If you sell your brainpower for a living — writing code, designing, facilitating, consulting — you've probably felt the suffocating anxiety of justifying every hour on a timesheet. That anxiety isn't a people problem. It's a contract problem.
In this episode, we break down why the two default contract models in knowledge work — fixed price and time & materials — are both structural traps. Fixed price forces you to predict the future on day zero. Time & materials rewards inefficiency and invites micromanagement into your daily life. Either way, you lose.
The escape hatch is a principle called Skin in the Game: engineering your agreements so that if you fail, your client fails — and if you succeed, they succeed right alongside you. Not a motivational buzzword, but a precise contractual mechanism that forces shared risk, shared reward, and total alignment.
We walk through four real-world case studies — a high-stakes multi-million-euro tender, a software agency that replaced 357-page contracts with three brutally simple rules, an a cappella band negotiating a venue gig in Milan, and a team of facilitators breaking through corporate procurement at a 220-million-euro publisher — to show you exactly how to deploy this principle in your very next negotiation.
Extreme Contracts is a framework for negotiation and collaboration in knowledge work, by Jacopo Romei.
Learn more: extremecontracts.com
About Jacopo: jacoporomei.com
This episode includes AI-generated content.