This year the room is harder. Prices have to rise again, the easy single-digit asks are gone, and the retailer is more dug in than last year. The teams that come back in autumn ready are the ones who shaped the table now. Everyone else walks in on hope.
Every negotiation has two phases. How you play at the table, and how you shape the table before you sit down.
The belief is that autumn is the beginning: teams come back, start planning, build their case. By then the table is already set, and usually not in your favor. The shaping phase starts now, in the weeks before the break, not after it.
Shape the table
Objectives set, stakeholders mapped, guardrails built, the buyer already being conditioned. This is the work that decides the outcome.
Play the table
Tactical planning and proposals. A team that did phase one walks straight into this. Everyone else is still scrambling to catch up.
Run the checklist below for your most important upcoming negotiations. If you can tick every box, you are the prepared side of the table. Every box you cannot tick is where you are exposed, and what to do about it.
Objectives
Do you know what you are actually negotiating for, before the buyer tells you what you will settle for?
We have agreed, written objectives for each negotiation, not just a price target.
If you can't tick thisA price target is not an objective. Without a full set, your team improvises priorities live and trades the wrong things away.
Define objectives across price, terms, volume, and conditions now, while you still have room to decide what each is worth.
We have set and tested our walk-away point and know what triggers it.
If you can't tick thisAn untested walk-away collapses the moment it is challenged. If you find it under pressure, you find it too late.
Set the walk-away before the room, and pressure-test it against the buyer’s most likely push.
We have a recommended objective set for next year, even if leadership has not handed one down.
If you can't tick thisIf you are waiting for direction from above, you will start late. The organization rarely moves before you force it.
Build the recommendation bottom-up from your account data and bring it to leadership. Set the agenda rather than wait for it. This is the part we can drive for you.
Stakeholders
Is your own organization aligned, and have you started managing the buyer before the negotiation, not during it?
We have a confirmed internal mandate. Everyone knows what we can and cannot agree to.
If you can't tick thisMandates that get revisited mid-negotiation are the single most common reason deals stall and concessions leak.
Lock the mandate in writing before you engage. Confirm it, do not assume it.
We have mapped the internal stakeholders and secured their alignment early.
If you can't tick thisInternal alignment that drags on compresses your real preparation into the final days, when there is no time to fix anything.
Map decision-makers and influencers now and close the alignment gaps while there is still runway before the break.
We are already managing the buyer’s expectations, ahead of the formal negotiation.
If you can't tick thisIf the first time the retailer hears your position is at the table, you have surrendered the shaping phase and invited fast escalation.
Start expectation management in the weeks before the break, so the table is set in your favor before anyone sits down.
Communication planning
Have you planned how you will shape the table, or are you relying on reacting well on the day?
We have a communication plan for the weeks before the negotiation, not just for the meeting.
If you can't tick thisMost teams plan the meeting and ignore everything before it. The shaping phase is where the outcome is decided.
Plan the pre-negotiation communication deliberately: what you signal, to whom, and when.
We have anticipated the buyer’s likely moves and prepared our responses.
If you can't tick thisWithout prepared scenarios, your team reacts. Reactive teams concede to relieve pressure and call it pragmatism.
War-game the buyer’s openings and objections and rehearse your responses before they are used on you.
We have a plan to open in a way that conditions the retailer, rather than blindsiding them.
If you can't tick thisAn opening that surprises the retailer makes fast escalation more likely, exactly when prices have to rise again and the easy single-digit asks are gone.
Design the opening and the conditioning around it, so the ask lands as expected, not as a shock.
Your readiness
The gaps the checklist found are the ones we close
Negotiation Readiness is a facilitated session where our practitioners help you set objectives, lock internal mandate, map stakeholders, and build the communication plan that shapes the table. When your organization is too slow to start early, we are the external party that drives the frontend for you.
Book a meetingA 30-minute call with one of our partners about your negotiations this year.


