it?"
Post-Agreement Actions
| Action | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Send contract immediately | Momentum is perishable |
| Confirm receipt | Ensure right hands |
| Offer to walk through | Remove friction |
| Align on timeline | Set expectations |
| Introduce implementation | Build confidence |
| Thank the champion | They took a risk on you |
Anti-Patterns
- Premature closing — Asking for commitment before value is clear
- Passive follow-up — "Just checking in" with no value add
- Avoiding the ask — Hoping they'll volunteer to buy
- High-pressure tactics — Creating fake urgency
- Ignoring signals — Missing obvious buying or warning signs
- Single close attempt — Giving up after one "not yet"
- Post-signature neglect — Disappearing after the deal closes
title: Procurement & Legal Negotiations impact: HIGH tags: multiparty, procurement, legal, contracts, enterprise
Procurement & Legal Negotiations
Impact: HIGH
Your champion wants you to win. Procurement wants to win for the company. Legal wants to avoid risk. Navigate all three to close enterprise deals.
Understanding the Players
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ BUYING CENTER │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Champion (your ally) │
│ └─ Goal: Solve their problem, look good │
│ └─ Power: Limited budget authority │
│ └─ Danger: Over-promises their influence │
│ │
│ Economic Buyer (budget holder) │
│ └─ Goal: ROI, cost control, strategic fit │
│ └─ Power: Final purchase authority │
│ └─ Danger: May override champion │
│ │
│ Procurement (process owner) │
│ └─ Goal: Best terms, compliance, savings KPIs │
│ └─ Power: Can delay, add requirements │
│ └─ Danger: Measured on discounts obtained │
│ │
│ Legal (risk manager) │
│ └─ Goal: Minimize company liability │
│ └─ Power: Can block on contract terms │
│ └─ Danger: Defaults to "no" for safety │
│ │
│ IT/Security (technical validation) │
│ └─ Goal: Compliance, integration, security │
│ └─ Power: Technical veto │
│ └─ Danger: Creates requirements late │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Procurement Negotiation Tactics
Common procurement moves and responses:
| Their Tactic | What They Want | Your Response |
|---|---|---|
| "We have budget for $X" | Anchor low | "That's helpful context. Let me show you what's possible at different investment levels." |
| "We need 3 competitive bids" | Process compliance | "Absolutely. Happy to participate. What criteria matter most?" |
| "Your competitor is cheaper" | Price pressure | "What specifically are you comparing? Let's look at total value." |
| "Take it or leave it" | Test your floor | "I understand. Let me take this back internally. We may need to adjust scope." |
| "Add these terms at same price" | Scope creep | "Those add value. Here's how that affects the investment level." |
Legal Negotiation Common Issues
| Clause | Their Concern | Your Position | Resolution Path |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liability cap | Unlimited exposure | Cap at contract value | 2-3x annual contract value |
| Indemnification | Third-party claims | Mutual, limited | Carve out willful misconduct |
| IP ownership | Work product rights | You retain platform IP | They own their data, configs |
| Data privacy | Compliance (GDPR, etc.) | Standard DPA | Offer DPA addendum |
| Termination | Trapped in bad contract | Lock-in period | Allow with notice, no refund |
| SLA penalties | Accountability | Reasonable targets | Credit, not cash penalties |
| Security requirements | Breach prevention | SOC 2, standard | Provide documentation |
Good Multi-Party Navigation Examples
Scenario: Procurement joins late, demands 25% discount
Bad approach:
Negotiate directly with procurement, bypass champion.
(Champion feels cut out, loses face)
Good approach:
"Thanks for joining the conversation. [Champion] and I have
been working on scoping this for your needs. I'd love to
understand your process and what success looks like for you.
[Champion], can you share the business case we developed?"
Then: Let champion justify the value. Address procurement
concerns. Trade for any additional discount.
Scenario: Legal redlines 15 contract terms
Bad approach:
Accept all changes to avoid delay.
(Sets terrible precedent, may create operational issues)
Good approach:
"I've reviewed your redlines. I can accept items 1, 3, 7, 9,
and 12 as written. Items 2, 5, and 11 we can meet halfway -
here's our proposed language. Items 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 14, and
15 are standard terms we can't modify, but let me explain
the rationale and why they protect both parties."
The Champion Enablement Model
Don't replace your champion. Enable them.
What champions need from you:
- Business case documentation they can share
- ROI calculations in their company's format
- Competitive comparisons for procurement
- Security/compliance documentation for IT
- Executive summary for their leadership
- Answers to questions before they're asked
Procurement Process Navigation
| Stage | What Happens | Your Focus |
|---|---|---|
| RFI | Information gathering | Stand out, get disqualified |
| RFP | Formal requirements | Shape criteria, compliance |
| Vendor calls | Dog and pony shows | Differentiate, build relationships |
| Shortlist | Final 2-3 vendors | Understand decision criteria |
| BAFO | Best and final offer | Strategic pricing, protect value |
| Contract | Legal negotiation | Expedite, don't cave |
| Approval | Internal sign-offs | Support champion |
Handling Multi-Party Conflict
Scenario: Champion wants features, CFO wants low price
Your move:
"It sounds like there's a tradeoff between capability and
investment. Let me propose two options that might help:
Option A: Full scope at $150K with [all features champion wants]
Option B: Core scope at $100K with [essentials], expandable later
What would help your internal discussion?"
Why it works:
- You're not choosing sides
- You're providing options that serve both
- Champion keeps their priorities on the table
- CFO has a budget-friendly option
- You're guiding, not dictating
Legal Redline Response Framework
For each requested change:
- Understand intent — What risk are they addressing?
- Assess impact — Can you operationally comply?
- Categorize response:
- Accept as-is
- Accept with modification
- Reject with explanation
- Trade for something else
Response template:
"Regarding [clause], I understand you're concerned about [their
interest]. Here's what we can do: [your proposal]. This protects
your interest in [X] while allowing us to [Y]. Would that work?"
