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MGT 459 Negotiation

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Self-assessment. Target or aspiration point ... Self-assessment. Best Alternative To a Negotiated ... Is the negotiation one shot, long term, or repetitive? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MGT 459 Negotiation


1
MGT 459 - Negotiation
  • Instruction 2 Preparing to Negotiate

2
Think About It
  • Its not the plan that is important, its the
    planning. Graeme Edwards
  • He who asks a question is a fool for five
    minutes he who does not ask a question remains a
    fool forever. Chinese Proverb

3
Outline for Instruction 2
  • Assessing yourself
  • Assessing the other party
  • Assessing the situation
  • Basic steps of preparation

4
The Fixed-Pie Perception
  • Some negotiators resign themselves to
    capitulating (soft bargaining)
  • Some negotiators prepare themselves for an attack
    (hard bargaining)
  • Other negotiators attempt to compromise (illusion
    of a win-win agreement)

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
5
Preparing to Negotiate
  • Prepare yourself
  • Prepare to meet the other party
  • Prepare for the negotiation situation

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
6
Planning for Negotiation
  • Unclear objectives makes it difficult to evaluate
    alternatives
  • Weak planning makes for weak arguments
  • Quick and clever negotiating may not prevail

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
7
Self-assessment
  • Target or aspiration point
  • Under-aspiring negotiator suffers from the
    winners curse
  • Over-aspiring negotiator is too tough and
    passes up good deals

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
8
Self-assessment
  • Target or aspiration point (cont)
  • Grass-is-greener negotiator doesnt know what
    he or she wants and engages in reactive
    devaluation

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
9
Self-assessment
  • Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement
    (BATNA)
  • Not what the negotiator deserves
  • Not what the negotiator wants
  • Prevents the negotiator from falling in love
    with any single option
  • Quantified as the reservation point

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
10
Factors that Undermine Preparation
  • Focal points
  • May be arbitrary
  • The not-so-even split
  • Sunk costs
  • Influence both parties
  • Confusing the target point for the reservation
    point
  • Leaves no room to bargain
  • Negotiating along a single dimension
  • Limits potential value of agreement

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
11
Factors that Undermine Preparation
  • Endowment effects
  • Ownership includes psychological value
  • Counterfactual thinking
  • Regret arises from what could have been
  • Violating the sure thing principle
  • If X gt Y under condition 1 and X gt Y under
    condition 2, then X should be gt Y when condition
    is unknown
  • Overconfidence effects
  • Optimism is good, but third party wont always
    favor you

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
12
Factors that Enhance Preparation
  • Identifying alternatives for each issue
  • Identifying multiple equivalent packages of
    offers
  • Understanding your risk propensity
  • Strategic risk Tactics used at the bargaining
    table
  • BATNA risk Alternatives not certain
  • Contractual risk Parties dont/cant always
    honor the agreement

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
13
Assessing the Other Party
  • There may be multiple persons within the other
    party
  • The persons in the other party may not be in
    complete agreement
  • Try to learn the other partys issues, interests,
    positions and BATNA

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
14
Assessing the Situation - I
  • Is the negotiation one shot, long term, or
    repetitive?
  • Do the negotiations involve scarce resources,
    conflicts of ideologies, or both?
  • Is the negotiation of necessity or opportunity?
  • Is the negotiation an exchange or dispute
    situation?
  • Are there linkage effects?
  • Is agreement required?
  • Are there time constraints or other time-related
    costs?
  • Are contracts official or unofficial?

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
15
Assessing the Situation - II
  • Where do negotiations take place?
  • Are negotiations public or private?
  • Is third-party intervention a possibility?
  • Are there conventions in terms of the process of
    negotiation?
  • Do negotiations involve more than one offer by
    each party?
  • Do negotiators communicate explicitly or tacitly?
  • Is there a power differential among parties?
  • Is precedent important?

Source Adapted from Thompson, The Mind and Heart
of the Negotiator, 2005
16
Step 1 Define the Issues
  • Rarely one single issue
  • Identifying more than one issue adds value
  • Each issue will have multiple alternatives
  • Look for packages or bundles of issues

17
Step 2 Define the Bargaining Mix
  • Prioritize the issues
  • Determine which issues are connected

18
Step 3 Define Your Interests
  • Substantive
  • Process-based
  • Relationship-based
  • Intangibles

19
Step 4 Consult with Others
  • Constituents
  • Other side
  • Issues, agenda, ground rules
  • Location
  • Time period
  • Parties involved
  • What if negotiation fails?

20
Step 5 Know Your Limits
  • Target Point Negotiators most preferred or
    ideal settlement
  • Reservation Point Negotiators indifference
    point the deal is worth the same as walking away
  • BATNA Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement

21
Step 6 Assess the Other Party and the Situation
  • Other party
  • Resources, interests, needs
  • Objectives
  • Reputation and style
  • BATNA
  • Authority
  • Strategy
  • The situation

22
Step 7 Develop Supporting Arguments
  • Logical approach
  • Relationship approach
  • Persuasion/pressure approach
  • Customized approach
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