The Power of a Positive No by William Ury — Cliff Notes Summary
Direct Answer
The Power of a Positive No by William Ury (Bantam, 2007) is the negotiation classic that solves the problem most sellers and leaders never name out loud: how to say No without destroying the relationship, the deal, or your own integrity. Ury — co-founder of the Harvard Program on Negotiation and co-author of Getting to Yes with Roger Fisher — argues that "the Power of a Positive No is the foundation of every YES that matters." His signature 3-Step Positive No (Yes! / No. / Yes?) wraps a firm limit inside a clear affirmation of what you value and a positive alternative path — so you protect your interests without burning the counterparty.
For sellers, this is the operating framework for holding price, walking from bad-fit deals, and defending margin against procurement squeeze. The book sits in a direct lineage from Fisher/Ury Getting to Yes (1981) to Ury's own Getting Past No (1991) through Voss's Never Split the Difference (2016) and Blount's Inked (2020) — and remains the cleanest single framework for the "respectful but firm" muscle every modern revenue org wants but few train.
1. The Problem Ury Names — Why We Cave
1.1 The Three Gifts of No
Ury opens by reframing No as a gift, not an act of hostility. A well-delivered No protects three things at once: your own interests, the relationship with the counterparty, and the counterparty's own long-term interest (because accommodating a bad ask trains them to keep asking).
The book's premise: most professionals — and nearly all sellers — were taught that No is rude and Yes is polite. Ury inverts this. A cowardly Yes is the rudest answer there is, because it sets up the eventual breakdown when the over-promised cannot be delivered.
1.2 The Yes Trap
Sellers live inside the Yes Trap more than anyone. The quota, the forecast call, the deal desk, the champion's pleading email — all train the rep to say Yes when they should say No. Ury frames this as the first failure mode: a rep who concedes a 30% discount in week 47 of the quarter has not "won the deal" — they have damaged the pricing integrity of every renewal that follows.
The book's mission is to give that rep — and the executive, the parent, the doctor, the diplomat — a structured way to refuse without rupture.
2. The 3-Step Positive No (Ury's Signature Framework)
2.1 Yes! — Affirm What You Value
The Positive No begins with an internal Yes — not to the counterparty's ask, but to your own underlying interest. Before you can credibly refuse, you must know what you are protecting. "Your No is only as strong as your underlying Yes," Ury writes.
For a seller, that internal Yes might be a sustainable gross margin, a deployment timeline the engineering team can actually hit, or a reference customer worth two years of cultivation. The Yes is the anchor. Without it, the No drifts into either defensiveness ("we just can't") or aggression ("that's insulting").
2.2 No. — Assert the Limit Clearly
Step two is the firm, calm, declarative No. Ury insists this sentence be specific, short, and free of apology. Not *"I'm so sorry, but unfortunately we may not be in a position to..."* Just: "I can't do 30% off on a one-year deal." The book teaches that hedging the No is what makes the counterparty push harder — vagueness reads as a starting point for further negotiation.
A clean No closes the door on that specific request while keeping the relationship door open for the next step.
2.3 Yes? — Propose a Positive Alternative
Step three converts refusal into forward motion. The closing Yes? offers a path the counterparty can actually walk down. The textbook seller version: *"I value our partnership and want this to work for both sides long-term (Yes!).
I can't accept the 30% discount — that puts us underwater on this deal (No.). Here's what I CAN do: lock in current pricing for three years with annual escalators capped at CPI, plus a 90-day pilot at full price to prove the ROI (Yes?)."* The Yes? Does the political work of handing the buyer something to bring back to their boss, which is often what they actually needed in the first place.
3. The Three Traps — How Positive No Fails
3.1 Accommodation — The Cave
The most common failure mode in sales. The rep says Yes when they should say No — discounts on demand, extends payment terms without reciprocity, layers in custom development "just this once." Ury notes that accommodators believe they are preserving the relationship, but in practice they are training the counterparty to disrespect them.
Procurement teams at Walmart, Amazon Business, and any private equity-backed buyer are explicitly designed to identify and exploit accommodators. Every concession without an ask in return is a data point the buyer will use against the next rep.
3.2 Attack — The Burn
The opposite failure: a No delivered with hostility. *"That's a ridiculous ask. We're done here."* Attack feels powerful for about ninety seconds and then kills the deal, the renewal, and the referral.
