Kategorier: Alle - trust - fairness - negotiation - strategy

av Mayra Diaz de leon 6 år siden

216

Best Practices in Negotiation

Effective negotiation hinges on meticulous preparation, understanding both your own and the opposing party's goals, and being able to articulate them clearly. A well-prepared negotiator can analyze offers, plan positions, and adapt to the broader context.

Best Practices in Negotiation

Honest and Open vs. Closed and Opaque

say the necessary to create trust

expose by giving all your info.

Best Practices in Negotiation

Learn from the Experience

follow a three-step process
personal diary on strengths and weaknesses

work on your weaknesses

“take a lesson” from a trainer or coach
Plan a personal reflection time
to remain sharp
analyze after every negotiation

Remember rationality and fairness are relative

maintain high perceptions
illuminate definitions of fairness held by the other party

reach to a consensus in standard of fairness

find external benchmarks

suggest that have fair outcomes

question their own perceptions of fairness

clear principles

Savor and Protect your Reputation

work to shape and enhance reputation
being consistent and fair
"tough and underhanded"
verify what the other says, be vigilant for dirty tricks and be guarded of sharing info.
"tough but fair"
difficult negotiation, but rational and fair
essential to have a positive reputation

Actively Manage Coalitions

loose, undefined colaitions
coalitions that support you
communication is essential
coalitions against you
recognize them
divide and conquer

Remember the intangibles

Asking questions, analyzing their behaviors and taking and observer or listener to the negotiation
"see what is not there"

Master the Key Paradoxes of Negotiation

Trust vs. Distrust
level of trust is seen in the process
believe everything
Stick with the strategy vs. New options
distinguish a phantom (or trojan horse) opportunity

real opportunity

important to belive in your intuition
Principles vs. resilient to the flow
a flexible thinking and understanding when the situation changes

distinction between issues of principle

Claiming Value vs. Creating Value
integrative skills for value creation
balance the stages and their transitions
distributive skills for value claiming

Be Willing to Walk Away

there is a poor arrangement or if it's offensive
in mind the goal is to obtain a good outcome
make regular comparison with the target

maintain clear a walkaway point

Identify and Work the BATNA

option that will be chosen if the agreement isn't reached
a good BATNA you can find a good deal

notice the BATNA of the other part

monitor it carefully, show your BATNA is better and show competitors BATNA is weak.

Diagnose the Fundamental Structure

Negotiatiors
negotiations consist of a blend of integrative and distributive elements

in integrative and distributive phases

be careful in the transitioning

analyze what type of negotiation they are facing

choose strategies and tactics

acommodative, avoidance and compromise

Be prepared

Negotiators
replanning the negotiation sequence

overplanning tactics

Plan their statements and positions

recognize and prepare for the effects of the broader context

understanding one's own goals and interests
setting high but achievable aspirations
understand the others party communication

find an agreement

an ability to articulate them
more preparation
numerous advantages

the ability to analyze the others party's offer