『The Piranha Client』のカバーアート

The Piranha Client

The Piranha Client

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概要

Some clients do not attack your deal in one dramatic bite. They take tiny pieces—one discount request, one scope change, one extra demand, one more profile review—until your margins, time, and energy are stripped away. In sales, consulting, professional services, and corporate training, leaders need to recognise the "piranha client" early. The danger is not always a bad person or a bad company. Often, it is a pattern of incremental pressure that looks harmless in isolation but becomes commercially toxic over time. What is a piranha client in sales and professional services? A piranha client is a customer who erodes your deal through repeated small demands rather than one obvious negotiation attack. They ask for "just one more" discount, "just one more" concession, or "just one more" change until the original agreement barely resembles the final delivery. Unlike a shark-style negotiator who takes one huge bite, the piranha client works through accumulation. In B2B sales, consulting, training, recruitment, technology implementation, and agency work, this often appears as volume discounts, extra stakeholders, expanded scope, and constant approval loops. Post-pandemic, when many service firms were hungry for revenue, these patterns became even harder to resist. Do now: Track every concession in writing. Small bites become big losses when nobody totals them. Why do clients keep asking for more discounts? Clients keep asking for discounts because each successful concession teaches them that more pressure may produce a better price. If the seller has not created a clear commercial boundary, the buyer naturally tests the limits. In large companies, especially new divisions or procurement-heavy organisations, buyers may not reveal the full deal size upfront. A supplier agrees to the first discount, then a second tranche appears, then a third. By the time the total opportunity is visible, the seller is already trapped inside a "big discount" corner. This happens across Japan, the US, Europe, and Asia-Pacific, but it is especially painful in high-touch service businesses where labour, expertise, and delivery capacity cannot be infinitely scaled. Do now: Price each stage as though more scope may follow. Set a hard stop before negotiations begin. How can scope creep damage a service business? Scope creep damages a service business by quietly increasing delivery obligations without increasing revenue. The client may see each request as reasonable, but the supplier absorbs the extra time, coordination, risk, and opportunity cost. In training, consulting, and advisory work, scope creep often appears as new requirements, additional audiences, more reporting, special customisation, extra meetings, or new approval layers. For SMEs and boutique firms, the impact is sharper than for large multinationals because fewer people carry the operational load. During COVID-19 and the post-pandemic recovery, external trainer availability, client uncertainty, and shifting schedules made this even more complex. A deal that looked profitable on paper can become unattractive once hidden delivery costs are included. Do now: Define scope, exclusions, decision rights, and change fees before delivery starts. Why is trainer or consultant selection a hidden negotiation risk? Trainer and consultant selection becomes risky when the client treats expert availability as unlimited. In reality, quality delivery depends on certified people, scheduling constraints, and proven fit. In the training industry, certification is not a light administrative step. Dale Carnegie trainer development, for example, involves long preparation, specialist training, and accreditation standards. That means a client asking to review more and more profiles is not simply requesting choice; they may be consuming scarce operational capacity. This issue appears in other fields too: legal partners, executive coaches, cybersecurity consultants, enterprise software architects, and medical specialists all face similar constraints. Quality depends on expertise, not infinite substitutions. Do now: Explain the certification, experience, and availability logic early. Choice should support quality, not undermine delivery. When should a business push back on a demanding client? A business should push back when discount pressure, scope creep, and difficult behaviour combine into a pattern.One tough request is negotiation; repeated erosion is a warning signal. Many service firms operate with an informal "no idiots" policy, although the actual wording is often stronger. The principle is simple: some revenue is not worth the operational damage, staff stress, or reputational risk. Leaders at startups, SMEs, and established firms need to ask whether the client is building a partnership or simply extracting value. In Japan, where long-term relationships and trust matter, the pushback should be polite, structured, and commercially clear. In more aggressive procurement cultures, ...
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