Verhandlungsstratege für Lieferantenverträge

Why this prompt matters
Most vendor contracts are written entirely in the vendor's favor. Auto-renewal clauses lock companies in for another year if they miss a 30-day cancellation window. Uncapped price escalation clauses let vendors raise prices 10–15% annually without renegotiation rights. One-sided liability caps mean you bear all the risk of a service failure. A 2024 Gartner survey found that companies that actively negotiate SaaS contracts save an average of 23% on initial contract value — but fewer than 1 in 3 SMBs negotiate at all, typically because they don't know where to start or how to ask professionally.
What we use it for
You have a vendor proposal on your desk — a SaaS subscription, a service contract, an agency retainer, or an enterprise software deal — and the renewal or initial signing date is approaching. You need to negotiate better terms but do not have a procurement team or legal department to do it for you. Paste the contract and get a complete negotiation package: red flags identified, a counteroffer email ready to send, and a clear sense of when to walk away.
Prompt
Act as a senior procurement specialist and contract negotiation expert with 15+ years of experience closing deals for [YOUR COMPANY SIZE: startup / mid-size / enterprise] companies in the [YOUR INDUSTRY] sector. Context: I have received a vendor proposal that I need to negotiate before signing. The contract is for [PRODUCT/SERVICE TYPE] with an annual value of approximately [CONTRACT VALUE, e.g., "$48,000/year"]. My primary negotiation goals are: 1. [GOAL 1, e.g., "Reduce annual cost by at least 20%"] 2. [GOAL 2, e.g., "Add a 90-day termination-for-convenience clause"] 3. [GOAL 3, e.g., "Remove auto-renewal and price escalation clauses"] My leverage points include: [e.g., "Comparing 3 vendors / Can pay annually upfront / Can provide a case study / Multi-year commitment possible"] Here is the vendor proposal / key contract terms: [PASTE THE FULL PROPOSAL TEXT OR KEY CLAUSES HERE] Task: 1. Identify the 5 most negotiable terms in this contract, with a brief explanation of why vendors typically concede on each. 2. Flag all red-flag clauses: auto-renewal traps, one-sided liability caps, data ownership and portability issues, uncapped price escalation, SLA penalties that favor the vendor, and any clauses that require legal review before signing. 3. Write a complete counteroffer email I can send to the vendor today — professional but firm, with exact replacement language for each clause I want changed, not just a list of complaints. 4. Provide a BATNA (Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement) analysis: what is our best fallback if the vendor refuses to negotiate, and what is the minimum acceptable outcome we should accept before walking away? 5. Suggest 2 concessions we can offer the vendor in exchange for our key asks — things that cost us little but have real perceived value to the vendor. Constraints: - Keep the tone professional and relationship-preserving — we may work with this vendor long-term. - Focus on commercially standard and reasonable asks, not aggressive tactics that could kill the deal. - Clearly flag any clause that requires a lawyer to review before signing — do not give legal advice, just flag it. - Base every observation on the actual contract text provided — do not invent terms that are not present. - If a term is non-negotiable due to legal or regulatory reasons, say so and explain why. Output Format: ## Red Flags (Priority: High / Medium / Low) [List each with: clause name → what it says → why it is a problem → recommended fix] ## Top 5 Negotiable Terms [For each: term name → typical vendor flexibility → suggested ask] ## Counteroffer Email (ready to send) [Subject line + full email body with exact replacement clause language in blockquotes] ## BATNA Analysis [Best alternative + minimum acceptable outcome + walk-away threshold] ## Concessions to Offer [2 concessions with explanation of perceived value to vendor vs. real cost to you]
Result
Example scenario: A 35-person SaaS startup pastes a $42,000/year CRM contract from a mid-tier vendor. Goals: reduce cost by 20%, add a 60-day exit clause, remove auto-renewal.
Red Flags
- Auto-renewal clause (Section 8.2) — HIGH: Contract auto-renews for 12 months unless cancelled in writing 45 days before renewal date. Problem: easy to miss, locks you in at current pricing. Fix: Negotiate to 30-day notice period or mutual written confirmation required to renew.