Expediting Procurement/Legal
| Tactic | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Provide comparables | "Here are similar agreements we've signed" |
| Offer paper choice | "Happy to use your paper if faster" |
| Pre-answer objections | Include FAQ with standard terms |
| Single-thread legal | "Can we set up a call to resolve these together?" |
| Create urgency (real) | "Implementation team available next month only" |
| Executive alignment | Have your exec reach out to their exec |
Anti-Patterns
- Ignoring procurement — Hoping champion can bypass them
- Legal as enemy — Treating every redline as adversarial
- Single threading — Only talking to your champion
- Scope creep acceptance — Adding requirements without price adjustment
- Over-conceding to close — Accepting terms that hurt you operationally
- Bypassing process — Trying to skip steps (it backfires)
- Champion abandonment — Going around them when things get hard
title: Multi-Stakeholder Negotiations impact: HIGH tags: multiparty, stakeholders, consensus, alignment, committee
Multi-Stakeholder Negotiations
Impact: HIGH
Enterprise deals are won through consensus, not conquest. Navigate multiple stakeholders by understanding each one's unique interests and building collective agreement.
The Buying Committee Reality
Average B2B buying committee: 6-10 people
Average deal cycle increase: 30-50% with each stakeholder added
Your job: Unite them, don't divide them.
Stakeholder Mapping Framework
| Role | Typical Title | Key Interest | Your Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Champion | Manager, Director | Solve their problem | Enable, equip, support |
| Economic Buyer | VP, C-level | ROI, strategic fit | Business case, executive alignment |
| Technical Buyer | IT, Engineering | Will it work? | Proof, documentation, integration |
| User Buyer | End user, team lead | Daily experience | Demo, trial, ease of use |
| Procurement | Procurement, Finance | Terms, compliance | Process alignment, flexibility |
| Legal | General Counsel | Risk mitigation | Contract clarity, standards |
| Blocker | Various | Various (often hidden) | Identify early, neutralize/convert |
The Stakeholder Power Map
Plot stakeholders on two dimensions:
High Influence
│
│
CULTIVATE │ PARTNER
(Keep informed, │ (Deep engagement,
build relationship) │ win their support)
│
───────────────────────┼───────────────────────
│
MONITOR │ INVOLVE
(Minimal effort, │ (Keep satisfied,
stay aware) │ address concerns)
│
Low Influence
│
Low Support ───────┼─────── High Support
Discovering Hidden Stakeholders
Questions to ask your champion:
- "Who else will be involved in this decision?"
- "Who might have concerns about this change?"
- "Whose budget does this come from?"
- "Who approved similar purchases before?"
- "Is there anyone who might block or slow this down?"
- "Who will be affected by this that we haven't talked to?"
Warning signs of hidden stakeholders:
- Unexpected delays or "internal discussions"
- New names appearing in email threads
- Questions that don't match your contact's expertise
- Vague references to "we" or "leadership"
- Changing requirements or priorities
Good Multi-Stakeholder Examples
Scenario: Champion loves you, but CFO is skeptical
Bad approach:
Focus only on champion, hope they sell internally.
Good approach:
"[Champion], I want to make sure you have everything needed
for your conversation with [CFO]. Based on what you've told
me, I'd guess [CFO]'s concerns are [cost, ROI, risk]. Here's
a business case specifically addressing those points. Would
it help if I put together a brief executive summary too?
Or would it be useful for me to meet with [CFO] directly?"
Result: Champion is equipped, CFO concerns anticipated
Scenario: Technical team raises security concerns late
Bad approach:
Rush through security review, frustrate technical buyer.
Good approach:
"Security is exactly the right question to be asking. Let me
get you connected with our security team—they can share our
SOC 2 report, walk through our architecture, and address any
specific concerns. I'd rather take time now than have issues
after you've committed. What specific areas should they focus on?"
Result: Technical buyer feels heard, trust builds
Managing Conflicting Stakeholder Interests
Scenario: Users want features, Finance wants cheap
Step 1: Surface the tension
"I'm hearing two things: the team needs [features], and
there's a budget ceiling of [amount]. Is that right?"
Step 2: Acknowledge both
"Both are completely valid. Let's see if there's a path
that addresses both."
Step 3: Propose options
"Option A gives you all features at [higher price].
Option B hits budget with [core features], expandable later.
Option C is a pilot with [limited scope] to prove value first."
Step 4: Let them choose
"What would work best for your organization?"
Stakeholder Communication Matrix
| Stakeholder | Communication Style | Content Focus | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Executive | Brief, strategic | Business outcomes | Monthly/milestones |
| Champion | Detailed, collaborative | Progress, obstacles | Weekly |
| Technical | Data-driven, precise | Specs, proof | As needed |
| Procurement | Process-oriented | Terms, timeline | Stage-based |
| User | Practical, empathetic | Experience, ease | Demo/trial |
Building Consensus
The consensus-building sequence:
1. Individual alignment
Meet stakeholders 1:1 to understand their interests.
2. Objection surfacing
"What concerns do you have that we haven't discussed?"
3. Pre-meeting alignment
Address concerns before group meetings.
4. Group validation
In group meetings, let stakeholders voice support.
5. Champion enablement
Arm champion to handle internal conversations.
6. Executive bridge
Your exec to their exec for final push.
Handling the Blocker
Blocker types and responses:
| Type | Motivation | Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| The Skeptic | Doesn't believe claims | Proof, references, pilot |
| The Political | Protecting turf | Find their win, make ally |
| The Burned | Bad past experience | Acknowledge, differentiate |
| The Perfectionist | Needs everything right | Phase approach, guarantees |
| The Passive | Doesn't want to decide | Force timeline, escalate |
Meeting Dynamics
When multiple stakeholders are present:
Do:
- Acknowledge each person's priorities
- Direct technical questions to technical people
- Direct business questions to business people
- Watch for non-verbal cues (disagreement, discomfort)
- Create space for quiet voices
- Follow up individually with concerns
Don't:
- Let one voice dominate
- Ignore junior attendees (they often influence)
- Put people on the spot
- Let disagreements fester
- Assume silence is agreement
The Mutual Action Plan
Create shared accountability:
Mutual Action Plan: [Company] + [Your Company]
Objective: Go live by [date]
| Action | Owner | Due Date | Status |
|--------|-------|----------|--------|
| Security review | [Their IT] | [Date] | Pending |
| Executive alignment | [Champion] | [Date] | Done |
| Contract review | [Their Legal] | [Date] | In progress |
| Implementation scope | [Your Team] | [Date] | Done |
| Budget approval | [Their Finance] | [Date] | Pending |
Next meeting: [Date] to review progress
Anti-Patterns
- Single-threading — Only talking to one stakeholder
- Champion dependency — Assuming champion can sell internally
- Ignoring blockers — Hoping opposition will disappear
- Late stakeholder discovery — New faces appearing at decision time
- One-size-fits-all — Same pitch to every stakeholder
- Group selling — Trying to close in a group meeting
- Bypassing — Going around stakeholders who say no
- Abandoning champion — Going direct when things get hard
title: BATNA Development & Walk-Away Power impact: CRITICAL tags: preparation, batna, power, leverage, alternatives
BATNA Development & Walk-Away Power
Impact: CRITICAL
Your BATNA (Best Alternative To Negotiated Agreement) is your power. The party with the better alternative controls the negotiation.
