trick.
NEGOTIATING A RENT CUT AFTER RECEIVING
NOTICE OF AN INCREASE
Eight    months  after   a   Georgetown  MBA     student     of  mine
named   Mishary signed  a   rental  contract    for $1,850/month,
he   got     some    unwelcome   news:   his     landlord    informed    him
that    if  he  wanted  to  re-up,  it  would   be  $2,100/month    for ten
months, or  $2,000/month    for a   year.
Mishary  loved   the     place   and     didn’t  think   he’d    find    a
better  one,    but the price   was already high    and he  couldn’t
afford  more.
Taking   to  heart   our     class   slogan,     “You    fall    to  your
highest  level   of  preparation,”   he  dove    into    the     real    estate
listings     and     found   that    prices  for     comparable  apartments
were     $1,800–$1,950/month,    but     none    of  them    were    in  as
good     a   building.   He  then    examined    his     own     finances    and
figured the rent    he  wanted  to  pay was $1,830.
He  requested   a   sit-down    with    his rental  agent.
This    was going   to  be  tough.
At   their   meeting,    Mishary     laid    out     his     situation.  His
experience  in  the building    had been    really  positive,   he  said.
And,    he  pointed out,    he  always  paid    on  time.   It  would   be
sad for him to  leave,  he  said,   and sad for the landlord    to  lose
a   good    tenant. The agent   nodded.
“Totally    in  agreement,” he  said.   “That’s why I   think   it
will    benefit both    of  us  to  agree   on  renewing    the lease.”
Here    Mishary pulled  out his research:   buildings   around
