7 Mistakes You’re Making with AI SaaS Pricing (and How to Protect Your Budget)

Look, we all know AI is the shiny new toy in every C-suite's budget right now. Every vendor from Salesforce to Microsoft is slapping an "AI-powered" label on their modules and telling you it’s going to revolutionize your workflow. And maybe it will. But here’s the reality from the trenches: most enterprise leaders are walking into these AI negotiations blindfolded.
In the world of SaaS Negotiation Consulting, we’re seeing a massive shift. The old days of simple per-user pricing are dying. In their place, we have "tokens," "credits," "agentic steps," and "compute-based tiers." If you try to negotiate a 2026 AI contract using a 2018 playbook, you’re going to get crushed.
At The Negotiator Guru (TNG), we’ve been deep in the weeds of these renewals. If you want to protect your budget, stop making these seven common mistakes.
1. Buying the "Credit Pile" Before You Have the Proof
The most common mistake we see right now? Overcommitting on AI credits. Vendors love this because it locks in revenue for them while you take all the risk. They’ll tell you, "Buy 1,000,000 Agentforce credits now at a 40% discount, or pay retail later."
CIOs often bite because they don’t want to be the bottleneck for innovation. But here’s the kicker: most AI initiatives start slow. You might only use 10% of those credits in the first year. Since these credits rarely roll over, you’re essentially donating money to the vendor. Before you sign off on a massive credit commitment, you need a contract risk review to ensure you have clawback provisions or the ability to scale up: not just scale down.
2. Ignoring "Meter Anxiety" and Its Impact on ROI
When you move to usage-based pricing, your employees start acting differently. This is what we call "meter anxiety." If your team knows that every time they ask an AI agent to summarize a meeting it costs the company $0.50, they might stop using it.
The mistake here is choosing a pricing model that punishes experimentation. If you're negotiating for Microsoft Copilot or a similar tool, you need to understand how the pricing affects user behavior. If your goal is broad adoption, a pure usage-based model is your worst enemy. You’re better off fighting for a flat-fee "innovation sandbox" period where usage is uncapped until you establish a baseline.

3. Failing to Benchmark AI SKUs (Because You Think You Can’t)
"It’s a new product, there is no benchmark data yet."
That’s what the sales reps will tell you. Don't believe them. While AI SKUs are evolving rapidly, we are already seeing patterns in the market. Whether it’s Salesforce Agentforce or AI-add-ons for ServiceNow, there is always a baseline.
If you aren't using right-price benchmarking, you’re essentially letting the vendor set the market price based on your perceived "willingness to pay." We’ve seen price variations of over 50% for the exact same AI capabilities across different enterprise accounts. Don't be the one paying the "pioneer tax."
4. Treating AI Pricing as a Marketing Decision, Not System Architecture
This is a technical trap that Procurement leaders often miss. AI costs aren't static. The cost to a vendor for running a simple GPT-3.5 query is vastly different than a complex, multi-step "agentic" workflow using a high-reasoning model.
If you don't know the top two variance drivers of your AI tool: is it the number of steps? The volume of data processed? The frequency of real-time requests?: you aren't ready to sign the contract. A mistake here means that as your data grows or your workflows get more complex, your costs could scale exponentially while your budget stays linear. This is where full negotiation support becomes vital to ensure the technical architecture of the pricing matches your actual use case.
5. Overlooking the "Transparency Gap" in Usage Reporting
How do you know you’re actually using the credits you’re paying for? In many AI contracts, the vendor is the one holding the stopwatch and the measuring tape.
Many enterprise teams sign AI contracts without demanding a seat at the dashboard. You need real-time, granular visibility into how AI credits are being consumed. If the vendor can't provide a dashboard that shows usage by department, user, or project, walk away. Without transparency, you can’t perform a proper software audit later to see if you're getting a return on your investment.

6. Blind Faith in "Unlimited" Bundles
We’ve seen it before with cloud storage, and we’re seeing it now with AI. A vendor offers an "Unlimited AI" tier to get you to upgrade your entire ELA (Enterprise License Agreement).