- Price escalation (Section 5.1) — HIGH: Vendor may increase fees by up to CPI + 5% annually without cap. Problem: In a high-inflation year this could mean 12–15% increases. Fix: Cap annual increases at 3% or CPI, whichever is lower.
- Data portability (Section 12.3) — MEDIUM: Vendor will provide data export in "commercially reasonable formats" at contract end, with up to 90 days to deliver. Problem: Vague and slow — you could be locked out of your own data during migration. Fix: Specify CSV/JSON export within 14 days, at no additional charge.
- Liability cap (Section 14.1) — MEDIUM (flag for legal review): Vendor's total liability is capped at 1 month's fees. Problem: If a service outage causes you $200K in lost business, you can recover at most $3,500. Recommend legal review before signing.
Top 5 Negotiable Terms
- Price: Vendors typically have 10–25% discount authority. Ask for 20% off with an annual upfront payment.
- Auto-renewal notice: Reducing from 45 to 30 days is a standard, low-resistance ask.
- Price escalation cap: 3% cap is industry standard — most vendors accept this for multi-year deals.
- Data export timeline: 14-day export SLA is reasonable and vendors rarely push back.
- Payment terms: Net-30 vs. net-15 — low stakes for vendor, important for your cash flow.
Counteroffer Email (ready to send)
Subject: [Company Name] — Contract Review and Proposed Amendments
Hi [Vendor Contact],
Thank you for sending over the agreement. We are excited about moving forward and have completed our review. We have a few amendments we would like to discuss before signing — all of which are commercially standard and should be straightforward to address.
1. Price: We are proposing $33,600/year (a 20% reduction) in exchange for annual upfront payment, which simplifies your billing and improves your cash flow. We are also prepared to commit to a 2-year term if pricing reflects that commitment.
2. Auto-renewal notice (Section 8.2): Please amend to: "This Agreement will auto-renew unless either party provides written notice of non-renewal at least thirty (30) days prior to the end of the then-current term."
3. Price escalation (Section 5.1): Please amend to: "Annual fee increases shall not exceed three percent (3%) or the US Consumer Price Index (CPI), whichever is lower."
4. Data export (Section 12.3): Please amend to: "Upon contract termination, Vendor shall provide a complete export of Customer data in CSV and JSON formats within fourteen (14) calendar days at no additional charge."
We are ready to sign this week once these amendments are reflected. Please let me know if you would like to discuss any of these on a quick call.
Best regards,
[Your Name]
BATNA Analysis
Best alternative: Competitor B offers comparable functionality at $38,000/year with a 60-day exit clause already included. This is your walk-away anchor.
Minimum acceptable outcome: Settle at $37,000/year + auto-renewal reduced to 30 days + data export within 30 days. If vendor refuses all three, switch to Competitor B.
Walk-away threshold: Any contract above $38,000/year with uncapped price escalation and 45-day auto-renewal notice = walk away.
Concessions to Offer
- Annual upfront payment: Costs you nothing extra (you were going to pay anyway) but improves vendor cash flow and often unlocks 10–15% discounts. Lead with this in exchange for price reduction.
- Case study participation: Offer to be a named customer reference or co-author a case study. High perceived value for vendor's marketing team, zero financial cost to you. Use this to unlock the data portability and escalation cap asks.
Die meisten Lieferantenverträge werden von der Rechtsabteilung des Anbieters mit einem Ziel verfasst: den Anbieter zu schützen. Automatische Verlängerungsfallen, unbegrenzte Preiserhöhungen, einseitige Haftungsbegrenzungen und vage Klauseln zur Datenportabilität sind Standard. Für Unternehmen ohne dedizierte Einkaufs- oder Rechtsabteilung ist das Unterzeichnen ohne Prüfung dieser Bedingungen teuer.