Understanding BATNA
BATNA ≠ What you want
BATNA = What happens if you don't reach agreement
Your BATNA is your walk-away option.
The better your BATNA, the more power you have.
BATNA Assessment Framework
| Factor | Strong BATNA | Weak BATNA |
|---|---|---|
| Pipeline | Multiple active deals | This is your only deal |
| Timeline | Quota ahead | Need this to hit quota |
| Competition | Customers pursuing you | You're pursuing them |
| Alternatives | Product fits other segments | Narrow ICP fit |
| Market | Seller's market | Buyer's market |
Strengthening Your BATNA
Before the negotiation:
- Build pipeline — Never negotiate dependent on one deal
- Qualify harder — Walk from bad-fit deals early
- Expand market — More potential customers = more power
- Create demand — Marketing that brings inbound
- Lengthen runway — Financial buffer = patience
During the negotiation:
- Surface alternatives — Mention (don't threaten) other opportunities
- Control pace — Don't show desperation with timeline
- Be willing to pause — "Let me think about that and reconnect"
Assessing Their BATNA
Questions to uncover:
- What will you do if we don't reach agreement?
- What other solutions are you considering?
- How did you handle this before us?
- What's the cost of doing nothing?
Signals of weak buyer BATNA:
- They initiated contact
- Urgent timeline mentioned
- Previous solution failed
- Executive sponsorship pushing
- Already invested time/resources
Signals of strong buyer BATNA:
- Multiple vendors in final round
- Internal build option
- Current solution "good enough"
- Budget uncertainty
- Low urgency language
Good BATNA Examples
Scenario: Negotiating $200K enterprise deal
Strong BATNA position:
"Our pipeline is healthy this quarter. We'd love to work with you,
but we can only do so at terms that work for both of us. If the
timing doesn't work now, we can revisit next quarter."
Internal reality:
- Two other deals at similar stage
- Quota 80% achieved
- Genuine interest in customer's success
Result: Maintain pricing integrity, close at target price
Scenario: Customer asks for 40% discount
Good response (strong BATNA):
"I appreciate you sharing your budget constraints. At that level,
the math doesn't work for us to deliver the implementation quality
you'd expect. We could explore a phased approach, or perhaps
reconnect when budget aligns. What would be most helpful?"
Result: Either creative solution or qualified walk-away
Bad BATNA Examples
Scenario: End of quarter, need one more deal for quota
Weak BATNA revealed:
"We really want to make this work. What would it take to get this
done by Friday?"
Buyer thinks: "They're desperate. I have leverage."
Result: Unnecessary discount, unfavorable terms
Scenario: Startup with limited pipeline
Weak BATNA revealed:
"You're our ideal customer profile. This partnership would be huge
for us."
Buyer thinks: "They need us more than we need them."
Result: Commoditized positioning, price pressure
The Walk-Away Mindset
Internal dialogue:
Before negotiation:
"If this deal doesn't happen at acceptable terms, I will be okay.
I have alternatives. A bad deal is worse than no deal. I want this
but don't need this."
This creates genuine confidence that buyers detect.
Behaviors that signal weak BATNA:
| Behavior | Signal to Buyer |
|---|---|
| Quick concessions | "They're desperate" |
| Excessive follow-up | "They need this more than I do" |
| Apologetic tone | "They don't believe in their value" |
| Timeline panic | "I can use their deadline against them" |
| Over-availability | "They have nothing else going on" |
When to Reveal BATNA
Reveal when:
- You have a genuinely strong alternative
- Buyer doubts your willingness to walk away
- Negotiation is stalled and you can create movement
- You're making a final offer
Never reveal:
- Your BATNA is weak
- To threaten or coerce
- Early in the negotiation
- As a bluff you can't back up
Building BATNA Into Sales Process
| Stage | BATNA Action |
|---|---|
| Prospecting | Generate volume, don't depend on one |
| Qualification | Disqualify fast, protect time |
| Discovery | Assess their alternatives |
| Proposal | Multiple deals in motion |
| Negotiation | Know your walk-away before starting |
| Closing | Willing to walk even at the end |
Anti-Patterns
- Bluffing BATNA — Claiming alternatives you don't have
- Threatening BATNA — "If you don't sign, we're walking"
- Ignoring BATNA — Not building alternatives before negotiating
- Revealing desperation — Showing you have no other options
- End-of-quarter panic — Letting quota pressure destroy leverage
- Single-threaded deals — Only one deal in late stage
title: Negotiation Preparation & Planning impact: CRITICAL tags: preparation, planning, research, strategy
Negotiation Preparation & Planning
Impact: CRITICAL
The negotiation is won or lost before you sit down at the table. Preparation is your competitive advantage.
The Preparation Framework
ICON Model:
- Interests — What does each party really want?
- Criteria — What standards will guide decisions?
- Options — What creative solutions exist?
- No-deal — What happens if we walk away?
