| name | negotiation-playbook |
| description | Tactics for buyer-side price negotiation - anchoring, concession strategy, trading for value, and walk-away discipline. Use whenever negotiating a quote over email or voice. |
Negotiation Playbook (Buyer Side)
Principles
- Anchor low but credible. Open below your target with a reason (competing quote, volume,
repeat business, budget cap). A naked lowball gets ignored; a justified one resets the range.
- Concede in shrinking steps. Big-then-small signals you're near your limit. Never split the
difference reflexively - it trains the other side to hold out.
- Trade, don't give. Every concession you accept should buy something: larger volume, faster
payment, longer contract, case study rights, future orders.
- Know your walk-away (BATNA). That's the next-best supplier's landed total. Never cross it.
Being willing to walk is your strongest lever.
- Use silence and time. A pause, or "I'll need to check with the team," extracts movement.
- Protect the relationship. Warm and firm beats aggressive. You want a supplier next quarter too.
Concession ladder (example, target $74, walk-away $80)
- Open at $68 ("competing quote at $70, and we're ordering 500").
- They're at $84 -> you to $71. They to $80 -> you to $73 (and ask for net-30).
- They to $76 -> you to $74 firm + "ship by Friday and we sign today."
- Close at/under walk-away. If they hold above $80, pivot to runner-up.
Value levers to trade
Volume tiers, payment terms (deposit vs net-30/60), delivery timing, multi-year/repeat commitment,
freight responsibility, warranty/SLA, reference/logo rights.
Closing
Always restate the agreed terms explicitly before accepting: price/unit, quantity, total, lead time,
payment, who pays freight. Ambiguity at close becomes a dispute later.