Negotiation
Tactic

Make the First Offer During a Negotiation

Request a high anchor so that your counterpart searches for the best qualities that would justify this cost.

Person says "I'd like $90k" during a negotiation

Overview

Always make the first offer:

When I poll executives, more than three quarters believe that it’s usually best not to make the first offer...There’s only one problem with this assumption: it’s wrong. One thorough analysis of negotiation experiments showed that every dollar higher in the first offer translates into about 50 cents more in the final agreement. (Grant, 2013).

Why?

First, your counterpart will focus on the best qualities about your offer.

...a high list price directed real estate agents’ attention to the house’s positive features (such as spacious rooms or a new roof) while pushing negative features (such as a small yard or an old furnace) to the back recesses of their minds. (Galinsky, 2004)

Negotiating a job offer? Request a high salary to orient this employer to look for your best qualities that justify this cost.

Second, you trigger an anchoring effect (see Epley & Gilovich, 2006).

Most employers are considering a range of salaries, such as $70k - $95k. Your requested salary ($100k) will pull them to the higher end of their range ($95k).

Without an anchor, your salary would settle near the midpoint of their range — in this case $82.5k (which is $12.5k less than you would have received).

  • Epley, N., & Gilovich, T. (2006). The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic: Why the adjustments are insufficient. Psychological science, 17(4), 311-318.
  • Galinsky, A. D. (2004). When to make the first offer in negotiations. Harvard Business School Working Knowledge.