Pre-Negotiation Checklist
| Element | Questions to Answer | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Their situation | Budget cycle? Competitive threats? Recent changes? | News, LinkedIn, 10-K |
| Decision process | Who decides? Who influences? Timeline? | Champion intel |
| Past behavior | How do they typically negotiate? Precedents? | Industry contacts |
| Your authority | What can you approve? When escalate? | Internal alignment |
| Walk-away point | At what terms do you leave? | BATNA analysis |
Setting Your Positions
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ │
│ Aspiration (Opening Position) $150,000 │
│ ────────────────────────────────────────── │
│ You anchor here. Ambitious but defensible. │
│ │
│ Target (Realistic Goal) $120,000 │
│ ────────────────────────────────────────── │
│ Where you expect to land. Your true objective. │
│ │
│ Resistance Point $100,000 │
│ ────────────────────────────────────────── │
│ Fight hard here. Major concessions required. │
│ │
│ Walk-Away Point $85,000 │
│ ────────────────────────────────────────── │
│ Below this, no deal is better than this deal. │
│ │
└────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Issue Matrix Planning
Map every negotiable item:
| Issue | Our Priority | Their Priority | Trade Potential |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | High | High | Low (both care) |
| Payment terms | Low | High | HIGH (we trade) |
| Implementation | Medium | Low | Medium |
| Contract length | High | Medium | HIGH (we want) |
| Case study rights | Low | Medium | HIGH (we trade) |
| Support SLA | Medium | High | Medium |
Good Preparation Examples
Scenario: Enterprise software negotiation
Good preparation:
- Researched: CFO mentioned "cost optimization" in earnings call
- Discovered: Incumbent contract expires in 6 weeks
- Mapped: IT has veto power, procurement runs process
- Prepared: 3 pricing structures (monthly, annual, 3-year)
- Documented: Competitor pricing benchmarks
- Aligned: Internal approval for 15% max discount
- BATNA: Two other deals in pipeline at full price
Result: Negotiated from strength with multiple options
Bad Preparation Examples
Scenario: Same enterprise negotiation
Bad preparation:
- Walked in knowing only the contact's name
- No idea of their budget or timeline
- Assumed champion could approve the deal
- Only one pricing option prepared
- Didn't know competitor pricing
- Had to "check with manager" on every concession
Result: Gave unnecessary discounts, extended timeline
Stakeholder Intelligence Gathering
Questions for your champion:
- Who else will be involved in this decision?
- What's the approval process look like?
- What concerns have you heard from others?
- How have similar purchases been decided?
- What would make this a clear "yes" for everyone?
- What's your timeline, and what's driving it?
Questions for yourself:
- What do I know I don't know?
- What assumptions am I making?
- What could derail this deal?
- What's the best outcome for both sides?
Planning Your Negotiation Narrative
The story you'll tell:
1. Acknowledge their world
"Given your growth targets and the pressure on operations..."
2. Connect to their interests
"...you need a solution that scales without scaling costs..."
3. Position your value
"...which is exactly what we've done for [similar company]..."
4. Justify your ask
"...which is why our investment level reflects that outcome."
Time Investment by Deal Size
| Deal Size | Preparation Time | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|
| <$25K | 1-2 hours | Basic research, single decision maker |
| $25K-$100K | 4-8 hours | Stakeholder map, competitive analysis |
| $100K-$500K | 1-2 days | Deep research, multiple scenarios |
| $500K+ | 1 week+ | Executive alignment, legal prep |
Anti-Patterns
- Winging it — "I know this customer, I don't need to prepare"
- Over-preparing tactics — Scripting every response (you'll miss cues)
- Ignoring their BATNA — Not knowing their alternatives
- Assuming alignment — Not confirming internal authority before negotiating
- Single scenario — Only preparing for one outcome
- Data hoarding — Gathering intel but not synthesizing it
title: Handling Discount Requests impact: HIGH tags: pricing, discounts, value, negotiation, margins
Handling Discount Requests
Impact: HIGH
Every discount trains the buyer. How you handle discount requests defines your pricing integrity and future negotiations.
The Discount Request Spectrum
"Can you do better on price?"
│
▼
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ WHAT THEY MIGHT MEAN: │
│ │
│ 1. Testing: "Let's see if they'll fold" │
│ 2. Process: "I have to ask for a discount" │
│ 3. Budget: "I genuinely need to fit budget" │
│ 4. Value: "I don't see why it costs this" │
│ 5. Politics: "I need to show I negotiated" │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Your job: Figure out which before responding.
Diagnostic Questions
Before responding to any discount request:
| Question | What It Reveals |
|---|---|
| "Help me understand what's driving this request" | True motivation |
| "What would you need to see to feel confident in this investment?" | Value gap |
| "Is this a budget constraint or a value question?" | Framing approach |
| "If price weren't a factor, would you move forward?" | True objection |
| "What happens if we can't reach agreement on price?" | Their BATNA |
The Never-Give-Without-Getting Framework
NEVER: "Sure, I can do 15% off"
(You gave, they took, they'll ask again)
ALWAYS: "I can adjust by 15% if we [trade item]"
(Value exchange, mutual commitment)
Trade Items for Discounts
| Your Concession | What You Get in Return |
|---|---|
| 5-10% discount | Annual payment (upfront cash) |
| 10-15% discount | Multi-year commitment |
| 10-15% discount | Reduced scope/tier |
| 5-10% discount | Case study + reference calls |
| 5-10% discount | Longer implementation timeline |
| 10-20% discount | Payment terms (net 60 → net 15) |
| Variable | Logo rights for marketing |
| Variable | Introduction to peer companies |
Good Discount Handling Examples
Scenario: "Can you do 20% off?"
Response 1: The Trade
"I can get to a 20% reduction. Here's how we'd do that:
- Move from monthly to annual billing (saves us cost)
- 3-year commitment instead of 1 (reduces our risk)
- You provide a case study after 6 months (marketing value)
If those work for you, I can justify the discount internally.
Which of those would work on your end?"
Scenario: "Your competitor is 30% cheaper"
Response 2: The Value Reframe
"They may well be. The question is what you're comparing.
We win deals against them regularly at higher prices because
[specific differentiator]. The companies that go with cheaper
solutions often come to us later - and it costs them more
because they have to migrate. What's driving the comparison?"
Scenario: Budget genuinely constrained
Response 3: The Scope Adjustment
"I respect that budget is firm. Let's look at this differently.
At $80K, I can offer our Growth tier which covers [core needs].
Once you're seeing ROI, we can expand to the full scope.
Would that work as a starting point?"
Bad Discount Handling Examples
Scenario: First discount request
Bad response:
"Let me see what I can do. I might be able to get you 10% off."
