Vance blinked, momentarily thrown off balance. He had expected a fight. By agreeing with him, Julian had instantly disarmed Vance's combative stance. They were no longer adversaries; they were on the same side.

His target tonight was Arthur Vance, a billionaire tech mogul known for his iron-clad defenses and predictable stubbornness. Vance held the controlling shares of a green energy startup that Julian’s client desperately needed to acquire. Every traditional negotiator had failed. They had used logic, numbers, and pressure. Julian knew better. He used the mind.

This was the masterstroke: negative framing and the fear of loss. Psychologically, people are motivated far more by the fear of losing something than by the prospect of gaining something of equal value. Julian had just painted a vivid picture of Vance’s legacy dying of starvation while a competitor thrived.

Vance was quiet for a long moment. He stared into the glowing tip of his cigar. The seed of doubt had been planted. It wasn't Julian pushing the sale anymore; it was Vance's own fear of failure pulling him toward it.

"You're right," Julian said, subtly mirroring Vance’s relaxed posture. He leaned back at the exact same angle. This created a subconscious sense of rapport and trust. "It's not about the money. It's about impact. I actually told my clients that they probably aren't worthy of taking over your vision. I told them you’d never let it go because they don't have your... let's call it, pioneering spirit."

Julian had just deployed the scarcity principle combined with a subtle ego challenge. He made the acquisition seem like an exclusive club that the buyers had to qualify for, while simultaneously challenging Vance's pride.

"How much R&D capital are they actually willing to commit?" Vance asked, his voice lower now.

"Nothing," Julian sighed dramatically, flicking the ash from his cigar. "They just see the massive profit potential and the chance to revolutionize the grid. They don't see the art in it. Frankly, I think it's better if you keep it. Sure, the tech might stagnate without their massive R&D capital, and yes, another competitor might eclipse you in five years because they can't scale fast enough... but at least it will still be yours. Pure. Untouched."