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Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In By: Travis Lorenzen.

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1 Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In By: Travis Lorenzen

2  Research Began 1973 by Harvard and MIT  Authors Joined 1977 Roger FisherWilliam Ury Bruce Patton  Published 1981

3  Types of Negotiators  Positional Negotiation  Principled Negotiation  If they’re not havin’ it  If they’re more powerful  If they use dirty tricks

4  Sees situations as a contest of wills  Will not allow a “loss”  Exhausts people and resources  Harms relationships  About substance  Common in divorces

5  Tries to be the “nice guy”  About relationship  Avoids conflict  Makes concessions  Often exploited and left feeling bitter  Generally works with  Friends  Family  Trusted others  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8TQZ BHszI4 (4:23) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8TQZ BHszI4

6  Holding onto a fixed idea (position)  The easy way, not necessarily effective  Causes blindness to underlying interests  Ex. Plankton trying to steal the patty recipe – misses out on other prosperous food markets  Common in  Daily negotiations  Bartering

7  Not the easiest, but the most effective  Neither hard nor soft  Looks for mutual gains  Decides on issues based on merits  Independent and fair

8  People – separate the people form the problem  Interests – focus on interests not positions  Options – generate a variety of possibilities before making a decision  Criteria – the results should be based on an objective standard

9  Separate the people from the problem  They’re there to solve the same issue  Negotiators have two interests  Substance – Getting to an agreement  Relationship – Working together  Egos become tangled with positions  Lack of willingness to change or compromise

10  Negotiators are emotional too, don’t attack  Emotions cloud the objective  Take a step back, understand both sides  Write it down!  Remove cognitive dissonance  Make the negotiators feel welcome MeThem ConfusedUpset AngryHappy SatisfiedDissatisfied

11  Focus on interests, not positions  Interests motivate  Leave options open  Positions can obscure what you truly want  Already decided on before negotiate  Ask questions. Why? Why not?  Makes other aware you care  Shows want to understand

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13  Landlord vs Tenant InterestsPosition Both want stability3yr lease Well kept accommodationRequire pro lawn care

14  Generate various possibilities before deciding  Difference between deadlock and agreement  Searching for just ONE correct solution limits creativity  Use other experts  Seek mutual gain  Shared interests  Low cost to you high benefit to them  Makes their decision easy  Offers are more attractive than threats  Follow the inventing circle (Next Slide)

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16  Criteria/Objectives insists that results are based on some objective standard  Less relationship threat  Quicker  Higher chance of solution  Both parties defer to a fair solution  Don’t have to give in to each other  (no ego hurt)  Win-Win

17  Options 1. Principled negotiation – its contagious!  They may or may not play 2. 3 rd party introduction Book ex. Invite architect with couple designing home 3. Refer to BATNA  Don’t attack their position  Its counter productive

18  What if they’re more powerful?  Or refuse to negotiate  Best Alternative To A Negotiated Agreement  Keeping options open in case negotiation fails  Outside alternatives  Make the most of your assets  Salary negotiations with a job offer  Have backup or other alternative to give leverage

19  Dirty tricks = one side proposals about procedure of negotiating  DON’T play the game!  Either put up with it  Or respond kindly  Ask questions  Raise issue explicitly  Trust but verify  Don’t use a hammer 

20  Separate the people from the problem!  Show the other side you care  Be open to suggestions and search for new options  Don’t attack  Don’t hard or soft negotiate  Don’t give in  Always have an alternative ready

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