Concessions

Concessions

Making Strategic Trade-Offs to Achieve Mutually Beneficial Agreements

Lesson Overview

Concessions are an inevitable part of negotiation—but how they are made determines whether value is protected or eroded.

From a sales management perspective, concessions are not signs of weakness.

They are strategic tools that, when used deliberately, move negotiations forward while preserving long-term value.

This lesson explores how leaders and sellers can:

  • Make concessions intentionally rather than reactively

  • Protect margin and credibility

  • Use trade-offs to maintain balance

  • Create consistent concession behavior across the sales organization

The goal is not to avoid concessions, but to control them.

Reframing Concessions (Management Lens)

What Concessions Are Not

  • Automatic discounts

  • Emotional responses to pressure

  • Last-minute panic moves

What Concessions Are

  • Planned trade-offs

  • Signals of flexibility

  • Tools to advance agreement

From a leadership standpoint:

Unplanned concessions are symptoms of weak negotiation discipline.

Why Concessions Matter at Scale

Inconsistent concession behavior leads to:

  • Margin erosion

  • Customer conditioning

  • Internal confusion

Sales leaders focus on concessions because:

  • Small discounts compound across deals

  • Behavior spreads quickly within teams

  • Customers learn what is negotiable

Concession strategy must be intentional and enforced.

The Principle of “Trade, Don’t Give”

One of the most important negotiation principles is:

Never give a concession without receiving something in return.

Effective trade-offs include:

  • Price in exchange for volume

  • Flexibility in exchange for commitment

  • Speed in exchange for certainty

This preserves balance and professionalism.

Timing of Concessions

When concessions are made matters as much as what is given.

Best practices include:

  • Delaying concessions until value is established

  • Avoiding early or automatic discounts

  • Using concessions to unblock stalled negotiations

Premature concessions weaken perceived value.

Structuring Concessions Strategically

High-performing teams:

  • Prepare concession ranges in advance

  • Know what is easy vs. costly to give

  • Understand internal approval thresholds

From a management lens:

Preparation turns concessions into strategy, not reaction.

Understanding the Cost of Concessions

Not all concessions cost the same.

Examples:

  • Price reductions (high cost, visible)

  • Payment terms (medium cost, situational)

  • Scope adjustments (variable cost)

Sales leaders coach teams to:

  • Choose low-cost, high-value concessions where possible

  • Avoid giving away high-cost items unnecessarily

Concessions and Customer Perception

How concessions are framed matters.

Effective framing:

  • Positions concessions as thoughtful exceptions

  • Reinforces the value of what is given

  • Avoids normalizing discounts

Poor framing teaches customers to expect more.

Managing Customer Demands for Concessions

Customers often push for concessions as a default behavior.

Effective responses:

  • Re-anchor to value

  • Clarify what problem the concession solves

  • Introduce trade-offs

This keeps negotiations collaborative, not adversarial.

Concessions and BATNA

BATNA shapes concession behavior.

When BATNA is clear:

  • Pressure is reduced

  • Concessions are measured

  • Walking away becomes an option

Sales leaders reinforce:

Strong BATNAs lead to disciplined concessions.

Coaching Concession Behavior Across the Team

Consistency is critical.

Sales managers should:

  • Review concession patterns

  • Coach on alternatives

  • Reinforce approval processes

Post-deal reviews should examine:

  • What was conceded

  • Why

  • Whether it was necessary

Ethical and Long-Term Considerations

Concessions should support long-term relationships.

Ethical concession strategies:

  • Are transparent

  • Deliver real value

  • Avoid misleading tactics

Short-term wins achieved through excessive concessions often create long-term problems.

Common Concession Mistakes

  • Conceding too early

  • Giving without trading

  • Undermining the original anchor

  • Making concessions to close quickly

Most concession errors stem from urgency without clarity.

Concessions as a Strategic Capability

Organizations that manage concessions well:

  • Protect margins

  • Improve negotiation confidence

  • Increase deal quality

  • Build customer trust

Concessions, when used correctly, strengthen—not weaken—relationships.

Key Takeaways (Sales Management Lens)

  • Concessions should be planned, not reactive

  • Trade-offs preserve value and balance

  • Timing and framing influence perception

  • BATNA supports disciplined concession behavior

  • Leaders enforce consistency through coaching and review

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