Why it fails:
- Conceded without understanding why
- Showed you have room (they'll push for more)
- No trade requested
- "Might" shows uncertainty/weakness
Scenario: Repeat discount requests
Bad response:
"I already gave you 15%. I can maybe do 18%."
Why it fails:
- Rewarded asking twice with more discount
- Established pattern: asking = getting
- No trade for additional concession
- Will keep going
The Discount Ladder
If you must discount, diminish each step:
Opening price: $100,000
First concession: - $8,000 (8%)
Second concession: - $4,000 (4%) ← Halving pattern
Third concession: - $1,500 (1.5%)
"Final" concession: - $500 (0.5%)
─────────
Ending price: $86,000
The decreasing pattern signals: "We're approaching the floor"
Response Templates
"That's too expensive"
"Expensive compared to what? I want to understand your
reference point so I can address the right concern."
"I need 30% off"
"Help me understand what's driving that number. Is it a budget
you're working within, or do you not see the value at our price?"
"Competitor X is cheaper"
"What specifically about their offering are you comparing?
I want to make sure we're looking at apples to apples."
"Can you do any better?"
"Better in what way? If it's about the investment level, tell
me more about what you're working with and I'll see what
options we have."
"I can't approve this amount"
"Who can? I'd rather we get the right people in the room than
have you negotiate something you can't commit to."
Protecting Price Integrity
| Principle | Application |
|---|---|
| Same discount requires same trade | Don't give different customers different terms |
| Document trade rationale | "Discount provided in exchange for..." |
| Don't negotiate twice | Signed terms are final |
| Internal alignment | Know your floor before negotiating |
| Precedent awareness | Today's discount is tomorrow's expectation |
When to Accept Lower Price
Valid reasons:
- Strategic logo/reference customer
- Land-and-expand opportunity with clear path
- Genuine budget constraint with high-value fit
- Market entry/early adopter pricing
- Volume commitment justifies margin compression
Invalid reasons:
- Fear of losing the deal
- End of quarter pressure
- They asked nicely
- "We'll make it up on expansion"
- Competitor price matching
Anti-Patterns
- Instant discounting — Discounting before they even ask
- Discount without trade — Giving without getting
- Revealing your floor — "20% is the absolute most I can do"
- Escalating discounts — Rewarding persistence with more off
- Price matching — Racing to bottom with competitors
- Apologizing for price — "I know it's expensive, but..."
- Discount as default — Every deal gets a discount
title: Value-Based Deal Structuring impact: HIGH tags: pricing, value, deal-structure, creative, win-win
Value-Based Deal Structuring
Impact: HIGH
Price is just one variable. Creative deal structuring expands the pie, aligns incentives, and creates agreements neither side could reach with price alone.
The Value Equation
Customer Value = (Benefits Received - Price Paid) × Confidence
Your job:
1. Maximize benefits perceived
2. Justify price relative to benefits
3. Increase confidence in outcomes
When Value Equation is positive, price becomes secondary.
Deal Structure Components
| Component | Options | Trade Value |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Fixed, tiered, usage-based | High |
| Term length | 1-year, multi-year, month-to-month | Medium-High |
| Payment timing | Upfront, monthly, quarterly, milestone | Medium |
| Scope | Full, phased, pilot | Medium |
| Services | Included, a la carte, premium | Medium |
| SLA/guarantees | Standard, premium, custom | Low-Medium |
| Expansion terms | Locked rate, discount on growth | Medium |
| Exit terms | Notice period, cancellation rights | Low-Medium |
Creative Structure Examples
Structure 1: Phased Commitment
Challenge: Buyer wants lower price, you want multi-year
Structure:
Year 1: $80K (20% discount) - prove value
Year 2: $90K (10% discount) - locked if Y1 succeeds
Year 3+: $100K (full price) - committed at Y1 signing
Why it works:
- Buyer gets reduced risk (low Y1 price)
- You get committed pipeline (multi-year)
- Expansion is built-in
Structure 2: Success-Based Pricing
Challenge: Buyer skeptical of ROI claims
Structure:
Base price: $60K (reduced)
Performance bonus: $40K if [metric] achieved in 6 months
Total potential: $100K
Why it works:
- Buyer pays less if value isn't delivered
- You earn more if you deliver
- Aligns incentives, builds trust
Structure 3: Volume Commitment
Challenge: Large enterprise wants deep discount
Structure:
Current need: 500 seats @ $100/seat = $50K
Committed volume: 2,000 seats @ $75/seat = $150K
True-up quarterly at committed rate
Why it works:
- Buyer gets lower per-unit cost
- You get guaranteed volume
- Growth is pre-sold
Value Justification Framework
Connect price to outcomes:
Step 1: Quantify the problem
"You mentioned [problem] is costing you $X/month."
Step 2: Show the delta
"Our solution reduces that by Y%."
Step 3: Calculate value
"That's $Z/year in savings."
Step 4: Position price
"Your investment of $A delivers $Z return."
Step 5: Simple math
"That's a [X:1] ROI. For every dollar invested, you get $X back."
Good Value Structuring Examples
Scenario: Startup with limited budget but high potential
Bad structure:
$100K annual contract (too big for their stage)
Good structure:
"Let's do this: $40K year one for core platform. If you hit
[growth milestone], you're already committed to our Growth tier
at $80K with preferred pricing locked for 3 years. We grow
with you, and you get below-market rates as you scale."
Why it works:
- Accessible entry point
- Built-in expansion
- Customer incentive to grow
- You capture the upside
Scenario: Enterprise buyer wants guarantees
Bad structure:
Discount to win deal (margin erosion)
Good structure:
"Instead of reducing price, let me offer this: standard pricing,
but with a performance guarantee. If you don't see [specific
metric] improvement in 90 days, we'll credit 50% of your first
quarter toward renewal or cancellation. We're that confident."
