BY ELIZABETH MACBRIDE
The modern framework for negotiation is broken: Most of the prevailing
theories see negotiations as battles in which the players act rationally in
their own best interests. If you are lucky, this is a battle you might win.
But what if you reframed the whole idea, to think of a negotiation not as a fight but as a
problem-solving exercise? And one in which emotions can play a systematic and
powerful role?
Strike a powerpose for 2 minutes |
In a new book, Getting (More of) What
You Want, Stanford GSB professor Margaret
Neale and co-author Thomas
Lys challenge
longstanding conventional wisdom on negotiating. They say that when people
cease to see negotiation as a fight, they open themselves up to more creative
solutions and are more able see more situations as opportunities to negotiate.
To
write the book, the duo drew on economics and behavioral economics to
systematically analyze how emotions tend to affect negotiations. Perhaps the
most important effect is that when people are drawn into the battle, they will
sometimes give up too much--even against their own interest--just for the sake
of coming to a resolution.
"Agreements
for the sake of agreeing are not so great, unless of course agreement is all
you care about," says Neale. "But then, if that were the case, you
wouldn't need to negotiate. You'd just accept your counterpart's first
offer."
There are other powerful psychological processes that can affect
negotiations. For instance, merely expecting an outcome, or creating an
expectation in your counterpart, can affect what happens at the table. And Getting
(More of) What You Want leverages
decades of research to help answer questions such as who should make the first
offer and how do you create a packaged offer.
A
"negotiation is about finding a solution to your counterpart's problem
that makes you better off than you would have been had you not
negotiated," Neale says.
In
the business world, the "wins" are almost always defined by dollars.
In Lys and Neale's view, what you value in the deal--what you want--can range
from the traditional view of dollars to control of your time, a better
relationship with your counterpart, or achieving a particular outcome in a
meeting.
Neale
and Lys offer a five-step road map to negotiating:
1. Assess.
Look
at the situation and decide if this is a place where you can negotiate:
"Can I change the outcome in a way that makes me better off?" One of
the questions is whether you have the information you need to help you
construct viable offers and creative packages in the negotiation.
If
the answer to your assessment is yes, then move on to stage two.
2. Prepare.
This
is where most people fall down, Neale says.
"We
are struck by how many smart people act as if negotiation is simply
improvisational theater rather than an interdependent process that requires
planning and preparation, making strategic choices, and maintaining
discipline," write the authors.
The
key is to figure out as much as you can about where you stand and where your
counterpart stands prior to negotiating. "People may have positions, but
those positions may have very little to do with what is driving the issue or
dispute," write the authors.
For
instance, when Neale was asked by an associate dean at a previous post to take
on a program directorship, she discovered that he'd been instructed to do so by
his boss--and that one of the things driving him was that the program was
important to the overall institution. She was able to factor in how to show
loyalty to the school as she negotiated her compensation.
3. Ask.
Conventional
negotiating wisdom holds that "whoever makes the first offer loses the
negotiation."
But
that old-school line of thinking ignores "anchoring." When you make
the first offer--informed by everything you've learned in your preparation
about what you need and what your counterpart wants--you are anchoring the
negotiation closer to where you want it.
There
are ways to make that first offer more appealing: The more objective your first
offer appears, the more value you're likely to get. And precise offers (and
counteroffers) are better than "round numbers." For instance,
research shows that homes with precise listing prices sell for more, on
average, than those with a more rounded listing--even when that rounded figure
is higher.
4. Package.
To
avoid the battle mentality, prepare a proposal that is an entire package. You
can then say, "How can we talk about crafting an outcome to make it work
for us?"
Among
other things, that gets the counterpart committed to the deal.
Packaging
is an especially valuable tactic when you are the party with less power in a
negotiation. If you can work hard enough to find creative sources of value--for
instance, identifying your counterpart's emotional need to save face or to look
like a hero in the eyes of his or her boss--you can design a package that is
more likely to be accepted--and is a better value for you.
5. Adopt
a powerful mindset.
Expectations are
incredibly influential, including your expectations of yourself. Neale suggests
that adopting a powerful mindset at the negotiation table is easier and more
formulaic than you think. Here are some tips to remember when you are sitting
down to begin:
Recall a time when you
had power over another person. Focus on what happened, how you felt, and what
that experience was like.
Think about a time
when you felt physically attractive. "Although it may surprise you,"
the authors write, "research shows that recalling a time when you felt physically
attractive influences your ability to claim value in the negotiation.”
Try power poses. In a
series of studies, researchers have demonstrated that sitting or standing in an
expansive pose, versus a constricted one, can influence your levels of cortisol
(the stress hormone) and testosterone (the power hormone) as well as your
willingness to take risks.
Source:
http://www.inc.com/stanford-business/5-simple-steps-to-better-negotiating.html
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