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Management Side
Week of 16 March 2026: Negotiations--Linerboard

Email Jim at jim.thompson@ipulpmedia.com

By now you should understand the setup I am using for the columns this month. I go to Chat GPT, tell it what role I am going to play and ask it to guide me on how to behave. This week we'll start with me being a linerboard salesperson. My boss has told me, of course, to maximize the price we receive and to reduce our inventory, which sits at 40,000 short tons. By the way, we make 1,500 short tons per day.

Here is what ChatGPT tells me to do:

You've got a classic (and solvable) tension: maximize price while pulling down a heavy inventory position. The trick is segmentation and timing -- not blanket discounting.

Let's turn March into a strong month.

Your Reality Check (Quick Math)

> Inventory: 40,000 tons

> Production: 1,500 tons/day

> March adds ~ 46,500 tons

> Total potential supply pressure in March: ~86,500 tons

If you don't move faster than production, inventory will grow -- and pricing power will erode.

Your mission:

> Protect price where you have leverage

> Strategically accelerate volume where you don't

> Create urgency in the market

March Game Plan (What Top Performers Do)

1) Segment Customers by Price Elasticity (Do This First)

Not all tons are equal.

Tier A -- Price-Insensitive (Protect price)

Who they are:

> High service dependence

> Short on inventory

> Retail/food exposure

> Long-term relationships

> Freight-sensitive buyers

Your move:

> Hold or increase price

> Offer service/security, NOT discounts

> Push contracts forward

Goal: maximize margin tons

---

Tier B -- Negotiators (Trade value, not price)

Who they are:

> Regional converters

> Multi-sourcing buyers

> Moderate inventory

Your move:

> Use structured offers

> Volume-for-time trades

> Freight programs

> Mix upgrades

Goal: controlled volume at acceptable price

---

Tier C -- Price Buyers / Opportunistic

Who they are:

> Inventory heavy

> Spot buyers

> Export traders

> Box plants running light

Your move:

> Move inventory tons strategically

> Use quiet spot deals

> Bundle with logistics

> Time-box offers

Goal: inventory reduction without market collapse

---

2) Create March Urgency (Most Salespeople Skip This)

Right now buyers feel patient. You must change the psychology.

Messaging themes that work in linerboard:

> "Order book tightening"

> "Mill balancing runs"

> "Lead times extending"

> "Strategic tons available for March shipment"

> "April production already allocating"

You are not lying -- you are framing reality.

---

3) Run a Two-Track Pricing Strategy

Track A -- Public Position (Firm)

Your official posture:

> Hold price

> Talk about stability

> Emphasize operating discipline

This protects the market.

Track B -- Private Inventory Relief (Surgical)

Quietly move tons through:

> Geographic arbitrage

> Export channels

> One-time programs

> Freight-equalized deals

> Mix optimization

Rule: Never let the market see desperation.

---

4) Attack the Fastest Inventory Drains

If your goal is March success, prioritize velocity buyers.

High-probability volume targets:

> Independent box plants running below capacity

> Sheet feeders needing quick tons

> Buyers who cut inventory in Q4

> Plants with strong retail exposure

> Export channels if domestic is slow

Daily question: Who can take 500-2,000 tons quickly?

---

5) Pull Forward April Tons (Huge Lever)

One of the cleanest moves:

> "If you can take March shipment, I can protect your April position."

This:

> Reduces inventory now

> Keeps price intact

> Creates customer urgency

> Smooths your production

Top linerboard sellers live on pull-forwards.

---

6) Use Smart Commercial Tools (Not Discounts)

Instead of dropping price, use:

> Freight absorption

> Extended terms (selectively)

> Mix upgrades

> Mill-direct programs

> Guaranteed availability

> Allocation protection

> Volume rebates tied to future months

These preserve invoice price while moving tons.

---

7) Daily March War Rhythm

If you want March to pop, run this cadence:

Every morning:

> Inventory by grade

> Order intake vs production

> Top 20 open opportunities

> Mills running light?

Every week:

> Who can take incremental 500+ tons?

> Where are competitors soft?

> Which customers are short?

