| name | negotiation-email |
| description | Use when a company wants to negotiate corporate flight discounts with airlines. Triggers on corporate rate, bulk discount, airline negotiation, volume pricing, company travel budget. |
Negotiation Email - Email Thương Lượng Giá
Purpose
Companies flying 100+ trips per year have real negotiating power but rarely use it. This skill crafts professional emails that airlines' sales teams take seriously - with market evidence, volume data, and strategic urgency.
Input Required
company_name from corporate profile
annual_flight_volume (number of flights/year)
annual_spend (total spend in USD)
target_airline (who to negotiate with)
primary_routes (most frequent routes)
competitor_pricing (optional - prices from other airlines)
loyalty_status (current tier with this airline, if any)
Eligibility Check
Before generating, verify the company has negotiating leverage:
| Factor | Minimum for Leverage | Strong Position |
|---|
| Annual flights | 50+ | 200+ |
| Annual spend | $50,000+ | $200,000+ |
| Route concentration | 3+ routes with same airline | 5+ routes |
| Loyalty status | Silver tier | Gold/Platinum |
If below minimum: inform user that individual negotiation is unlikely to succeed. Suggest alternatives (credit card deals, group booking, corporate travel agency).
Execution Steps
Step 1: Identify Recipient
| Recipient | When to Use | Tone |
|---|
| Sales Manager / Corporate Sales | Volume > 100 flights/year | Professional, data-driven |
| Reservations Team Lead | Volume 50-100 | Polite, relationship-focused |
| Key Account Manager | Existing relationship | Collaborative, renewal-style |
Provide:
- Suggested department: "Corporate Sales" or "Key Accounts"
- Generic email format: corporatesales@airline.com
- LinkedIn approach: Search "[Airline] Corporate Sales Manager [Country]"
Step 2: Build Email Structure
Subject Line (create curiosity without revealing max budget):
- "[Company] - [Volume] Annual Flights - Partnership Inquiry"
- "Corporate Rate Discussion - [City Pair] Route Focus"
- NOT: "Discount Request" (too weak)
Opening (2 sentences):
- Who you are + company profile (1 line)
- Specific volume metric that demonstrates value
Body (3 paragraphs):
-
Value proposition: What the airline gets (guaranteed volume, route commitment, advance booking, off-peak flexibility)
-
Market evidence: Current alternatives you're evaluating
- Reference competitor pricing without naming specific amounts
- Mention that you're "evaluating proposals from carriers on [route]"
- NEVER reveal your maximum acceptable price
-
Specific ask: Clear, reasonable request
- "10-15% reduction on published fares for [route]"
- Volume commitment in exchange
- No long-term contract requirement (initially)
Closing:
- Deadline: "We're finalizing our Q3 travel arrangements by [date 2-3 weeks out]"
- Next step: "I'd welcome a brief call to discuss potential terms"
- CC suggestion: Your Finance Director or CEO (shows authority)
Step 3: Generate Email
Subject: [Company Name] - [Volume] Annual Business Flights - Partnership Discussion
Dear [Corporate Sales Team / Mr./Ms. Last Name],
I'm [Name], [Title] at [Company Name]. We're currently evaluating our airline
partnerships for [Year], with approximately [Volume] flights annually, primarily
on [Route 1] and [Route 2].
Our team has been loyal [Airline] customers, and [X]% of our 2025 bookings were
with your airline. As we plan our [Year] travel budget of approximately $[Range,
not exact], we're reviewing proposals from several carriers to ensure competitive
rates for our team.
We're seeking a [10-15]% improvement on published Economy/Business fares for our
primary routes, in exchange for a commitment of [X flights/month] over the next
12 months. We value the [specific benefit: direct routes, schedule reliability,
lounge access] your airline provides and would prefer to consolidate our bookings
with a single carrier.
Could we schedule a brief call before [date, 2-3 weeks out] to discuss potential
terms? We're finalizing our travel arrangements for [next quarter] and want to
ensure we make the right partnership choice.
Best regards,
[Name]
[Title], [Company]
[Phone] | [Email]
CC: [Finance Director / Travel Manager]
Step 4: Follow-Up Strategy
If no response within 5 business days:
Subject: Re: [Original Subject] - Following up
Dear [Name],
Following up on my email from [date]. We're in the final stages of selecting
our airline partner for [Year] and would value the opportunity to discuss
terms with [Airline].
Our decision timeline is [date]. I'd appreciate even a brief response on
whether corporate rates are available for our volume.
Best regards,
[Name]
Step 5: Talking Points (if phone follow-up)
Prepare user with key points if airline calls back:
- Lead with volume, not price complaints
- Mention competitor by category ("several LCC options") not by name
- Be willing to commit to minimum 60% share-of-wallet
- Ask about soft benefits too: lounge access, priority boarding, dedicated booking line
- Don't accept first offer - ask "Is that the best you can do for this volume?"
Output Package
- Email draft (ready to copy-paste)
- CC suggestion with rationale
- Timing recommendation (best day/time to send)
- Follow-up email draft
- Phone talking points (if call happens)
- Counter-offer strategy (if airline's first response is weak)
Important Notes
- NEVER include the company's maximum acceptable rate in the email
- NEVER name specific competitor prices (say "competitive alternatives exist")
- Emails work best when sent Tuesday-Thursday, 9-11 AM recipient's timezone
- Some airlines require minimum 12-month commitment for corporate rates
- Corporate rates usually apply to specific routes, not system-wide