Here’s the catch: "Unlimited" almost always has a "Fair Use Policy" buried in the fine print. These policies often give the vendor the right to throttle your performance or move you to a higher tier if your usage becomes "atypical." In the AI world, what is "typical" is changing every month. If you’re a CIO, you need to ensure your enterprise contract renewals explicitly define what "fair use" means in quantifiable terms. Otherwise, "unlimited" is just a marketing term for "we’ll bill you more later."
7. Not Negotiating the "Exit Ramp" for AI
AI is moving fast. The "must-have" tool you’re buying today might be obsolete in 18 months. The biggest mistake is locking yourself into a three-year or five-year deal with no flexibility to swap AI SKUs or reduce spend if the technology doesn't pan out.
Your contract should include "exchange rights." If you commit $500k to an AI module that your team hates, you should have the right to move that spend to other core licenses. Vendors hate this because it hurts their "AI growth" metrics, but for a Procurement leader, it’s the only way to hedge your bets in a volatile market.

How to Protect Your Budget Today
The AI hype train is moving fast, but that doesn't mean you have to jump on without a ticket. If you're facing a renewal or a new AI purchase, here’s your checklist:
- Demand a Pilot: Never commit to full-scale AI pricing without a 90-day production pilot to establish your actual "cost per outcome."
- Define the Metric: Is it tokens? Is it "conversations"? Is it "agent credits"? Make sure the metric aligns with how your business creates value.
- Get an Outside Opinion: Vendors are experts at selling AI; you need an expert at buying it. Whether it's Workday, SAP, or Snowflake, these companies have specialized teams designed to maximize their margin on AI. You need someone on your side of the table.
Negotiating AI isn't just about getting a discount; it's about mitigating the massive risks that come with unpredictable, usage-based models. If you're worried about your next big AI spend, don't wing it. Reach out for a contract review and let’s make sure you aren’t overpaying for the hype.
The tech is new, but the game is the same. Stay confident, stay skeptical, and always check the meter.
Need help navigating your next AI renewal? At The Negotiator Guru, we specialize in SaaS negotiation consulting that saves enterprises millions. Contact us today to see how we can protect your bottom line.
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From Fortune 500 giants to fast-growing innovators, TNG has helped clients save 20% – 40%+ on enterprise software contracts — even when they thought it was impossible

Software Audits from Oracle, SAP, Microsoft, and Salesforce: What You Should Know
Getting an audit notification from your software provider can be nerve-wracking, but after reading this you’ll realize this is less likely due to something you’ve done wrong and more likely a tactic to throw you off-course.
If you’ve never been through an audit before, you don’t know what to expect, what to do, or how to make sure it’s over as quickly as possible with minimal expense to your organization.
In this article, we’re going to make all this crystal clear by outlining the audit processes of large enterprise software providers like Oracle, Salesforce, SAP, and Microsoft. There are a few key things you need to take into account that apply to all of these providers: ● Use your contract as your best weapon to defeat audits. Take action if there is any sort of grey space in terms of what is allowed by the supplier.
- Use your contract as your best weapon to defeat audits. Take action if there is any sort of grey space in terms of what is allowed by the supplier.
- You’ll do best if you bring in outside assistance. An expert who has experience guiding businesses through software audits will be a huge help throughout the process.
- You need to control all the information that is shared with the supplier in your own format and spreadsheets.
- The more you are proactively sharing information with suppliers, the less basis they have to bring up an audit.
- Audits are brought forth to customers for many commercial reasons. The more proactive you (the customer) are with sharing information, addressing audit risks in meetings, and creating a paper trail, the less likely your supplier is to audit you.
What is a Software Audit and How Did Your Company Get Selected for One?
A software audit is both a technical and contractual review of your organization’s use of a specific software platform within your IT environment. Most large enterprise software companies like Oracle and SAP have separate departments that focus purely on license compliance audits. These teams look and feel like a shared service organization inside of a large software company. They work with a customer’s account management team to take an aligned, yet separate and distinct, position on behalf of their software company. We will discuss the similarities and differences between these different teams later in the article.
