Offering an unprompted discount is described as the "most pathetic thing in sales." It immediately transforms you from a trusted advisor into a transactional salesperson, erodes all built-up trust, and signals that your initial price was inflated.
Frame every negotiation around four core business drivers. Offer discounts not as concessions, but as payments for the customer giving you something valuable: more volume, faster cash payments, a longer contract commitment, or a predictable closing date. This shifts the conversation from haggling to a structured, collaborative process.
Instead of offering a fake, expiring discount to create urgency, frame it as a payment for predictability. Tell the prospect you will pay them a discount in exchange for mutually aligning on a specific close date, which helps you forecast accurately. This turns a sales tactic into a valuable business exchange.
Fixating on closing a deal triggers negativity bias and creates a sense of desperation that prospects can detect. To counteract this, salespeople should shift their primary objective from 'How do I close this?' to 'How do I help this person?'. This simple reframe leads to better questions, stronger rapport, and more natural closes.
Don't let your personal perception of what's 'expensive' limit your earning potential. Set your price high based on the value you provide. It is easy to lower a price that gets no buyers, but impossible to know if you could have charged more if you start too low. Never say no for the customer.
Discussing pricing early doesn't mean you're in the proposal stage. True proposal and negotiation begins only after you have secured explicit agreement on the problem, the solution, and from the key decision-maker. At this point, the deal would close if it were free; price is the only remaining variable.
When starting out, don't just charge a low fee. Instead, state your full market-rate price and offer a significant discount (e.g., 50%) as an introductory offer. This establishes your true value from the beginning while still winning the client. Then, systematically raise your price every few clients.
Instead of forcing a sale, elite salespeople act as advisors by proactively telling smaller companies when a solution is a poor financial fit. This builds long-term trust and prevents you from becoming the highest, most scrutinized line item on their P&L.
Younger generations, accustomed to wage transparency, reject the traditional sales 'game' of delaying price discussions. Salespeople must adapt by addressing cost earlier and more directly to build trust, rather than waiting for later stages.
Instead of hiding price until the end of the sales cycle, be transparent from the start. Acknowledge if your solution is at the high end of the market and provide a realistic price range based on their environment. This allows you to quickly qualify out buyers with misaligned budgets, saving your most valuable asset: time.
When increasing prices, the communication strategy should be direct and confident. If you truly believe the product delivers value commensurate with the new price, there's no need to hide the change. Evasive language or trying to 'shy away' suggests you doubt your own product's worth.