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Kathryn Arbuckle John A. Weir Memorial Law Library/ Association of Academic Staff

Let’s Make a Deal: Negotiating in Everyday Life & Work. Kathryn Arbuckle John A. Weir Memorial Law Library/ Association of Academic Staff University of Alberta. Negotiating: Everybody does it. Negotiations are a part of everyday life: Family members Friends & neighbors

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Kathryn Arbuckle John A. Weir Memorial Law Library/ Association of Academic Staff

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  1. Let’s Make a Deal: Negotiating in Everyday Life & Work Kathryn Arbuckle John A. Weir Memorial Law Library/ Association of Academic Staff University of Alberta Neos Mini-Conference

  2. Negotiating: Everybody does it • Negotiations are a part of everyday life: • Family members • Friends & neighbors • Co-workers & employers • Commercial transactions • Some negotiations are formal – Many are informal – Some are not recognized Neos Mini-Conference

  3. Before You Begin What do you value? What outcome do you want? Is there more than one way to fulfill your objective? Know your interests. What is the relationship between the parties? Is it in itself an interest of value? How much harm to the relationship would you accept in order to get what you want? Neos Mini-Conference

  4. Negotiating Strategies High Relationship High Relationship Low Outcome High Outcome ACCOMMODATINGCOLLABORATIVE Lose to winWin – win COMPROMISE Split the Difference AVOIDINGCOMPETITIVE Lose-lose Win at all costs Win – lose Low RelationshipLow Relationship Low OutcomeHigh Outcome Neos Mini-Conference

  5. Avoidance • Lack of interest in the outcome or in the relationship – is there a counter-proposal? • If no counter-proposal –possibly a negative attitude to the outcome and/or the relationship • May also imply a conflicting commitment Neos Mini-Conference

  6. Accommodation • Accommodation as a choice • Patterns in relationships may reflect implicit negotiations: • E.g., Alternating turns • Social Exchange Theory (the fast version) • Continuing relationship over time • Exchanges balance over time • Not always equal – status can matter Neos Mini-Conference

  7. Competition • Approach negotiation as if a zero-sum game: a winner and a loser • Ignores shared interests • “Hard Ball” Negotiating: win at any cost • Can be appropriate in some circumstances • Consider the relationship factor before starting a competition Neos Mini-Conference

  8. Compromise • Split the Difference • How do you know what the “Difference” is? • Use of Fair, External Standards, e.g., valuations or appraisals • First slice, Second pick • Is it a satisfactory outcome? All the time? Neos Mini-Conference

  9. Collaborative Negotiations • Invests in the outcome and in the relationship • Takes time • Requires creativity and open-mindedness • Approaches negotiation as shared problem-solving exercise • Harvard Negotiation Project & Principled Negotiation Neos Mini-Conference

  10. Getting to Yes • Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In, (2nd ed.) Fisher, Ury & Patton • Four Principles for Collaborative Negotiation Method • Applied in wide range of negotiations: personal matters, business matters, international politics & diplomacy Neos Mini-Conference

  11. 1. Separate the People from the Problem • ‘Hard on the problem, soft on the people’ • The emphasis is on building, strengthening and preserving ongoing relationships. • Importance of respect • Deal with perceptions and emotions • Critical: Clear Communication & Listening Neos Mini-Conference

  12. Perceptions & Emotions • Filling in the blanks • What you know about someone • What you think you know about someone • Emotions escalate rapidly – Be wary • Check your baggage at the door • Don’t pick up someone else’s baggage • Focus on interests & relationships Neos Mini-Conference

  13. Communication • Active listening techniques • Paraphrasing & repeating back • Work at building shared meaning • Talking takes time & energy Neos Mini-Conference

  14. 2. Focus on Interests, Not Positions • A position is something you have already decided. • The interest is why you made that decision. • Often more than one way to address the interest. • There are often compatible or shared interests as well as opposing ones. Neos Mini-Conference

  15. 3. Invent Options for Mutual Gain • “Expand the pie before dividing it” • Brainstorming to invent options • Avoid premature criticism and premature closure • Need for solutions that appeal to self-interest of both sides • Look for areas of shared interest • Look for mutual gains Neos Mini-Conference

  16. 4. Fair Standards to Resolve Conflict • Use of fair measures and process • Independent criteria or measures • Market value - Precedent • What a court would decide - Efficiency • Professional standards - Tradition • Scientific judgment - Reciprocity • Equal treatment - Costs • Moral standards - Etc. Neos Mini-Conference

  17. Procedure as Fairness • Importance of fair procedures to resolve conflicts • First Slice, Second Pick • Options include: • Taking turns • Drawing lots (equal opportunity / chance) • Letting someone else decide (arbitration) Neos Mini-Conference

  18. Power & Negotiating • Power imbalance makes negotiating more challenging – not impossible • Power as authority • Power as resources • Power as information • Power as moral / social justice Neos Mini-Conference

  19. Setting a Limit – the BATNA • Using a “Bottom Line” • Fixed or flexible? • Closed or creative? • BATNA – Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement • What is the best available alternative that you have? • Your BATNA has to be known, not speculative Neos Mini-Conference

  20. BATNA • The better your BATNA, the less dependent you are on reaching agreement • To develop your BATNA: • Invent a list of actions to take if no deal is reached • Convert best ideas into practical alternatives • Select the one that seems best • Judge the deal by your BATNA Neos Mini-Conference

  21. Moving to Merit • How to get the other party to focus on interests, not positions • Three basic approaches: • You concentrate on merits (what you can do) • Negotiation “jujitsu” • Do not reject – deflect: ask what the interests are • Look behind their position to the principles • Invite criticism and advice, rather than acceptance or rejection Neos Mini-Conference

  22. Dirty Tricks • Several ways to respond: • Ignore it • Response in kind • Turn it into a negotiation over the process • Recognize it • Raise it explicitly • Question it’s legitimacy & desirability, i.e., make them negotiate the rules of the game Neos Mini-Conference

  23. Remember the Principles: • Separate the people from the problem • Focus on interests, not positions • Invent options for mutual gain • Insist on using objective criteria Neos Mini-Conference

  24. Questions Neos Mini-Conference

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