One common similarity across all of these suppliers is that the audits will compare your usage and processes to any specifications, standards, or contractual agreements in place.
Why your company? Why did you get singled out for an audit?
There are three primary operational/contractual triggers for a software audit:
- If there is any sort of consumption-based pricing in your contract;
- If you have any sort of restricted-use license in which you are only allowed to use a license for certain functionality; or,
- If you have recently acquired or divested a company.
While not mutually exclusive, you’ll also find the timing of these audits is very suspect and robotic in nature. The two primary timing triggers are:
- Anytime a large software company needs to identify “unearned revenue” to meet quarterly revenue targets; and,
- A pending contract renewal.
These large enterprise software companies know that it’s very common for their customers to be out of compliance due to the sheer size and scope of their operations. This is augmented by the fact they know anytime there is employee turnover within a customer’s IT organization (especially their “software asset management” department) the company is susceptible to additional compliance risk as a result of lost tribal knowledge of the environment, past internal audits, etc.
Taking all of this into consideration makes it relatively easy to understand why a company like Oracle can confidently predict net new revenue from their existing client base.
In addition to market pressure for additional revenue, a customer’s upcoming contract renewal also serves as an all too common trigger. The general rule of thumb we tell clients is anytime you have a contract renewal coming up nine to twelve months, your supplier is likely to introduce an audit. Your supplier will use this as an opportunity to distract you and gain the upper hand in an anticipated contract negotiation that hasn’t even started.
Suppliers do this because it automatically puts you in a defensive position. Naturally, you will be forced to concentrate on defeating the audit instead of allocating that same time to figuring out what you need for the upcoming contract renewal. They want to gain as much leverage and understanding of your business as possible before going into a renewal negotiation.
The audit is merely a tactic large software providers use to 1) seek out unearned revenue for their company to meet revenue targets and 2) gain the upper hand in your contract renewal negotiations in the hopes of minimizing any revenue loss from your account.
The fact of the matter is that it’s very common for customers to be unintentionally out of compliance. Knowing this, it’s important you know what to do in order to defend your company from what is potentially a very costly situation.
Here’s an example to help illustrate this tactic
By way of an audit, an ERP provider could discover you are misusing the license, giving the supplier reason to charge you a larger fee. Often, sales revenue targets for these audits are about 30% of your annual maintenance/subscription costs.
Let’s say you are spending $1M on core licenses, the audit will likely lead to around $300k in costs on top of that. If you can defeat the audit and keep your core license costs at $1M, then you will be happy and reward yourself for fending off the extra charges. In reality, the supplier didn’t expect the $300k in the first place, the audit was just a way to distract you from putting time and effort into your upcoming renewal negotiation.
It’s a win-win situation for them - if they win the audit, they put the money towards their sales revenue to meet their quota; if they don't, they’ve distracted you from being prepared to save money on your upcoming contract negotiation.
As a sales rep, finding new business is much harder than auditing an existing customer. Suppliers will target big companies because they don’t have perfect internal controls and mistakes are likely to happen.
What to Do When You Get an Audit from Oracle
When Oracle conducts an audit, they engage their License Management Services (LMS) team to run the process.
The audit process often involves installing software code within your secure environment. It is a listener software that will hit your mainframe servers and figure out how many other systems are connected.
This is important because, historically for this on-premise software, you are licensed based on the interconnectedness of both physical and virtual server environments. Your supplier wants to know how much “value” you are getting from their platform so the software they install provides a report of how many systems are interconnected. In a nutshell, the software delivers a report that illustrates when your technical architecture is in non-compliance. This automatically gives Oracle the upper-hand as it forces the customer to validate the information.
The best tactic to defeat this process is to never allow the software in your environment to begin with.
You have the right to refuse listening software within your Oracle contract.
Unless your contract explicitly calls out installing software, tell Oracle that installing software does not comply with your IT security protocols.
