Overview

Here's a crash course on effective negotiations. It covers the basics of negotiating for long-term, mutual gain...exactly the kind you want to engage in as a member of UTSC.

Preparation

For a difficult and/or high-stakes negotiation, use this Negotiation Notes Form. Start filling it out at least a week in advance of the negotiation, and bring it to the negotiation. 

Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement (BATNA)

This is your measuring stick for evaluating any potential agreement. In coming up with your BATNA, consider the following:

  1. What can you do all by yourself to pursue your interests? 
  2. What can you do directly to the other side to make them respect your interests?
  3. How can you bring a third party to the situation to further your own interests?

After considering a set of alternatives to agreement, decide on the one that's most likely to satisfy your interests. Then pursue low-hanging fruit to solidify your BATNA. For example, if your BATNA is to talk to another vendor (like Nexpose vs. Nessus), then you should spend at least 15 minutes investigating Nessus, or enough to find out how well it satisfies your interests: consider price, features, terms, etc. It's rare, but it may turn out that your BATNA is actually better than negotiating in the first place.

Once you have your BATNA solidified, try to identify the other side's BATNA; it will give you an idea of the challenge ahead: to negotiate an agreement that's better than both sides' BATNAs.

Proposals

Go in with three proposals in mind:

Managing Willpower

Willpower is our ability to refrain from carrying out an impulse. In negotiations, you may have to choose not to react with an outburst, to separate your personal feelings from the task at hand, and more.

A few things to know:

Getting to Yes

Positions vs. Interests

In a negotiation or disagreement, people take specific positions, like "I won't go lower than $2000". 

Behind these positions are interests. For every interest, there are several possible positions that serve it.

When faced with positions you can't accept, ask questions and try to understand the other side to get to their interests. 

Also, you need to understand your own interests fully to know where you can be flexible in the negotiation. 

By understanding the other side's interests, you can get them to accept positions they hadn't considered before: positions that still serve their interests, but also serve yours more than their initial position.

Some open questions to help you find interests:

When asking open-ended questions like these, you may get a pause or silence. Let it happen. They may need time to think.

It often only takes one good answer to get the negotiations going, so ask more questions until you get one.

Separate people from the problem

If you have an adversarial relationship with the other side, you must address that separately from the problem you're negotiating over. 

Perception

Emotion

Communication

Invent options for mutual gain

  1. Defer judgment: There is a time for creativity and a time for criticism. First, be creative; do not judge. Once each side has exhausted its ideas, then start narrowing down and improving the best ones. If you get stumped, turn to experts in different fields.
  2. Keep an open mind: There is a huge array of possible solutions. You're trying to find the overall best one, and it often takes both sides to reveal it.
  3. Expand the pie: The entire basis of trade is specialization and comparative advantage. Find options that are low-cost for you but high-value for them, and vice versa. Identify shared interests and try to dovetail differing ones. Consider how you differ on beliefs, values, forecasts, and risk assessment. Consider if-then formulae: if you meet your revenue forecast, then they make an extra concession. If their risk prediction comes true, then you make an extra concession.
  4. Be willing to solve their problems: You may resent it, but you have to help the other side in solving their own problems. You offer a fresh perspective. When you help them solve their problem, you make it easier for them to say "yes".
  5. Keep implementation in mind: Design the deal to minimize your risks; act independently of trust. Build in a dispute resolution procedure for both sides.

Insist on objective criteria

Consider the following criteria where appropriate:

Market ValueTraditionEqual TreatmentEfficiency
What a Court would DecidePrecedentReciprocityCosts
Professional StandardsMutually-selected Mediator's OpinionMoral StandardsScientific Judgment

When both sides can agree upon one or more of the above criteria, they can move forward in the negotiation without resentment.

Build a Golden Bridge

If negotiations have come close to completing but the other side is hesitant, here are ways to break through.

Involve the other side: Ask for and build on their ideas. Ask for constructive criticism. If they still don't respond, offer them a choice between 2-4 options. Let them take credit wherever possible.

Satisfy unmet interests: Look out for any interests you may have missed. Double-check that you're satisfying the other side's basic human needs.

Don't ask for a final commitment until the end: Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed. Go over each issue carefully; more clarity now can save a lot of pain later.

Getting Past No

Tips for more difficult situations

Don't React: Step Back and Assess

When put in an adversarial situation, it's easy to react: to strike back, give in, or break off.

In a negotiation, you need to mentally detach yourself from the moment and take a bigger picture view of the situation. In an especially tough situation you may need to call for a short break to do this.

Bypassing Dirty Tricks

For many of these, the most important step is being aware of the tactics being used against you. If you are unfamiliar with any of these tactics, research until you can immediately identify them. Role play with a colleague in a mock-negotiation if need be.

 

Deliberate Deception

Stay alert, but don't let yourself slip into suspicion or paranoia.

 

Psychological Warfare

Know your own hot buttons and be aware of when someone is pushing them, knowingly or not. You must exert willpower to keep yourself from reacting to them. You may need to pause and say nothing, or pause and then ask about something earlier in the discussion, before it started going downhill. You may have to call for a short break to recover mentally.

Don't get mad. Don't get even. Get what you want.

 

Positional Pressure Tactics

Never make important decisions on the spot.

Use Power to Educate

As a last resort, when you're in the position of power, use it to educate rather than try to force the other side.

 

Resources

Video

Conducting Effective Negotiations - Stanford Lecture by Joel Peterson, chairman of JetBlue (68 minutes)

Fundamentals of Negotiation - Lynda.com course (37 minutes)

Literature