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In any real sales situation, the first number presented is just a starting point. Inspired by Richard Branson, serial entrepreneur Brian Will advises that your first counteroffer should be aggressive. By treating every initial price as something to be rejected, you transform a simple transaction into a genuine negotiation.

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When a prospect says your price is too high, reframe the conversation away from cost. Ask them, 'Independent of price, are we the vendor of choice?' This forces them to recommit to you as the best solution or admit they're still evaluating, strengthening your negotiation leverage.

When a prospect objects that your price range is too high, immediately pivot by asking what number they have discussed internally. This tactic leverages transparency—since you've shared your number, it's reasonable for them to share theirs—and quickly uncovers their real budget expectations.

Many people avoid negotiation due to confrontation aversion. This creates a market for services that simply ask for a better deal. A single question, such as asking a competitor to beat an existing offer, can save thousands. This principle is broadly applicable across business and personal finance.

Contrary to classic advice, literary agent Suzanne Gluck avoids making the first offer. She builds a compelling case, letting the other party's enthusiasm potentially lead them to a number higher than she would have proposed. If their offer is too low, she simply dismisses it and resets the baseline.

Zayo CEO Dan Caruso would sometimes counter a seller's offer with a lower number than his previous bid. This unorthodox move was designed to create emotional distress, reframe control, and break a negotiation stalemate.

Set your price not by what you feel you're worth, but by what the market will bear. Continuously increase your price until you receive consistent rejections. That point of friction is your current market value. Treat the "no" as essential data, not a personal offense, to find your price ceiling.

You don't need a confrontational negotiation to get more. A simple, polite question like, "what's the chance there could be a little more?" is often enough to see a significant, around 20%, increase in your initial offer.

Instead of lowballing, Bending Spoons makes a very fair, near-final offer immediately. This tactic builds a reputation for seriousness, similar to Warren Buffett's approach. It avoids lengthy back-and-forth and signals that they are not a buyer that can be "pushed around," creating an efficient and powerful deal-making process.

Shift adversarial negotiations to collaborative problem-solving by transparently explaining your pricing model is based on four levers: volume, timing of cash, length of commitment, and timing of the deal. When a customer asks for a concession, you can explore which of the other levers they can adjust, making it a mutual exchange of value rather than a zero-sum haggle.

Instead of hiding information, Todd Capone's "transparent negotiation" advises telling buyers the four levers they can pull for a better price: contract term, volume, timing of cash, and predictability (signing by a certain date). This builds trust and turns negotiation into a collaborative process.

Treat Every Initial Price as an Invitation to Negotiate, Starting With 'No' | RiffOn