Look to determine if you have audit language specified in your contract. The older the contract you have with Oracle, the more likely you have the right to refuse the audit, or to at least not allow the listener software to be installed within your environment.
If this is the case, tell Oracle that instead of installing the software, you will run the audit yourself using their tools and spreadsheets with no software included. This means you are in control of what information is being shared with Oracle. Controlling the information is incredibly important in any audit, especially when suppliers are involved.
What to do when Salesforce Conducts an Audit
Salesforce audits customers when there is a restricted-use license available. When this happens you need to think critically about negotiating with Salesforce.
Salesforce is Software as a Service (SaaS) in the cloud which means they have more ability to freely monitor your utilization of licenses within your environment and can freely audit for misuse.
When you have a Restricted Use License (RUL), you have permission to use the product for a specific business purpose leveraging a certain number of standard and custom objects. Standard objects are modules within the Salesforce platform, such as contacts, accounts, or prospects. A custom object is something that was built by a Salesforce developer specifically for your company.
The license limitations in an RUL are a contractual limitation, not a technical one. A contractual limitation means there is legal language on your Order Form specifying how the license may use a predetermined number of standard/custom objects even though there is a set quantity limitation, technically there is no way to shut off access to other custom objects for that user.
This license is often in place for a subset of users who only need limited access to your tool. For example, an employee who is only viewing the data and not editing it. If this group starts editing objects, it becomes in and of itself a compliance issue.
Salesforce makes it easy for the end-user to accidentally do this without realizing they are in breach of the license. They will use this opportunity to accuse you of using the license incorrectly and request that your organization upgrade these licenses to full users and will seek compensation since the inception of the misuse. Contractually, Salesforce has the right to charge you full retail price for those non-compliant users.
Another time when Salesforce audits come into play is when a client is on a SELA Agreement (Salesforce Enterprise License Agreement).
How do you get around Salesforce RUL audit problems?
The best thing you can do is to establish quarterly check-ins with your account team at Salesforce. Use these meetings to stay on the same page with your account team and create a paper trail that shows how your users are engaging with the platform.
If you are accused of breaching restricted use, but have established quarterly check-ins with a paper trail, you can respond to Salesforce by saying “We met with your team and they didn’t bring anything up during our meeting so why should we believe you now?” Without quarterly check-ins and a paper trail, you get into a he-said-she-said argument.
Often times, the employee in breach of license may have accessed the wrong objects once or twice throughout the life of an account. Salesforce will create an argument that the license has been systematically misused for a long period of time.
We treat this event like a litigation. If you don’t have a paper trail of record, then you have no legal foundation for a defense. When comparing the perspective outcome of the party that has records and the other that does not, the person with records almost always wins in court.
Keep careful documentation about your interactions with Salesforce, and have open conversations about audit and license use risk. This will build a strong foundation and reduce the risk of an audit.
How to Handle an Audit from SAP
An audit by SAP is very similar to an audit by Oracle in that, historically, their licensing model is primarily “consumption-based.” This means your price is based on your company’s revenue, profit, services used, how many suppliers you have, or any number of a series of variables.
This model falls under the concept of Value-Based Pricing and is a subjective assessment of value captured from the utilization of the software.
SAP will use many of the same tactics as Oracle which we’ve outlined above. One thing to specifically note about SAP is that they very frequently introduce audits during merger & acquisition (M&A) announcements. When supporting clients with M&A IT Sourcing, we commonly tell our clients to “get ready for the ‘ransom letter.’” These aren’t our words but rather those of our clients who received notifications from suppliers such as SAP immediately after announcing a large acquisition to the market.
Want to know if you’re susceptible to these ‘ransom letters?’ Take a look at your contract and keep an eye out for any language within your contract that indicates they will “readdress the terms of the contract if you the customer acquires or divests entities during the term of the contract.” If you have this language within your contract you will more than likely receive a similar notification within 1 month of publicly notifying your M&A intent.