> Export arbitrage check

---

8) Early Warning Signals to Watch

Move faster if you see:

> Box plant downtime increasing

> Competitors quoting aggressively

> Lead times shrinking

> Inventory days rising at customers

> Export prices weakening

These mean price risk is rising.

---

What a GREAT March Looks Like

By March 31:

> Inventory down meaningfully (target: <30,000 tons if possible)

> Price flat to slightly up in Tier A accounts

> Spot tons moved quietly

> April order book partially pulled forward

> No visible market panic

---

Your High-Impact Moves This Week

If I were in your seat Monday morning:

  1. Segment top 30 customers into A/B/C
  2. Call every customer who can take March tons
  3. Launch "March shipment priority" messaging
  4. Identify 5 buyers who can take 1,000+ tons
  5. Explore export relief channel
  6. Protect price with your best accounts
  7. Start April pull-forward conversations

So now I told Chat GPT we will turn it around. You are the buyer for a box plant. Business has been running strong--you are cutting up 250 tons per day, 5 days a week. Your incoming warehouse, which will hold 7,000 tons, is nearly empty. You want to keep prices down, of course, but not run out of linerboard.

Now you're in the power seat -- but it's a balancing act between cost control and supply security . With your warehouse nearly empty, the worst mistake would be negotiating so hard you create supply risk.

Let's play this like a top-tier box plant buyer.

---

Your Situation (What It Really Means)

Run rate:

> 250 tons/day × 5 days = 1,250 tons/week

> ≈ 5,000 tons/month

Warehouse capacity: 7,000 tons

Current position: nearly empty (assume <1,000 tons)

>You have less than 1-2 weeks of cover -- that weakens your leverage if suppliers sense urgency.

Your objective:

> Rebuild inventory quietly

> Maintain negotiating credibility

> Avoid signaling desperation

> Lock in price protection

---

>Smart Buyer Strategy for March

1) First Rule: Fix Coverage Before Playing Hardball

With low inventory, your priority is:

> Secure tons first, optimize price second.

Target coverage:

> Minimum comfort: 3 weeks

> Healthy position: 4-6 weeks

> Full warehouse: not necessary right now

> Immediate move:

Secure 3,000-4,000 tons of near-term deliveries quickly.

This restores negotiating power.

---

2) Control the Narrative With Suppliers

You must project calm strength, even if inventory is thin.

>Language that keeps leverage:

Say things like:

> "We're balancing inventory back to normal levels."

> "We're reviewing our Q2 positions."

> "We're evaluating supplier mix."

> "We're planning steady runs."

Avoid saying:

> ❌ "We're getting tight"

> ❌ "We need tons fast"

> ❌ "Warehouse is empty"

Perception drives pricing behavior.

---

3) Use the Buyer's Triple-Leverage Play

>Lever A -- Volume Visibility

Suppliers love predictable demand.

Tell them:

> "We're running consistently at 250 tons/day."

This signals:

> Stable business

> Ongoing demand

> Future volume potential

It encourages them to compete for your tons.

---

>Lever B -- Split the Order Book

Never give one mill full control when inventory is low.

Ideal structure:

> Core supplier: 50-60%

> Secondary supplier: 25-30%

> Swing/spot supplier: 10-20%

This:

> Maintains competition

> Protects supply

> Improves negotiating power

> Prevents allocation risk

---

>Lever C -- Time-Based Negotiation

Right now mills with high inventory (like the seller you described earlier) are vulnerable.

Your messaging:

> "We can take incremental March tons if the program makes sense."

This is extremely powerful.

You are offering:

> Inventory relief

> Run stability

> Immediate volume

---

>4) Tactical Moves for March Buying

> Move #1: Quietly Rebuild Inventory

Goal for March:

> Add 4,000-6,000 tons

> Do NOT fill the warehouse completely yet

> Maintain buying flexibility

---

>Move #2: Fish for Inventory Pressure

Ask questions like:

> "How are your lead times looking?"

> "Any open machine time in March?"

> "Are you seeing steady order flow?"

> "Any opportunities for incremental tons?"

You're listening for softness.

If mills hesitate → they have inventory pressure.

---

>Move #3: Trade Flexibility for Value

Your strongest currency right now is operational flexibility .

