For busy salespeople trying to meet sales goals, a request for a discount might look like a quick way to win more business.
Although giving discounts can be beneficial in the short term, it isn’t a sustainable sales strategy. Even worse, it can kill your company. Dramatic? Maybe.
Let’s ignore the obvious impact on your bottom line and concentrate on the reputation of an easily-discounted product.
Does it appear more valuable? Research says no. Customers associate high prices with high quality. Plus, it can be hard to turn back once you start down the path of discounts to make a quick buck.
We all want happy customers. But it shouldn’t come at any price.
So, how do you say no to a customer asking for a discount without ruining the customer relationship? Let’s discuss.
7 Ways to Say No to a Discount Request (Without Being a Jerk)
Saying no to a customer’s discount request without being straight-up negative is a delicate balance. The key is to reduce that feeling of rejection by delivering the “no” in a positive way—without damaging the customer experience.
So, how can you do it without losing a potential customer? Here are seven ways to engage the prospect in a conversation that convinces them of your value.
1. "What are your priorities (and/or goals) with our solution?"
When a prospect requests a discount, many businesses email back a coupon. Now, there’s nothing wrong with incentivizing first-time customers.
But, one of the key steps in any robust sales process is understanding your customer’s needs. You want to research and establish the prospect's needs, goals, and pain points so you can sell effectively—and strengthen your value proposition.
Did the prospect ask for the discount early on? Then, ask them to share what exactly they’re looking for in your offering that made them request a discount. This gives you the chance to highlight your true value.
You could say: “I appreciate your request for a discount. Before we talk about that, I want to understand your priorities and what you’re looking for from our product. I want to provide the best-possible solution for you and an accurate price estimate.”
2. "What Additional Value Can We Provide to Make Our Solution Worth the Cost?”
Your customers want to extract the most value while paying the least. This question can help you discover gaps in your product's perceived value and present a personalized value proposition that addresses their needs.
If you can clearly demonstrate the value of your product, throw in some add-ons, or offer amazing customer support, the prospect may be willing to pay at your initial price point. Sometimes, you need to get them signed up for a free trial of your solution—they’ll explore the features and fall in love.
Here’s a social media exchange that demonstrates how you can nudge prospects to sign up for a free trial:
An effective email for this approach might look like this:
3. “Is Price a Huge Barrier in the Final Purchasing Decision?”
As soon as your prospect hears your pricing, they ask for a discount. Maybe they are short on money. Or, they don’t see the value of your solution at the quoted price. Every sales objection could be hidden behind such a price objection.
So, ask them if price is a huge sticking point for them.
If they say pricing is not a big problem, show them the value in your offer. If it is, consider offering a monthly pricing plan (covered next). But, if your pricing is way too high, they probably aren’t a good fit.
Here’s an email template you could use for this:
4. “Would a Month-to-Month Plan be Enough to Get You to Close Today?”
This is a clever workaround that can help you avoid giving discounts. Your prospect will experience the value of your solution first-hand, and if they like it, you may be able to get them into an annual contract later on.
These monthly deals work best for prospects that don’t have the money to pay upfront, but resemble your ideal customer profile. Monthly payment plans can be priced about 10 to 20 percent higher than annual ones.
Some sales teams may be unable to offer month-to-month plans because of their company’s policy. But if you can, it can help you close deals at full price and retain profit margins.
Here’s an email template offering a month-to-month payment plan:
5. Turn the Question on the Customer
Try turning the tables on your prospects to uncover their objections. By asking specific questions, you can get to the bottom of the pricing concerns. For example:
- “What were you looking to pay?”
- “Are you saying you can’t afford to continue paying the cost of the problem? Or, you can’t afford the solution?”
Asking these questions will reveal if the prospect has bought into the value of your solution—or not. Maybe they don’t even understand their own pain points completely! Or, maybe your product is simply out of their budget.
If they aren’t sold on your value, you have to research your prospects better, and position your product as an investment—not a money pit.
