Guessing what the other side wants. Guessing where the deal will land. Guessing when to push or hold back. In property negotiation, that kind of uncertainty is expensive.
It is not that buyers are careless. Most are trying hard. But trying hard without the right information, without a clear read on the other side, and without a deliberate position is not strategy. It is hope dressed up as effort.
And hope is not a negotiating position.
The mistake
Most people focus on the conversation itself. What to say. How to respond. How to handle the moment when pressure lands.
But the real work happens before that.
Before you open your mouth, before you make an offer, before you sit across from someone and try to reach an agreement, the outcome is already being shaped. By your positioning. By your timing. By how clearly you understand where the leverage actually sits.
Most buyers skip that work entirely. They walk into the situation underprepared and then wonder why the negotiation did not go the way they wanted.
The difference
When you go into a negotiation with clarity, you stop reacting and start controlling the situation.
You know what the other side needs. You know where they are flexible and where they are not. You know what your strongest move is and when to make it.
Positioning is not what you say in the room. It is the work you do before you walk in.
That is where better outcomes come from. Not luck. Not guesswork. Not hoping the other side makes a mistake.
Strategy. Preparation. The willingness to move deliberately rather than reactively.
If your last negotiation did not go the way you wanted, the conversation was probably not the problem. The preparation was.