Every day, you negotiate more than you think.
With a supplier on payment terms. With a key hire on salary and stock options. With a client on scope creep. With an investor on valuation.
If you’re an entrepreneur, negotiation isn’t a “nice-to-have soft skill”. It’s one of the few skills that directly impacts your revenue, your margins and your runway.
The problem: most founders still treat negotiation as an improvised conversation, not a process.
In this article, we’ll go through the essential negotiation skills you need to close better deals, more often, without leaving money on the table or burning relationships.
Why negotiation should be on your critical skills list
Let’s be blunt: you can have a great product and still run out of cash because you negotiated badly.
Think about the leverage points in your business:
All of that is negotiation.
Good negotiators don’t necessarily “win” every time. They consistently get:
Let’s break down the skills you actually need to get there.
Skill 1: Preparing like a professional, not a tourist
The biggest mistake I see with founders? They “wing it”. They read two blog posts on tactics and walk into a negotiation underprepared.
Strong negotiation starts long before you enter the room (or the Zoom). Preparation is where you create 80% of your advantage.
At a minimum, you should prepare these elements.
1. Your objectives (plural, not just price)
Negotiations derails when you only chase “the number” and forget the rest of the deal structure.
2. Your BATNA (Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement)
Your BATNA is your real source of power. It answers one question: “What do I do if this deal doesn’t happen?”
Example: a SaaS startup negotiating with a potential enterprise client. If this client represents 60% of their projected revenue and they have no other deals in the pipeline, their BATNA is weak. The client will feel it.
On the other hand, if they already have three similar clients in late-stage talks, they can walk away from unreasonable demands. That alone changes the tone of the negotiation.
3. Their constraints and motivations
Too many entrepreneurs only know what they want; they have no idea what the other side actually needs.
Before the negotiation, map out:
Good negotiators don’t “crush” the other side. They design deals that solve the other person’s problem while still serving their own interests.
Skill 2: Framing the conversation and using anchors
In every negotiation, someone frames the discussion and sets the reference points. If it’s not you, it’s them.
Anchoring: why the first number matters
The first credible number mentioned in a negotiation acts as an anchor. Even experienced people are influenced by it, whether they like it or not.
Example:
Now imagine you had said: “For similar clients, projects range between £4,500 and £6,000 per month, depending on scope.” The entire discussion would now revolve around a higher frame.
Practical anchoring rules for entrepreneurs
Weak anchor: “We charge around £5,000 because that’s what we think is fair.”
Strong anchor: “Our typical clients see between £50,000–£120,000 in additional annual revenue. Our fee is usually in the £5,000–£7,000 range per month, depending on how much of the funnel we manage for you.”
Skill 3: Asking better questions and actually listening
Negotiation isn’t a pitch contest. It’s a discovery process.
If you talk 80% of the time, you’re not negotiating. You’re guessing.
High-impact question types
Then, you shut up and listen. Not passively. Actively.
Active listening in practice
This does two things:
Skill 4: Creating value instead of trading discounts
Many entrepreneurs confuse “being flexible” with “giving discounts”. That’s not negotiation; that’s margin destruction.
The goal in a negotiation is not just to split the pie. It’s to make the pie bigger, then decide how to share it.
Think in variables, not just price
List all the variables you can move during a negotiation:
Example: a B2B startup selling a subscription at £1,000/month.
Client: “We need a discount to sign.”
Bad reaction: “Okay, we can do it at £800.” (You just lost 20% margin for no strategic gain.)
Stronger reaction:
“If budget is the constraint, we have a few levers. We can:
Out of these, which better fits your priorities?”
You are protecting your price while still creating options that work for both sides.
Skill 5: Managing emotions – yours and theirs
Entrepreneurs often negotiate under pressure: low cash balance, investor deadlines, key client at risk. Emotions enter the room with you.
An unregulated ego can easily destroy a good deal.
Common emotional traps
Simple tools to stay in control
Emotionally mature negotiators are calm, firm, and respectful. That’s a competitive advantage, especially when the other side is volatile.
Skill 6: Dealing with power imbalances (big client, big investor, big supplier)
At some point, you’ll negotiate with someone who seems to have all the power: a major corporate, a top-tier VC, a dominant supplier.
The risk: you behave like a beggar, not a business partner.
How to rebalance when you’re the “small one”
Example: a startup asked to sign a distribution deal with a global player. The contract included a clause giving the distributor full control over pricing and the right to terminate with 30 days’ notice.
On paper, the brand association was tempting. In reality, the startup would have been trapped in a dependent position with no pricing power.
Good negotiators know when a “big opportunity” is too expensive in strategic terms, even if the revenue looks attractive.
Skill 7: Closing the deal and locking the details
Many negotiations fail not on substance, but on execution. Everyone “agreed in principle”, then the contract phase becomes a mess.
Recap clearly, in writing
At the end of a positive meeting, don’t just say “Sounds good”. You systematically recap:
A simple follow-up email like this avoids 80% of “I thought we had agreed on…” later:
“As discussed today, here is my understanding of where we landed:
Let me know if I missed or misrepresented anything.”
Distinguish between “agreement” and “signature”
Entrepreneurs often celebrate too early. Until the contract is signed (or the PO is sent), you do not have a deal.
Make it easy to move from “yes” to “signed”:
Skill 8: Learning from every negotiation
Negotiation is not a one-time talent. It’s a skill you refine with every deal, if you treat it as such.
After-action review: 10-minute habit
After each significant negotiation (won or lost), ask yourself:
Capture this in a simple document you revisit regularly. Over 6–12 months, you’ll see patterns in your behaviour and in your market.
Build your own negotiation playbook
Instead of reinventing the wheel each time, formalise:
This doesn’t make you rigid. It gives you a solid base from which you can adapt with intention, not improvisation.
Common mistakes entrepreneurs must avoid
To finish, let’s be explicit about a few traps that quietly destroy value in deals.
Turning negotiation into a competitive advantage
You don’t need to become a manipulative “closer”. You need to become a clear, prepared, emotionally stable business partner who knows how to design deals that work.
If you apply just a few of the principles above in your next negotiation:
…you will already be ahead of 80% of founders out there.
In a market where capital is more expensive, clients are more demanding and margins are under pressure, being “good enough” at negotiation is no longer sufficient.
Treat it like any other core business skill: study it, practice it deliberately, and build your own playbook. The compounding effect on your deals, your cash and your growth will surprise you.