Offer:

> Flexible delivery windows

> Mill-direct shipments

> Larger drop sizes

> Quick acceptance of spot tons

In exchange request:

> Freight help

> Price protection

> Rebates

> Future price caps

---

>5) Protect Against the #1 Buyer Risk: Stockout

At 250 tons/day, a disruption hurts fast.

>Set internal triggers:

> 10 days cover → emergency buy mode

> 15 days cover → tighten monitoring

> 20+ days cover → normal leverage returns

Right now you are likely in the 10 - 15 day zone .

---

>6) Watch the Market Signals Closely

As buyer, look for:

>Bearish (good for you):

> Mills talking about "balanced" books

> Short lead times

> Increased spot offers

> Export softness

> Freight incentives appearing

> Bullish (danger):

> Allocation language

> Lead times stretching

> Scheduled downtime announcements

> Box demand spikes

> Containerboard price increase chatter

---

>What a Great March Looks Like for You

By March 31:

> Warehouse back to 3-5 weeks of supply

> No line stoppage risk

> Multiple suppliers active

> Some March tons bought opportunistically

> Price held flat or slightly improved

> Flexibility preserved for Q2

---

>Your High-Impact Moves This Week

If I were the buyer Monday morning:

  1. Lock in 2-3 weeks of immediate coverage
  2. Call secondary suppliers for competitive quotes
  3. Signal willingness to take March incremental tons
  4. Avoid showing urgency
  5. Structure split-supply model
  6. Push for freight/value concessions vs price cuts
  7. Set internal stockout trigger alerts

Happy negotiations! Be safe and we will talk next week.

For a deeper dive, go here.


Special Announcement

I will be offering the following course via Zoom...

The Engineer's Path to Executive Leadership

Starting in mid-April.

Six 2-hour Sessions...

  1. How mills actually make money
  2. The engineer vs executive mindset
  3. Capital projects and financial thinking
  4. Managing people in plants
  5. Strategy in heavy industry
  6. Career strategy for engineers

Maximum 10 participants.

Contact me: jthompson@taii.com

Subject line: Executive Course

Linerboard Negotiation and Market Dynamics Study Guide

This study guide provides a comprehensive overview of the strategic interactions between linerboard sellers and box plant buyers during periods of high inventory and fluctuating supply. It synthesizes the dual perspectives of a high-volume seller managing inventory pressure and a buyer managing low warehouse levels to maintain operational security.

_________

Part I: Short-Answer Quiz

Instructions: Provide concise answers (2-3 sentences) for each question based on the provided text.

  1. How is the "total potential supply pressure" for a linerboard seller calculated for the month of March? The total supply pressure is the sum of existing inventory at the start of the month and the projected monthly production. For a mill with 40,000 tons of inventory and a production rate of 1,500 tons per day, the March pressure totals approximately 86,500 tons.
  2. What characterizes a "Tier A" customer in the seller's segmentation strategy? Tier A customers are price-insensitive buyers who prioritize high service levels, security of supply, and long-term relationships over discounts. They typically have low inventory on hand or specific freight-sensitive needs, allowing the seller to maintain or even increase prices.
  3. Explain the difference between the "Public Position" and "Private Inventory Relief" in a two-track pricing strategy. The public position involves maintaining an official posture of firm pricing and market stability to protect overall market discipline. Private inventory relief involves "surgical" moves to drain inventory through quiet channels, such as export arbitrage or one-time programs, without signaling desperation to the broader market.
  4. Why is "pulling forward April tons" considered a primary lever for sellers? This tactic allows a seller to offer a customer April price protection or availability in exchange for taking shipment in March. This reduces current inventory levels and smooths out production schedules without requiring an explicit price reduction.
  5. What early warning signals indicate that a seller's pricing power is eroding? A seller should watch for increasing downtime at box plants, aggressive quotes from competitors, and shrinking lead times. Additionally, rising inventory levels at customer sites or weakening export prices suggest that market risks are increasing.
  6. What is the "Run Rate" of the box plant described in the text, and how does it impact inventory needs? The plant cuts 250 tons per day over a five-day work week, totaling 1,250 tons per week or approximately 5,000 tons per month. Because the warehouse is nearly empty (less than 1,000 tons), the buyer has less than two weeks of cover, which creates a significant risk of a stockout.
  7. How should a buyer use "Volume Visibility" to gain leverage over a supplier? A buyer gains leverage by projecting stable, predictable demand, such as a consistent run rate of 250 tons per day. This predictability is highly attractive to mills looking for run stability, encouraging them to compete more aggressively for the buyer's business.
  8. What are the primary benefits of a "Split Order Book" for a buyer? By dividing orders between a core supplier, a secondary supplier, and a spot supplier, a buyer prevents any single mill from having full control. This structure maintains competition between vendors, protects the plant from allocation risks, and improves overall negotiating power.
  9. What is meant by "fishing for inventory pressure" during a negotiation? This involves asking strategic questions about a mill's lead times, open machine time, and order flow to detect signs of softness. If a mill hesitates or offers quick availability, it signals they are under inventory pressure and may be more willing to offer concessions.
  10. What commercial tools can a seller use to move volume while keeping the "invoice price" intact? Sellers can use non-discount incentives such as freight absorption, extended payment terms, or "mix upgrades" where a higher grade is provided at a lower grade price. They can also offer volume rebates that are tied to future performance rather than immediate price cuts.