Why it works:
- Maintains price integrity
- Reduces buyer risk
- Demonstrates confidence
- Rarely invoked if product delivers
Pricing Structures Comparison
| Model | Best For | Risk Distribution |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed price | Clear scope, predictable use | Buyer bears volume risk |
| Per-seat | User-based products | Shared, scales with use |
| Usage-based | Variable consumption | Seller bears adoption risk |
| Outcome-based | ROI-dependent sales | Shared based on success |
| Hybrid | Complex, multi-component | Customized risk sharing |
The "Land and Expand" Structure
Initial deal (Land):
- Smaller scope/team/tier
- Lower price point
- Faster approval
- Prove value quickly
Expansion path (Expand):
- Pre-negotiated rates for growth
- Defined expansion triggers
- Locked pricing tiers
- Built-in success metrics
Example:
"Start with 50 seats at $150/seat ($7,500). At 100+ seats,
rate drops to $125. At 250+, $100. We'll lock these rates
for 3 years from signing."
Handling "Your Price Is Too High"
Response framework:
Step 1: Acknowledge
"I hear you. Let's make sure the investment makes sense."
Step 2: Reframe to value
"Let's look at what you're getting..."
Step 3: Calculate impact
"If this saves [X hours/week] at [$Y/hour], that's [$Z/year]."
Step 4: Position choice
"The question isn't whether $[price] is a lot—it is. The
question is whether the outcome is worth it."
Step 5: Offer structure
"If the upfront investment is the blocker, we could structure
differently. What would make this work for you?"
Win-Win Structure Tests
Check your structure against:
| Test | Question |
|---|---|
| Value delivery | Does this structure incentivize us to deliver? |
| Customer success | Is the customer set up to succeed? |
| Expansion alignment | Do we both benefit from growth? |
| Risk balance | Is risk appropriately shared? |
| Simplicity | Can we explain this in 30 seconds? |
| Sustainability | Would we do this deal again? |
Anti-Patterns
- Race to lowest price — Competing only on price destroys value
- Complex structures — Confusing terms create friction and distrust
- One-sided risk — All risk on one party creates misalignment
- No expansion path — Leaving future value undefined
- Outcome promises without data — Guarantees you can't verify
- Custom everything — Operational nightmare, precedent danger
- Verbal structures — Complex terms not in writing
title: Buyer Psychology & Decision Making impact: CRITICAL tags: psychology, buyer, decision-making, emotions, stakeholders
Buyer Psychology & Decision Making
Impact: CRITICAL
People don't buy logically. They buy emotionally and justify rationally. Understanding psychology is understanding your buyer.
The Decision-Making Hierarchy
What buyers THINK drives decisions:
ROI, features, price, specifications
What ACTUALLY drives decisions:
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Fear of making wrong choice (40%) │
│ Career risk / political safety │
│ │
│ Trust in you / your company (30%) │
│ Relationship, confidence, proof │
│ │
│ Emotional resonance (20%) │
│ Vision, excitement, status │
│ │
│ Rational factors (10%) │
│ Price, features, ROI │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Key Psychological Principles
| Principle | Definition | Negotiation Application |
|---|---|---|
| Loss aversion | Losses feel 2x worse than equivalent gains | Frame around what they'll lose |
| Status quo bias | Prefer current state | Make change feel safe |
| Social proof | Follow others' actions | Use peer references |
| Reciprocity | Feel obligated to return favors | Give value first |
| Scarcity | Want what's limited | Genuine constraints only |
| Authority | Trust experts | Establish credibility |
| Commitment | Stay consistent with prior actions | Get small yeses first |
Understanding Stakeholder Motivations
| Role | Public Goal | Hidden Motivation | Fear |
|---|---|---|---|
| CEO/Exec | Revenue, growth | Legacy, board perception | Looking foolish |
| CFO | Cost savings | Control, predictability | Surprises, overruns |
| IT/Security | Technical fit | Job security, workload | Blame for failures |
| User | Ease of use | Looking competent | Learning curve |
| Procurement | Best price | Process compliance | Audit findings |
| Champion | Solve problem | Career advancement | Being wrong |
Good Psychology Application Examples
Scenario: Buyer concerned about implementation risk
Bad approach:
"Our implementation is straightforward. You have nothing to worry about."
(Dismisses their fear, doesn't address underlying concern)
Good approach:
"Implementation concerns are completely valid - we hear this often.
Let me show you how [similar company] managed their rollout.
They had the same concerns. Here's what they did differently,
and here's what their CIO said about the result."
Psychology at work:
- Validates their concern (emotional safety)
- Social proof (others like them succeeded)
- Authority (CIO testimonial)
Scenario: CFO skeptical of ROI claims
Bad approach:
"Our ROI is 300%. Here are the numbers."
(Sounds like every vendor ever)
Good approach:
"I'd be skeptical too - every vendor claims ROI. Instead of our
projections, let me connect you with [peer company]'s CFO.
They did their own analysis before and after. I'd rather you
hear it from them than from me."
Psychology at work:
- Acknowledges skepticism (builds trust)
- Social proof from peer (not vendor)
- Reduces perceived risk (third party)
Bad Psychology Application Examples
Scenario: Creating urgency
Bad approach:
"This pricing expires Friday. You need to decide now."
(False scarcity, pressure tactics)
Result: Buyer feels manipulated, trust destroyed
Better approach:
"Our implementation team has capacity starting next month.
After that, we're booking into Q3. Wanted you to have that
context for your timeline."
(Real constraint, helpful framing)
Scenario: Handling objection
Bad approach:
"You're wrong about that. Let me explain why..."
(Triggers defensiveness, they'll dig in)
Better approach:
"That's a fair concern - I've heard that from others too.
What I've seen work is... Would that address your situation?"
(Validates, social proof, collaborative)
Reading Buyer Signals
Positive signals:
- Asking implementation questions
- Introducing additional stakeholders
- Sharing internal timeline pressures
- Asking about contract terms
- "What would it take to..."
- Nodding, leaning forward
Negative signals:
- Vague or non-committal language
- Reducing meeting frequency
- Only asking about price
- CC'ing legal/procurement unexpectedly
- "We'll discuss internally"
- Delayed responses
The Trust Equation
Credibility + Reliability + Intimacy
Trust = ─────────────────────────────────────────────
Self-Orientation
Credibility: Do you know your stuff?
Reliability: Do you do what you say?
Intimacy: Can I share concerns with you?
Self-Orientation: Are you focused on me or your commission?