Dieser Prompt macht jedes KI-Modell zu Ihrem persönlichen Verhandlungsstrategen. Fügen Sie den Vertrag oder die wesentlichen Bedingungen ein, beschreiben Sie Ihre Ziele und Hebelpunkte, und erhalten Sie eine strukturierte Analyse: die fünf am stärksten verhandelbaren Klauseln, jede Red Flag mit einem Lösungsvorschlag, eine vollständige Gegenangebots-E-Mail mit exakter Ersatzsprache, eine BATNA-Analyse, damit Sie genau wissen, wann Sie abbrechen sollten, und zwei Zugeständnisse, die Sie anbieten können, um die wichtigsten Forderungen durchzubekommen.
Warum Dieser Prompt Funktioniert
Der Prompt ist so strukturiert, dass die KI keine vagen Ratschläge geben kann. Sie muss vom tatsächlichen Vertragstext ausgehen, den Sie einfügen, bestimmte Klauseln anhand der Abschnittsnummern markieren und eine versandbereite E-Mail verfassen – keine Aufzählung von Gesprächspunkten. Die Rolle-Constraints-Struktur zwingt sie dazu, professionell und beziehungsschonend zu bleiben, was wichtig ist, wenn Sie den Deal wollen, aber zu besseren Konditionen.
Die [eckigen Klammern] sind essenziell: Ihre Unternehmensgröße, Branche, Vertragswert und Hebelpunkte verändern, was eine realistische Forderung ist. Eine Verhandlung über einen SaaS-Vertrag für 5.000 USD pro Jahr unterscheidet sich von einem Enterprise-Deal über 500.000 USD, und der Prompt berücksichtigt das.
Was die Ausgabe Ihnen Liefert
- Red Flags nach Priorität geordnet – damit Sie wissen, für welche Klauseln Sie kämpfen und welche Sie akzeptieren sollten
- Die 5 am stärksten verhandelbaren Bedingungen – mit Erklärung zur typischen Flexibilität des Anbieters, damit Sie Dinge fordern, die er tatsächlich geben kann
- Eine vollständige Gegenangebots-E-Mail – professionell, versandbereit, mit exakter Ersatzklauselsprache in Blockzitaten
- BATNA-Analyse – Ihre beste Alternative, minimal akzeptables Ergebnis und klare Abbruchschwelle
- Zwei anzubietende Zugeständnisse – Dinge, die Sie wenig kosten, aber für den Anbieter hohen Wert haben, damit Sie etwas zum Tauschen haben
Wann Sie Diesen Prompt Nutzen Sollten
Nutzen Sie diesen Prompt vor der Unterzeichnung jedes Lieferantenvertrags mit einem Jahreswert von mehr als einigen tausend Dollar – SaaS-Abonnements, Agentur-Retainer, Enterprise-Software, Dienstleistungsverträge, Datenanbieterverträge. Er ist am wertvollsten, wenn Sie ohne Einkaufsteam verhandeln, das Verlängerungsfenster naht und Sie sich unter Druck gesetzt fühlen zu unterschreiben, oder wenn ein Anbieter Ihnen eine „Standardvereinbarung" schickt, die angeblich nicht geändert werden kann.
Er funktioniert auch für die Neuverhandlung bestehender Verträge zum Verlängerungszeitpunkt: Fügen Sie den aktuellen Vertrag ein, setzen Sie Ihre Ziele für die neue Laufzeit, und nutzen Sie die Ausgabe, um Ihr Verlängerungsgespräch zu strukturieren.
Modellhinweise
Am besten geeignet für komplexe Enterprise-Verträge mit Claude Opus 4.7 oder GPT-4o – diese Modelle verarbeiten lange Vertragstexte und nuancierte juristische Sprache gut. Für kürzere SaaS-Vereinbarungen (unter 10 Seiten) liefern Claude Sonnet 4.6 oder GPT-4o mini vergleichbare Ergebnisse zu geringeren Kosten. Lassen Sie markierte Klauseln vor wichtigen Entscheidungen immer von einem Anwalt prüfen; dieser Prompt dient der Verhandlungsstrategie, nicht der Rechtsberatung.