__________

Part II: Essay Questions

Instructions: Use the provided context to develop comprehensive responses to the following prompts.

  1. The Seller's Dilemma: Analyze the tension between the need to maximize price and the necessity of reducing a 40,000-ton inventory. How does the strategy of "segmentation" solve this conflict without collapsing the market?
  2. The Buyer's Balancing Act: Discuss the risks associated with a box plant buyer having only 1-2 weeks of inventory cover. Why must a buyer "secure tons first and optimize price second" in this specific scenario?
  3. Psychological Framing in Negotiations: Compare how a seller uses "urgency" (e.g., "order book tightening") and how a buyer uses "calm strength" (e.g., "balancing inventory back to normal") to influence the perception of market conditions.
  4. Operational Flexibility as Currency: Explain how a buyer can trade delivery window flexibility and larger drop sizes for financial concessions like freight help or price protection.
  5. Market Indicators and Rhythms: Contrast the "Daily War Rhythm" of a seller with the "Internal Triggers" of a buyer. How do these daily and weekly assessments dictate the timing of moves in the linerboard market?

__________

Part III: Glossary of Key Terms

Term Definition

Allocation A situation where a supplier limits the amount of product a buyer can purchase, often due to tight supply or "stretching" lead times.

Box Plant A facility that processes linerboard into corrugated boxes; the primary customer for linerboard mills.

Export Arbitrage The practice of selling inventory in international markets to relieve domestic supply pressure, often used as a "quiet" channel to avoid lowering domestic prices.

Freight Absorption A commercial tool where the seller pays for transportation costs, effectively lowering the cost for the buyer without changing the official invoice price.

Lead Time The amount of time between placing an order and receiving the shipment; shrinking lead times often signal a soft market with high mill inventory.

Linerboard The heavy paper grade used to create the flat facing of corrugated cardboard.

Mix Optimization Adjusting the specific grades or types of linerboard sold to maximize mill efficiency or clear specific inventory bottlenecks.

Price Elasticity A measure of how sensitive a customer is to price changes; price-insensitive customers have "low elasticity."

Pull-Forward A strategy to move future demand (e.g., April orders) into the current month (March) to reduce immediate inventory.

Short Ton A unit of weight equal to 2,000 pounds, commonly used in the North American paper industry.

Spot Buyer A buyer who purchases material on an as-needed basis from the open market rather than through long-term contracts.

Stockout Trigger An internal inventory level (e.g., 10 days of cover) that, when reached, forces a buyer into emergency purchasing mode to avoid a line stoppage.

Tier B Negotiators Regional converters or multi-sourcing buyers who trade volume for value-added programs rather than just the lowest price.

Velocity Buyer A high-volume customer capable of quickly taking large quantities (e.g., 500-2,000 tons) to help a mill drain inventory rapidly.

________

Other interesting stories:


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