Claim
The negotiation that determines your comp doesn't start in the offer call. It starts with everything the buyer reads about you before the call: LinkedIn headline, headshot, recent posts, recruiter call notes, and the public narrative they assemble about your value. If you arrive at the conversation positioned as a commodity, you will be priced as a commodity.
Mechanism
Buyers (employers, clients) form a price anchor before any direct interaction. The anchor comes from the publicly available signal: how you describe yourself, what you've shipped, who endorses you, what you say in public. By the time the formal negotiation begins, the anchor is set; you can move it 10–20%, not 200%. Pre-negotiation positioning work is therefore the highest-leverage move, and it has to happen before there's any specific buyer in mind.
Conditions
Holds when:
- The buyer does pre-call diligence. (Most senior hires, all consulting and contract work.)
- You have control over your public surface — not blocked by an employer NDA from updating it.
Fails when:
- The role is commodity-procurement (entry-level, contract labor with set rates).
- The buyer is moving so fast they don't read pre-call materials. The anchor is then set in-call, and other tactics matter more.
Evidence
"If you are positioned as a commodity, you will be treated like a commodity."
"They don't understand when it starts. LinkedIn snapshot, headshot, recent posts, recruiter notes — all of it is pre-negotiation positioning."
— Jacob Warwick on Lenny's Podcast, 2026-04-28
Across $1B+ in client comp delivered, Warwick reports the highest-leverage moves are upstream of the offer conversation, not in it.
Signals
- Inbound recruiter conversations open at higher comp bands than your prior role.
- Buyers reference public artifacts you've shipped, not your title or company.
- The first comp number floated by the buyer is at or above your target floor.
Counter-evidence
Some operators are uniquely effective in-room and weak in their public artifacts. They can win negotiations through tactics in the actual conversation. Warwick's argument is that even those operators leave significant comp on the table because the anchor was set low. Pre-negotiation positioning gets you a higher floor; in-room tactics raise from there.
Cross-references
- In any infrequent negotiation, you are the werewolf with no card — close the asymmetry first — the structural problem this discipline addresses