In order to defeat an SAP audit, take the same approach we would take with Oracle and then protect yourself moving forward by changing your pricing model to a fixed baseline model that is attached to the reasonably certain variables in your company such as the number of employees.
What to Do When Microsoft Audits You
Microsoft’s audits vary depending on the products and services within your contract. Similar to Salesforce, Microsoft will commonly focus on those licenses that have restricted use. A very common audit for those clients with perpetual Microsoft Office licenses is the 1-to-1 validation of windows desktop licenses to computers within a customer’s environment. Similarly, for those clients with an active Office 365 subscription, Microsoft will look closely at the utilization of subscriptions that are inherently limited in their intended use. This is augmented by a deep analysis of computers and users in your ecosystem to ensure the capabilities being used are properly licensed.
If you are paying for any physical or virtualized servers from Microsoft within an SCE agreement, you will commonly be audited to ensure your consumption metrics are within your contracted allocation.
Frequently with Microsoft, you are leasing the utilization of servers either on-premise or in the cloud. Generally speaking, if you have a physical piece of hardware from Microsoft on-premise, they will almost certainly conduct an audit at renewal time to monitor utilization as part of their “optimization analysis.” In a nutshell, they will try to move you from an on-premise environment to the cloud.
Conceptually this is fine but they will use that audit as leverage to do a lift and shift into Microsoft Azure.
Microsoft Azure is a very attractive product for the sales team because they are heavily incentivized to get your company into the cloud. The market is looking at how Microsoft’s cloud growth is going year after year and as a result, the company wants to increase its usage.
Essentially, Microsoft will audit to try and sell you on Azure. This isn’t necessarily a bad move to make but knowing key motivators will keep you ahead of the game and alleviate any potentially detrimental surprises.
What Happens Next?
If you’ve been audited by any of your enterprise software providers, we recommend bringing in outside help to guide you through the process. Leveraging their experience and expertise will go a long way to mitigate both short and long term risk that can easily rise into the millions.
Don’t solely believe what your account executive is telling you, oftentimes they don’t have all the information needed and they are heavily incentivized by their employers.
Your outside expert will be able to comb through your contracts, identify risks/opportunities, and drive both cost savings and containment. With the proper assistance, you’ll be able to confidently stand your ground and mitigate risks before they are realized.

3 Strategies to Elevate Your Software Supplier Relationship
Over the years, our TNG client family has requested more and more guidance related to managing and elevating their commercial supplier relationships. Within this article, you’ll find our top 3 proven strategies to transform IT supplier relationships from tactical to strategic.
Strategy #1 – Control the Flow
When we say “control the flow”, we’re referring to conversation, meeting, and engagement flow.
When prospective clients reach out to TNG, they almost always have the complaint that the supplier knows more about the “needs” of their organization than they do. This most typically is due to the internal lack of time and/or resources to focus on a specific supplier or digital capability. On the other hand, the supplier’s sales team is laser focused on opportunities to grow their business inside of your organization. Immediately, this creates an unfair environment for all parties involved.
You may be thinking that this only creates an unfair advantage for you, the customer. Well, in most situations that’s true. However, it should also be noted that in some circumstances, the supplier’s sales team may be operating with good intentions and simply answering your internal stakeholder’s demand for attention. In short, when one side knows more than the other, it creates an uncomfortable situation for at least one party.
As our team brings 100+ years of collective experience, we have seen just about everything. Most of TNG’s clients are very well-established companies that have $5 billion+ in annual revenue. These companies typically have a “center of excellence (COE)” and/or a “software asset management (SAM)” team. While the overall intent is good, we typically see only about 10% of our clients leveraging these teams of resources correctly.
What happens to the other 90%? Well, one of the most classic inside sales techniques is for a supplier’s sales team member to establish, chair, and/or participate in a COE with a specific focus on their software and its many digital capabilities. This type of group typically meets either monthly or quarterly and is sold as a way in which the sales team member can “inform” the COE/SAM team members of the “demand” coming from inside of the organization. The reality is that the “demand” is often created by the sales team member who has been pushing a land-and-expand strategy inside of the organization.