Managing Stakeholder Emotions
| Emotion | Signs | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Fear | Excessive questions, delays | Reduce risk, provide proof |
| Frustration | Short responses, edge in voice | Acknowledge, slow down |
| Excitement | Fast pace, future casting | Channel into action |
| Skepticism | Challenging data, crossing arms | Third-party validation |
| Confusion | Repeated questions, pauses | Simplify, check understanding |
Building Psychological Safety
Create an environment where buyers can:
- Ask "dumb" questions without judgment
- Express concerns without feeling sold to
- Change their mind without losing face
- Involve others without your frustration
- Take time without pressure tactics
Phrases that build safety:
- "That's a great question - I should have explained that better"
- "It's totally reasonable to want to think this through"
- "What concerns would you want addressed before moving forward?"
- "If this isn't the right fit, I'd rather we figure that out now"
Anti-Patterns
- Manipulation tactics — False scarcity, fake deadlines, fear tactics
- Dismissing emotions — "You shouldn't worry about that"
- Over-logic — Burying fears in data instead of addressing them
- Projection — Assuming they think like you
- Ignoring politics — Not understanding internal dynamics
- Rushing trust — Expecting openness before earning it
title: Anchoring & Framing Techniques impact: HIGH tags: tactics, anchoring, framing, psychology, positioning
Anchoring & Framing Techniques
Impact: HIGH
The first number spoken shapes the entire negotiation. Anchor strategically, frame deliberately, and control the narrative.
The Science of Anchoring
Anchoring Effect:
First number mentioned becomes a reference point.
All subsequent numbers are evaluated relative to it.
Even RANDOM anchors influence negotiations.
Strategic anchors influence them dramatically.
Anchor Positioning Strategy
| Your Position | Anchor Strategy |
|---|---|
| First mover | Anchor high, backed by rationale |
| Responder | Re-anchor or deflect before counteroffering |
| Unknown value | Gather info first, then anchor |
Good Anchoring Examples
Scenario: Pricing a $100K software deal
Strong anchor approach:
"Based on the scope we discussed, similar implementations have
ranged from $180,000 to $220,000. Given your specific needs and
timeline, I'd recommend our Professional tier at $150,000."
Breakdown:
- Range anchor ($180K-$220K) sets high expectation
- Social proof (similar implementations)
- Your number ($150K) feels reasonable by comparison
- Leaves room for negotiation while protecting value
Scenario: Enterprise deal with unknown budget
Information-gathering approach:
"Before we discuss investment levels, help me understand - what
have you allocated for this initiative? I want to make sure we're
exploring options that fit your planning."
Then anchor:
"Thanks for sharing. Companies investing at that level typically
see results from our Growth tier, which starts at [higher than
their number]. Here's how we could potentially bridge the gap..."
Bad Anchoring Examples
Scenario: Buyer asks for price first
Weak response:
"Our pricing starts at $50,000."
(Anchored low, nowhere to go but down)
Better response:
"Pricing depends on scope, but our enterprise implementations
typically range from $100,000 to $250,000. Let's discuss your
needs to see where you'd fit."
(Anchored high with range, room to adjust)
Scenario: Responding to low anchor
Weak response:
"Well, $30,000 is below our cost, but we could maybe do $45,000?"
(Accepted their anchor, negotiated against yourself)
Better response:
"I understand budget constraints. To set expectations, companies
with your requirements invest between $80,000 and $120,000 with us.
Let's talk about what's driving your number and see if there's a
path forward."
(Re-anchored, seeking to understand)
Framing Techniques
How you say it matters as much as what you say:
| Frame Type | Example | Psychology |
|---|---|---|
| Loss frame | "Without this, you'll continue losing $50K/month" | Loss aversion |
| Gain frame | "This will generate $50K/month in savings" | Positive motivation |
| Exclusive | "This pricing is for design partners only" | Scarcity, status |
| Investment | "Your investment of $100K" vs "The cost is $100K" | Ownership mindset |
| Per-unit | "$8/user/month" vs "$96K annual" | Digestible numbers |
Framing in Practice
Scenario: Presenting price
Cost framing (weak):
"The annual cost is $120,000."
Investment framing (strong):
"Your annual investment of $120,000 - which breaks down to
roughly $10,000 per month - protects $2M in revenue risk.
That's about 6% of the value you're protecting."
ROI framing (strongest):
"For every dollar you invest, you're protecting $17 in revenue.
Companies typically see payback within 3 months."
Scenario: Discount request response
Weak frame:
"I can give you 15% off."
(You gave, they took)
Strong frame:
"I can restructure this to reduce your investment by 15% if we
move to annual payment and a 2-year commitment. That reduces
our risk, which lets us pass savings to you."
(Value exchange, mutual benefit)
Counter-Anchoring Strategies
When they anchor first:
-
Acknowledge, don't accept "I hear you. Let me share some context before we discuss numbers."
-
Re-anchor with rationale "Based on market rates and the value delivered, similar solutions range from X to Y."
-
Question their anchor "Help me understand how you arrived at that number. What's it based on?"
-
Bracket with range "That's quite a bit below where we typically engage. Our range for this scope is X to Y."
Price Presentation Tactics
| Tactic | How It Works | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Contrast pricing | Show expensive option first | Enterprise ($300K), Growth ($150K), Starter ($75K) |
| Decoy pricing | Make target option look best | Growth ($150K) vs Growth+ ($145K with fewer features) |
| Bundle pricing | Combine to obscure line items | "Complete solution: $200K" vs itemized |
| Unbundle pricing | Show components to justify total | "Platform ($100K) + Integration ($50K) + Training ($20K)" |
Anchoring Power Dynamics
High anchor works when:
- You have strong BATNA
- Product is differentiated
- Buyer has limited alternatives
- Value is well-established
Low anchor works when:
- You want to close fast
- Land-and-expand strategy
- Building reference customers
- Volume/scale opportunity
The "That's Expensive" Response
Buyer: "That's expensive."
Bad response:
"Where do we need to be?" (Negotiating against yourself)
Good responses:
1. Compared to what?
"Expensive compared to what? I want to understand your reference point."
2. Value probe
"What would make it worth that investment to you?"
3. Reframe
"It's a significant investment. The question is whether the
outcome is worth it. Let's talk about what success looks like."
