Rational Bargaining - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Rational Bargaining

Description:

Chapter 1Chapter 11 Chapter 1Chapter 11 Chapter 1Chapter 11 ... dominate in the opening phase of negotiation Pre ... presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:69
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: JeffCa5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Rational Bargaining


1
Rational Bargaining
  • What is meant by rational bargaining
  • John Nash on bargaining
  • Fisher and Ury principled negotiation

2
Bill and Jack
3
John Nash
  • Nash does not look at how you arrive at a
    soulution the focus is the content of the
    solution
  • Nash assumptions
  • Rational bargainers who can compare each others
    desires for various things
  • Bargainers who have equal bargaining skills
  • Bargainers have full knowledge of tastes and
    preferences of the other

4
Bill and Jack
5
Bill and Jack in Negotek
6
Bill and Jack both gain
7
John Nash
  • Nashassumptions may not always hold
  • Zero-sum or non-cooperative behaviour
  • Non-sero sum or co-operative behaviour
  • These match our Red and Blue negotiation
    styles
  • Distributive bargainers (claimers)
  • Integrative bargainers (creators)

8
Benefits of bargaining
9
Are people rational?
  • Kennedy The main problem with assuming
    rationality is that it is at variance with how
    people behave
  • Irrational escalation
  • Fixed pies
  • Anchoring
  • Referent behaviour
  • Fallacy of prominence
  • Overconfidence

10
Fisher and Ury Getting to yes
11
Principled solution
12
Fisher and Urys prescriptions
13
BATNA
  • Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement
  • On which basis will you agree to or walk away
    from a bargain
  • Norwegian BATFOL Beste Alternativ Til en
    FOrhandlings Løsning

14
Negotiators as mediators
15
Streetwise Manipulation
16
Streetwise Manipulation
  • A ploy recognised is a ploy disarmed
  • You need to know the ploys in order to understand
    when they are used against you
  • Ploys may affect power, which again affect what
    outcome you expect

17
Chester L. Karass
18
Chester L. Karass
19
First Seminar on Negotiating Changed My Life
  • When you are about to say yes, say no one more
    time.
  • Learn not to flinch.
  • Leave less on the table and leave others
    satisfied.
  • Start out with low, opening offer.
  • Encourage the other party to open up first.
  • The use of time is important.

20
First Seminar on Negotiating Changed My Life
  • Make concession on a minor issue.
  • Take time to answer questions.
  • Confusion can exist between need and want.
  • Negotiate on small items.
  • Learn when to leave

21
Power and outcome
22
Who has the power?
23
Ploys
  • All ploys belong to one of three main types
  • Dominance
  • Shaping
  • Closing

24
Dominance ploys
  • Negotiators may seek to dominate in the opening
    phase of negotiation
  • Pre-conditions
  • This is non-negotiable!
  • Rigging the agenda

25
Shaping ploys
  • Often used in the middle of negotiations to
    affect what one party may feel is possible
  • This is the final offer
  • Fait-accompli
  • Tough Guy/Soft Guy almost everybody sound in
    body and mind knows of it, so I wonder why it
    still works
  • The Bogey

26
Karass Bogey
  • Let's say you want to landscape and fence your
    backyard in an unusual way. The job is reasonably
    complex due to the layout. You get a bid of
    25,000 from a local contractor. It is neither
    the lowest nor highest bid, but you decide it is
    the most reliable and responsiveyou'd like to do
    business with them.
  • The trouble is you only want to spend 18,000 to
    20,000 for the project. So you try a Bogey. You
    tell the contractor that you really love their
    proposal, but I only have 18,000 to spend. The
    contractor will generally respond to the 18,000
    Bogey by either changing their proposal or
    exploring what alternatives are available.

27
Karass Bogey
  • The U.S. Government uses it when they tell a
    defense contractor to take a closer look at their
    million-dollar proposal because the government
    budget is only 700,000.
  • A school district uses it when it tells its
    architect to redesign the high-school building to
    fit the 22 million limitation imposed by the
    bond financing.

28
Karass Bogey
  • A project manager uses it when she tells her
    technical services department that the
    implementation schedule only allows twelve
    man-days for their portion of the project.
  • An industrial buyer uses it when showing the
    salesperson that the amount budgeted by the
    accounting department is less than what the
    seller bid.

29
Shaping ploys, continued
  • The Krunch you have to do better than that
  • The Nibble if you cant get a dinner, get a
    sandwich
  • Salami ploy
  • Sell cheap, get famous
  • Add-on
  • Limited authority

30
Closing ploys
  • Quivering Quill
  • Yes, but
  • Now or Never
  • Take It or Leave It
  • Split the Difference

31
Karass split the difference
  • I know buyers who use the spilt approach. They
    make a low starting offer, raise it only
    slightly, and then say, "Okay, let's split the
    difference." These buyers know it's hard for a
    salesperson to say no to such a reasonable
    request. The salesperson gets sucked into the
    split and then discovers they give away
    information to justify why a simple split is not
    equitable and use this as an opportunity to
    explore other options.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com