Here’s Close CEO Steli Efti sharing his thoughts on the subject:
If your prospect doesn’t have the money but seems like a great fit, you can consider structuring a deal for them, using these other tips, to ultimately complete the sale.
6. "I Can Offer a Discount of X If You Y."
Effective negotiations seek a middle ground that works for both parties: seller and buyer. So, rather than offering discounted prices, your sales team can take a quid pro quo approach.
Say something like: “I can give you a discount on the highest pricing tier if you buy at least five seats.” Or, you could ask them to be the subject of a case study seeking customer feedback, or request referrals in their network.
Ultimately, you want to get (likely non-monetary) benefits from the deal for yourself, so you can strike a win-win that benefits both parties.
Here’s an email template you can use for that:
7. "Let's Reconnect After The New Year" (Or Next Quarter)
Sometimes, your prospect is enthusiastic about your product, but they don’t have the budget to buy it. Don’t deny their request with a direct no.
Instead, ask them: “How about we reconnect next quarter? Do you think you’ll have more of a budget then?” This gives them time to find the budget or convince decision-makers that your solution is worth the cost.
Or, use the following email template:
Ideally, you want to exhaust the options discussed above before resorting to this last one.
Why You Should Have a "No Discount" Policy – Most of The Time
Discounts may ultimately damage customer satisfaction—rather than benefiting your business. Your brand reputation can be sullied by “cheapness.” And the type of customers you attract? Less than ideal.
Let’s look at three more reasons why discounts are a bad idea.
1. Discounted Customers Churn More Often
While discounts can incentivize prospects to buy, improving your short-term bottom line, those benefits hurt your company long-term. The new customers you get through discounts have inferior retention rates. Their unwillingness to pay full price also translates into a higher churn rate and decreased lifetime value—these aren’t the loyal customers you’re looking for.
2. You Might Destroy Existing Customer Relationships
Let’s say a large account aggressively negotiates a big discount on your solution. Then, a smaller company approaches your sales rep, who says, “This is the best we can do; I can’t go any lower.” At some point, your customers might talk. And when they do, the second customer is going to be pissed.
Plus, consider your ride-or-die loyal customers. If they discover they’re paying full price, while the new kid on the block got 20 percent off? That won’t go over well.
3. You Don’t Know Your Customers' Actual Worth
Discounts make your business unpredictable and unscalable.
Instead of Basic, Pro, and Business plans, where you know how much revenue you make for each, you’ve got Customer A with a 12 percent discount, Customer B with 14 percent, and Customer C with two free user accounts. Good luck forecasting future revenue.
Those discounts are going to undermine your entire financial structure because you don’t know your customers’ actual worth. Plus, it’s going to cause problems for your support team, success team, marketing team, and even product team.
The Big Exception: Enterprise Sales
Discount culture is bad for most companies. But there is one big exception: enterprise sales.
If you’re selling to enterprise customers, you will handle discounts differently. You can’t quote a price and say: “This is what it is.” That’s just not how they work.
Most enterprise companies have a procurement department whose entire job is to get discounts. They have a discount quota to meet, and if you don’t play ball, you can’t close enterprise deals.
That’s the way their organizations are built, so if they’re your ideal customer, you will have to negotiate discounts.
Consider building discounts into your enterprise pricing, or offer tiered packages based on seats, usage, or other premium offerings.
Trying to Win with Discounts? You’ve Already Lost
Having a lower price for the sake of it is a competitive disadvantage. If you don’t value your solution, your customers won’t either.
But, if you feel like you absolutely, 100 percent have to offer some discount, make sure you:
- Create standardized discounts (and don’t budge.)
- Get something equally valuable in return.
Sell your prospects on value first—and make the discount an added bonus. This will strengthen your brand and set you on the right path for real, sustainable growth.
Handling sales objections—including pricing objections—requires an elevated degree of finesse. Want to upgrade your skills? Grab our free Objection Management resource.