Reps keep discounting because cutting price relieves their own anxiety, not because it answers the buyer's real objection. When a deal feels at risk, the rep's threat response fires and a discount is the fastest relief. The fix is not a tighter discount policy; it is training reps to build trust and value so price becomes secondary. That is what Braintrust's NeuroSelling does.
The Short Answer
Discounting looks like a pricing problem, so leaders respond with approval gates and discounting policies. Those treat the symptom. The reason reps reach for a discount is rarely that the buyer demanded it. It is that the rep felt the deal slipping and a discount is the fastest way to relieve their own anxiety. Until you address that, the discounts keep coming, policy or not.
Discounting Relieves the Rep's Anxiety
When a deal feels at risk, the rep experiences it as a threat, and the brain's threat response engages. In that state, the rep wants relief, fast, and offering a discount produces immediate relief: it feels like progress, it lowers the tension in the conversation, and it gives the rep something to do with their anxiety. The discount works beautifully as anxiety management. It just does not work as selling, because it solves the rep's emotional state rather than the buyer's actual concern.
The discount usually solves the rep's anxiety, not the buyer's objection. That is why discounting policies fail: they target the price, not the fear driving it.
The Trust Gap Behind Price
Price becomes the battleground only when value and trust have not been established. When a buyer genuinely trusts the rep and clearly sees the value, price is a detail. When they do not, price is the only thing left to negotiate, and both sides default to it. So a rep who discounts reflexively is usually a rep who never built enough trust or framed enough value for the buyer's brain to weigh anything other than cost.
That is why discounting is a selling problem wearing a pricing costume. The rep reached for price because they had run out of trust and value to work with, and price was the only lever left.
What Actually Stops Discounting
Discounting falls when reps are equipped to build trust early and frame value in terms the buyer's brain actually accepts, so the deal never comes down to price as the only variable. It also falls when reps can regulate their own threat response, so a tense moment does not trigger the reflex to relieve anxiety with a concession. Both are trainable. Neither is addressed by a discount-approval workflow.
How to Train It
NeuroSelling, the methodology developed by Braintrust founder Jeff Bloomfield, trains reps to build trust and frame value at the level of how the buyer's brain decides, which removes the conditions that make discounting feel necessary. It also helps reps stay regulated under pressure so they stop trading margin for relief. Braintrust's AI roleplay platform lets them practice holding the conversation, and the price, when a deal gets tense.
If your team discounts despite every policy you put in place, the cause is upstream of price. That is the gap Braintrust was built to close, using the science of how the brain processes information, builds trust, and decides. It is worth a conversation. Start a conversation with our team.