Ury observed this pattern across diplomatic negotiations — the negotiator who finally snaps is often the one who accommodated for too long and then over-corrects. The Attack is the shadow of the Cave, not its opposite.
3.3 Avoidance — The Ghost
The third trap is the silent one: the rep who simply stops responding. The deal stalls in the CRM at "Negotiation" stage for ninety days. No one is told No, but no one is told Yes either.
Modern call analytics from Gong and Clari show Avoidance is now the dominant late-stage failure mode in B2B SaaS — the deal does not die from a Lost-to-Competitor; it dies from neither side wanting to deliver the hard message. The Positive No is the antidote to Avoidance because it gives the seller a script for the message they were dreading.
4. Preparation — The Discipline Before the Conversation
4.1 Uncover Your Interest
Ury devotes the entire middle of the book to preparation. Before the meeting, the negotiator must answer three questions in writing: What am I saying Yes to? What am I saying No to? What alternative am I prepared to offer? Skipping the writing step is the most reliable predictor of a Positive No collapsing into Accommodation under pressure.
4.2 Build Your BATNA
The BATNA — Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement — is the concept Ury imported from his Getting to Yes collaboration with Roger Fisher. In the Positive No book, BATNA is reframed as the source of your power to say No. If your only path to making the quarter is closing this one deal at any price, your No is theatrical and the buyer knows it.
If you have three other qualified deals on the same forecast week, your No is credible. "Your No is only as strong as your alternative," Ury writes — a line that should hang in every deal review room.
4.3 Rehearse the Bridge Statement
Ury teaches the Bridge Statement — a single rehearsed sentence that transitions from the No to the Yes?. The template: *"What I can offer instead is..."* or *"Here's a path I think works for both of us..."* Rehearsing this sentence out loud, before the call, is what separates the rep who delivers the Positive No cleanly from the rep who freezes when the buyer pushes back the first time.
5. Delivery — Scripts the Book Actually Teaches
5.1 The Yes-No-Yes Sandwich
The verbatim structure Ury teaches: affirm, refuse, propose. The reason it works is psychological — the counterparty hears the opening Yes and stays in receptive mode through the No, then hears the closing Yes? And has something concrete to react to instead of a wall.
The Yes-No-Yes Sandwich is now standard in Force Management, Winning by Design, and Pavilion sales training curricula, even when Ury is not credited by name.
5.2 The Respect-Based No
Ury's deepest insight: a Positive No is delivered with respect for the counterparty's autonomy. You are not saying they were wrong to ask; you are saying you cannot agree, and you are offering a path. Chris Voss in Never Split the Difference later operationalized this with tactical empathy and the "It seems like..." label — both descendants of Ury's respect-based posture.
The Positive No is not "No, and here's why you're wrong." It is "No, and here's how we both still win."
5.3 Holding the Line After the Pushback
The single hardest moment in the framework: when the counterparty pushes back and the rep is tempted to retreat. Ury's prescription is to repeat the Positive No with slightly different language but the same substance — sometimes three or four times in the same conversation. Deepak Malhotra, in Negotiation Genius (2007), calls this the "strategic ambiguity" of holding firm while sounding fresh.
The discipline is staying inside the Yes-No-Yes structure even when the buyer is trying to drag the conversation into pure-No territory.
6. Frameworks at a Glance
The named frameworks Ury teaches that travel directly into modern sales operating systems:
- 3-Step Positive No — Yes! / No. / Yes? — the master architecture for every refusal.
- Three Traps — Accommodation (cave), Attack (burn), Avoidance (ghost) — the failure modes to name and avoid.
- Yes-No-Yes Sandwich — the verbatim sentence structure for delivery.
- BATNA — imported from Getting to Yes; the source of credibility for any No.
- Bridge Statement — the rehearsed transitional sentence from No to Yes?.
- Respect-Based No — the posture that protects the counterparty's autonomy while holding your limit.
- Walk-Away Power — the strategic willingness to lose this deal that paradoxically wins more deals.
7. What Holds Up, What Has Aged
What still holds (2026-2027):
- The 3-Step Positive No has been replicated in every major negotiation curriculum — Harvard Program on Negotiation, Wharton Executive Negotiation, Black Swan Group — and remains the cleanest single framework for the respectful-but-firm posture.
- The Three Traps map exactly onto the late-stage failure modes that Gong, Clari, and Outreach call-analytics platforms now flag automatically.