The easiest way to not only level the playing field with your software suppliers, but also elevate the relationship from tactical to strategic, is to set up strict governance around the overall engagement. Every supplier engagement is slightly unique, but we recommend focusing on the following core tenants:
- Focus your efforts on your Top 10 software suppliers.
- Develop a steering team of executive IT leaders that are in control of the Digital Capability strategy for your company.
- Develop an internal COE for each of your Top 10 suppliers. The size and scope of them should proportionally match the importance of the supplier’s impact on your business.
- Identify and assign clear roles & responsibilities for each employee team member that is part of their performance objectives.
- Do not allow supplier sales team members to be a member of the core team but rather serve as an invited guest on a routine cadence.
This is about the time where traditional sales team members will indicate that this approach will slow down process, innovation, growth, etc. The reality is quite the opposite when properly set up and managed. The primary outcomes you want to achieve are the following:
- Shift the communication paradigm from outside-in to inside-out. This allows the company to ideate, contemplate, and organically socialize a software roadmap (vs. constantly asking the supplier for a list of their asset inventory).
- Share information with suppliers only when it has been fully vetted and approved as a sanctioned project or approved proof of concept. If done properly, this drastically decreases the chance of duplicate purchasing, split requirements, and/or random unwarranted proof of concepts (that usually turn into shelfware) around the enterprise.
- Allow everyone to be more efficient and structured with their time by eliminating the need for follow-up meetings, etc. In other words, engaging suppliers only after decisions have been made internally by the COE will enable the COE to be treated as a true authoritative entity vs a “check the box” exercise.
- Provide opportunities for suppliers to suggest innovative solutions in a fully committed environment.
We find that our TNG clients save an average of 26% annually by deploying this strategy alone (with our help, of course).
Strategy #2 – Manage Upwards
Anyone who knows the basics of selling understands that the easiest way to make a sale is to identify and influence the decision-maker directly. For large enterprise sales teams who are managing multi-million-dollar contracts, that decision-maker is very often an executive leader within the company. Far too often, we find that organizations provide unfettered access to executives without reason. This, in short, usually enables a very unhealthy and complacent comfort for the supplier sales team that (if not properly managed) rarely produces intrinsic value for the company.
By far one of the most effective ways to elevate your supplier relationship is to set up strategic business discussions between company and supplier executives. The key here is to establish equal representation on both sides and ensure there is proper attention and respect established between both companies. Access to your company’s executives should largely be restricted to these meetings which, where possible, should be set up by the COE/SAM teams mentioned in Strategy #1.
Subsequently, it’s important to know that you can leverage access to your executives to exemplify to a new supplier that any new proof of concept, tool, etc. will be given the highest level of attention and visibility. This means a lot for any supplier (new or existing) as it ensures the right eyes are engaged.
Strategy #3 – Set Realistic Milestones that are Mutually Achievable
Just as employees like to understand their performance objectives for each year, it has been proven by TNG that suppliers who understand what “great looks like” outperform those that are not given clear business objectives. Nearly everyone in the business world understands the concept of milestones; however, the implementation of the methodology is highly inconsistent.
One of the many mistakes companies make when establishing a milestone-based contract is they make the actual milestones either ambiguous or unrealistic. Both are equally as dangerous. Ambiguity allows everyone to be right and wrong at the same time. Unrealistic milestones, if accepted by the supplier, often induce unhealthy behaviors by those chartered with meeting or exceeding the same. It doesn’t take much to set a once “strategic” relationship on a path to implosion with either of these scenarios.
Establishing realistic milestones is important for your suppliers. Everyone, at every age, enjoys accomplishing a goal. It’s important to recognize this fact since at the end of the day, as this is a human reaction, and well, we’re all human.
To learn how to properly set up a milestone plan and/or implement any other strategies mentioned above that drive performance for both the company and the supplier, here’s a hint: It’s not just the supplier that has performance milestones!