4. Acknowledge and explore
"It's definitely an investment. Companies typically find the
cost of not solving this is 3-4x higher. What's it costing
you today?"
Anti-Patterns
- Anchoring without rationale — Numbers without justification feel arbitrary
- Accepting their anchor — Starting from their number instead of yours
- Revealing your floor — "Our absolute minimum is..."
- Price before value — Discussing investment before establishing worth
- Single price point — Not using range or tiered options
- Apologetic pricing — "I know it's a lot, but..."
title: Concession Strategy & Trading impact: HIGH tags: tactics, concessions, trading, value, negotiation
Concession Strategy & Trading
Impact: HIGH
Every concession sends a signal. Strategic concessions build momentum toward agreement. Random concessions train buyers to ask for more.
The Golden Rule of Concessions
NEVER give without getting.
Bad: "I'll give you 10% off."
Good: "I'll give you 10% off if you sign by Friday."
The trade creates:
- Reciprocity (they feel obligated)
- Value perception (if free, it's worthless)
- Momentum (mutual movement)
- Signal (you're at your limit)
Concession Value Matrix
Know what to trade:
| Your Concession | Cost to You | Value to Them | Trade Grade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case study rights | Low | Low | C (use as sweetener) |
| Extended payment terms | Medium | High | A (great trade) |
| Additional training | Low | Medium | B (easy value add) |
| 5% discount | High | Medium | C (protect this) |
| Multi-year pricing lock | Medium | High | A (get commitment) |
| Free implementation | High | High | B (trade for multi-year) |
| Dedicated CSM | Medium | Medium | B (good for expansion) |
| SLA upgrade | Low | Medium | A (costs little) |
| Contract flexibility | Low | High | A (great trade) |
Concession Patterns
The Diminishing Pattern:
Each concession should be smaller than the last.
Concession 1: $10,000 (large, shows goodwill)
Concession 2: $5,000 (50% of first)
Concession 3: $2,000 (smaller still)
Concession 4: $500 (tiny, signaling floor)
Final offer: $250 (token gesture)
Message: "We're running out of room"
The Reluctant Pattern:
Take time before each concession.
"Let me think about that..."
[Pause]
"This is difficult, but here's what I can do..."
Why: Easy concessions signal more room exists
The Package Pattern:
Trade multiple items at once.
"Here's what I can do as a package:
- 10% discount
- 60-day payment terms
- Premium support tier
In exchange for:
- 3-year commitment
- Annual upfront payment
- Reference call participation
This only works as a complete package."
Why: Prevents cherry-picking
Good Concession Examples
Scenario: They want 15% off
Bad approach:
"Let me check... okay, I can do 15%."
(Instant, free, signals more room)
Good approach:
"15% is a significant ask. Let me be straight with you -
I can get there, but here's what would make that work on
our end: annual payment instead of monthly, and a 2-year
minimum commitment. That helps me justify it internally.
Would those work for you?"
(Traded, reluctant, explained why)
Scenario: They want faster implementation
Bad approach:
"Sure, we can expedite that."
(Gave away value, set expectation)
Good approach:
"Standard implementation is 8 weeks, which lets us do it
right. We can accelerate to 4 weeks—we'd bring in additional
resources. There's a $15K expedite fee for that. Given your
timeline, would that make sense?"
(Value for value, or scope their urgency)
Bad Concession Examples
Scenario: Sequential concessions
Buyer: "Can you do better on price?"
You: "I can do 5% off."
Buyer: "That's not enough."
You: "Okay, 10%."
Buyer: "Still need more."
You: "Fine, 15%."
What happened:
- You negotiated against yourself
- They learned asking = getting
- You showed no limit exists
- They'll push for 20%
Scenario: Unreciprocated concession
You: "To help move this forward, I'll include premium support
at no charge and extend your payment terms to net-60."
Buyer: "Great, thanks. Now about that discount..."
What happened:
- You gave two concessions unprompted
- Got nothing in return
- Set precedent that asking isn't required
- Still facing original request
The Concession Conversation
Structure for any trade:
1. Acknowledge their request
"I hear you. Price flexibility is important."
2. Express difficulty (genuinely)
"That's a significant ask for us."
3. Propose a trade
"Here's what I can do: [your concession] if [their trade]."
4. Explain the why
"That works because [mutual benefit]."
5. Confirm the package
"Does that work as a complete package?"
What to Never Concede
| Never Trade | Why |
|---|---|
| Unlimited liability | Legal nightmare |
| Custom development (free) | Scope creep, expectation setting |
| Price without trade | Trains bad behavior |
| "Most Favored Nation" | Constrains future deals |
| Perpetual license at subscription price | Destroys model |
| Commitments you can't keep | Trust destruction |
Managing Concession Pressure
When they push hard:
"You've got to do better than that."
Response options:
1. The walk-back
"I understand the pressure. I've already moved significantly.
If this doesn't work, we may need to look at different scope."
2. The why
"Help me understand what's driving this. Is it budget, or
do you not see the value at this level?"
3. The swap
"I don't have more room on price, but I could [alternative
trade]. Would that help?"
4. The pause
"Let me sit with this. I want to see if there's a creative
solution, but I need to think it through."
The Final Concession
Make your last concession count:
"I want to get this done. Here's my absolute best:
[final offer]. This is everything I have authority for.
I can't go back to the well again. If this works, we're
partners. If not, I understand, and maybe timing isn't right."
Why it works:
- Clear finality
- Personal commitment
- No door for more
- Graceful exit if needed
Tracking Concessions
Keep a running log:
| Item | Original | Concession | Trade Received |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $100K | $92K (-8%) | 2-year term |
| Payment | Net-30 | Net-45 | Upfront annual |
| Support | Standard | Premium | Case study |
| Training | 5 seats | 10 seats | Reference calls |
Use the log to:
- Show total concession value
- Prevent additional asks
- Document what was traded
- Inform future negotiations
Anti-Patterns
- Conceding without trade — Free concessions have no perceived value
- Fast concessions — Speed signals more room
- Large jumps — Big moves signal you were inflated
- Reactive conceding — Conceding every time they push
- Unlimited concessions — No clear bottom
- Verbal-only concessions — Not documenting trades
- Conceding on principle issues — Trading on things that matter