- BATNA is, twenty years on, still the single most important concept in commercial negotiation — and Ury's reframing of it as the source of No-power is the version most sellers internalize first.
What has aged:
- The book was written for face-to-face and phone-based negotiation. Modern procurement increasingly runs through automated RFP portals and AI-assisted bid platforms like Pactum and Tropic, where the Positive No must be delivered in writing, at machine speed, with no tone of voice to soften it.
- The product-led growth (PLG) motion changes the location of the Positive No. At companies like Atlassian, Datadog, and Notion, the firm boundary is now baked into the pricing tier itself — the Positive No is the website. The seller's job has shifted to defending the enterprise-tier line when buyers try to negotiate down.
- Ury's framework assumes a counterparty who is also a human with a long-term relationship interest. Procurement automation by buyers like Walmart and Amazon Business has flattened that assumption — the seller now often delivers Positive Nos to a system, not a person, and the relationship preservation step has to be reconstructed elsewhere in the account team.
FAQ
How is this different from Getting to Yes? Getting to Yes (Fisher & Ury, 1981) taught principled negotiation — separate the people from the problem, focus on interests, generate options, use objective criteria. The Power of a Positive No is narrower and deeper: it solves the single hardest moment in any negotiation — how to refuse without rupturing the relationship.
Read both; this one is the operational handbook for the No itself.
Is a Positive No just a polite Yes in disguise? No. The middle step is a genuine, clear refusal. The Yes! At the front and the Yes? At the back are not softeners — they are strategic context that prevents the No from being heard as personal hostility. If you remove the No, you have Accommodation. If you remove the framing, you have Attack.
When should a seller actually walk away? When the counterparty refuses your Yes? Alternative AND your BATNA (next-best opportunity) is stronger than the proposed terms. Ury's discipline: never deliver Walk-Away as theater. If you say you'll walk, walk. Procurement teams are trained to recognize a bluff within one rep cycle.
Does this work with hostile counterparties? Yes — Ury's later work with Getting Past No (1991) specifically addresses the hostile case. The Positive No still applies; the preparation step grows (more BATNA development, more rehearsal of the Bridge Statement), and the delivery slows down.
Tactical empathy from Chris Voss is the modern complement.
How does this connect to MEDDPICC and Command of the Message? MEDDPICC qualifies the deal; Command of the Message (Force Management) frames the value; the Positive No is what you reach for in the negotiation phase when procurement attacks price. The three compose — qualify with MEDDPICC, frame with Command, hold the line with Positive No.
Is the book worth reading or just the summary? The book is worth reading for the personal and diplomatic examples — Ury draws from his work with Jimmy Carter at Camp David, Hugo Chavez, and Northern Ireland peace negotiations. The summary captures the framework; the case studies make it stick.
Bottom Line
Read this book if you sell anything that procurement will try to grind down, lead any team that needs to refuse bad work, or negotiate anything where the relationship has to survive the No. Ury gives you the cleanest framework in print for the move every revenue leader needs but few practice: a refusal that protects the deal economics without burning the counterparty.
Monday morning, write down the three questions — What am I saying Yes to? What am I saying No to? What alternative am I prepared to offer? — for every deal in the negotiation stage.
That single discipline is the entire book.
Sources
- Ury, William — *The Power of a Positive No* (Bantam, 2007)
- Fisher, Roger & Ury, William — *Getting to Yes* (Houghton Mifflin, 1981) — BATNA and principled negotiation
- Ury, William — *Getting Past No* (Bantam, 1991) — companion volume on hostile negotiation
- Ury, William — *Possible: How We Survive (and Thrive) in an Age of Conflict* (Harper, 2024) — most recent work
- Malhotra, Deepak & Bazerman, Max — *Negotiation Genius* (Bantam, 2007) — strategic ambiguity and holding firm
- Voss, Chris — *Never Split the Difference* (Harper Business, 2016) — tactical empathy as descendant of respect-based No
- Blount, Jeb — *Inked: The Ultimate Guide to Powerful Closing and Sales Negotiation* (Wiley, 2020) — modern sales-specific application
- Harvard Program on Negotiation — Faculty and curriculum reference (co-founded by Ury)
- Force Management — Command of the Message Methodology Reference
- Gong Labs — Negotiation Call Pattern Analysis (2024-2026) — Avoidance as dominant late-stage failure mode
- Pactum / Tropic — AI-assisted procurement and negotiation platform documentation