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Some questions answered in Chapter 14

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What type of planning needs to occur prior to a negotiation meeting? ... Arrogant. Strong need to be liked. Honest. Gullible. Passive. Tolerate ambiguity. Controlled ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Some questions answered in Chapter 14


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Some questions answered inChapter 14
  • What is negotiation selling? How does it differ
    from nonnegotiation selling?
  • What items can be negotiated in selling?
  • What type of planning needs to occur prior to a
    negotiation meeting?
  • How should a seller set objectives?
  • How can the negotiation session be effectively
    opened? What role does friendly conversation
    play?
  • What negotiation strategies and tactics do buyers
    use? How should negotiators respond?
  • What are the salespersons guidelines for
    offering and requesting concessions?

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Think of the last time you were engaged in some
kind of negotiation
  • As you think about the negotiation that took
    place, ask yourself if you were successful in
    meeting your objectives for the session.
  • Were you successful as a negotiator? Was the
    other person?

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What can be negotiated?
From Exhibit 14.1
  • Inventory levels the buyer must maintain.
  • Inventory levels the seller must keep on hand to
    be able to restock the buyer quickly.
  • Details about the design of the product or
    service.
  • How the product will be manufactured.
  • Display allowances for resellers.
  • Advertising allowances and the amount of
    advertising the seller does.
  • Sales promotion within the channel of
    distribution.
  • Delivery terms and conditions.
  • Retails and wholesale pricing points for
    resellers.

5
Which items reflect your personality and traits
on an average day?
From Exhibit 14.2
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Add 1 point for each green itemsubtract 1 point
for each red item
From Exhibit 14.2
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Planning for the negotiation session
  • Choosing the location
  • Making proper time allotment
  • Setting negotiation objectives
  • Choosing and managing the negotiation team
  • Recognizing individual behavior patterns
  • Controlling information

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Comparing buyer andseller price positions
Exhibit 14.3
SO Buyers opening price
ST Buyers target price
SM Buyers maximum price


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Will bargaining be harder or easier?
Exhibit 14.3
SO Buyers opening price
ST Buyers target price
SM Buyers maximum price


SO Sellers opening price
ST Sellers target price
SM Sellers minimum price
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Your opening position
  • Assume that you have been invited to a 3rd
    interview with Camadon next Friday. You know that
    if Camadon is going to hire someone, the job
    offer always comes in the 3rd interview. You also
    know they like to negotiate with their new
    hires.
  • What will be your target position, opening
    position and minimum position for your salary?
  • Camadon has also developed positions for your
    salary. How will you discover these positions
    before next Friday?

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Preparing for negotiation
  • If you were a salesperson preparing for an
    upcoming negotiation session, who from your firm
    would you get involved in the planning?
  • Who would you select to be on your team?
  • What criteria would you use?

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Preparing for negotiation
Assume that you are a member of a student group
that is getting ready to negotiate with the
student government association. Your group wants
to host a job fair and you want to convince the
student government group to provide funding.
Develop an agenda for this meeting.
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Mini-max strategy
Using the mini-max strategy for negotiation
planning, the negotiator must answer four
questions. Which of the following is one of those
questions?
  • What is the most I can offer without getting
    laughed out of the room?
  • What is the maximum I can accept?
  • What is the minimum I can ask for and not get
    laughed out of the room?
  • What is the minimum I can give away?
  • None of the above.

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Conflict-handling behavior modes
Exhibit 14.5
Assertive
Competing
Collaborating
Compromising
Cooperative
Uncooperative
Avoiding
Accommodating
Unassertive
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Competing mode
Collaborating
Competing
Compromising
Avoiding
Accommodating
  • Assertive and uncooperative
  • Tend to pursue their own goals at the expense of
    the other party.
  • Like to be surrounded by yes men.
  • Look for a win for themselves, a loss for the
    other person.

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Avoiding mode
Collaborating
Competing
Compromising
Avoiding
Accommodating
  • Unassertive and uncooperative
  • Do not attempt to fulfill their own needs or the
    needs of others.
  • In essence, they refuse to address the conflict.
  • They do not strive for any agreement.

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Accommodating mode
Collaborating
Competing
Compromising
Avoiding
Accommodating
  • Unassertive but highly cooperative
  • Tend to neglect their own goals in order to
    satisfy the concerns of the other party.
  • They may seek a win-lose agreement where they are
    the losers!
  • Display excessive generosity and easily yield to
    anothers point of view.

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Compromising mode
Collaborating
Competing
Compromising
Avoiding
Accommodating
  • These people are in the middle in terms of
    assertiveness and cooperativeness.
  • Attempt to find a quick, mutually agreeable
    solution that partially satisfies both parties.
  • The agreement reached does not usually maximize
    the satisfaction of the parties.
  • Will often say Lets just split the difference.

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Collaborating mode
Collaborating
Competing
Compromising
Avoiding
Accommodating
  • Assertive and cooperative
  • They seek to maximize the satisfaction of both
    parties and reach a truly win-win solution.
  • Collaborators have the motivation, skills, and
    determination to really dig into an issue or a
    problem and explore all possible solutions.

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Opposites
  • The exact opposite of the competing mode for
    resolving conflict is the avoiding mode.
  • True
  • False

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Thinking it through
What if you do everything in your power to
establish a win-win attitude with the buyer team,
but they insist on viewing the negotiation as a
series of win-lose maneuvers? Since they wont
play by win-win rules, should you?
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Negotiation strategies
  • Asking for a small add-on or extra concession
    after the contract has been signed is called
  • lowballing
  • nibbling
  • browbeating
  • shaving dollars
  • whittling

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Has anyone used any of these win-lose
negotiation strategies on you?
  • Emotional outbursts
  • Suddenly start crying, gets angry, or looks sad.
  • Lowballing (nibbling)
  • Reaches agreement, then adds additional items.
  • Good guybad guy routine
  • One person is very aggressive then the second
    person is nice.
  • Budget limitation tactic
  • Calls for you to meet their budget ceiling.
  • Browbeating
  • Attempts to undermine anothers confidence.

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Guidelines for making concessions
  • Get the buyers demands and opening position
    first.
  • Always get a concession in return for yours.
  • Concessions should gradually decrease in size.
  • Dont be afraid to decline to make a concession.
  • All concessions offered are tentative.
  • Be confident and secure in your position.

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Guidelines for making concessions
  • Dont accept the first attempt at a concession.
  • Help the buyer see the value of your concessions.
  • Start the negotiation without preconceived
    notions.
  • If you realize you made a mistake, say so.
  • Dont easily agree to lets split the
    difference offers.
  • Know when to stop.
  • Use silence effectively.

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Any questions about the terminology?
  • Accommodating mode
  • Adaptive planning
  • Agenda
  • Ambush negotiating
  • Avoiding mode
  • Brainstorming session
  • Browbeating
  • Budget bogey
  • Budget limitation tactic
  • Collaborating mode
  • Competing mode
  • Compromising mode
  • Concession
  • Emotional outburst tactic
  • Face
  • Good guy-bad guy routine
  • Lowballing
  • Minimum position
  • Negotiation
  • Negotiation jujitsu
  • Nibbling
  • Opening position
  • Sneak attack
  • Target position
  • Win-lose negotiating
  • Win-win negotiating
  • Win-win not yet negotiating

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