Getting To Yes-W
Getting To Yes-W
Getting To Yes-W
Getting To Yes Page 4 of 11 to ask yourself why they have not made that decision. What interests of theirs stand in the way? If you are trying to change their minds, the starting point is to figure out where their minds are now. o Construct the other sides currently perceived choices. How do I want to affect it? What decision do they think you are asking them to make? o Now analyze the consequences, as the other side would probably see them, of agreeing or refusing to make the decision you are asking for. Make a list of interests o Sort out the various interests of each side as they occur to you. o This will enable you to improve the quality of your assessment as you learn new information and to place interests in their order of importance. o Acknowledge their interests. People listen better if they feel that you understand them. So if you want the other side to appreciate your interests, begin by demonstrating that you appreciate theirs.
Getting To Yes Page 5 of 11 The solution to these obstacles o Separate the act of inventing options from the act of judging them. Invent first, decide later. Before brainstorming clarify the ground rules, including the no-criticism rule. o Broaden the options on the table rather than look for a single answer. o Search for mutual gains. o Invent ways of making their decisions easy. Rather than making things difficult for the other side, you want to confront them with a choice that is as painless as possible. Without some option that appeals to them, there is likely to be no agreement at all. Three points about shared interests are worth remembering o Shared interests lie latent in every negotiation. They may not be immediately obvious. Ask yourself: What opportunities lie ahead for cooperation and mutual benefit? What costs would we bear if negotiations broke off? o Shared interests are opportunities, not godsends. To be of use, you need to make something out of them. It helps to make a shared interest explicit and to formulate it as a shared goal. o Stressing your shared interests can make the negotiation smoother and more amicable. Dovetailing different interests o Differences between two parties sometimes create problems, but differences can also lead to a solution. o Many creative agreements reflect this principle of reaching agreement through differences. Differences in interests make it possible for an item to be high benefit to you, yet low cost to the other side. o Ask for their preferences as a way of dovetailing interests. Invent several options all equally acceptable to you and ask the other side which one they prefer. o You then take the option that is most preferable, work with it some more, and again present two or more variants, asking which one they prefer. In this way, without anyone making a decision, you can improve a plan until there are no more joint gains. o In summary, dovetailing is the process of looking for items that are low cost to you and high benefit to them, and vice versa.
Getting To Yes Page 7 of 11 If there is no principled basis for accepting it, you should assess what you might gain by accepting their unjustified position rather than accepting your next best alternative or the benefit of just walking away.
Getting To Yes Page 8 of 11 o Knowing your BATNA protects you against accepting an agreement you should reject and rejecting an agreement you should accept. o What is your BATNA? it is your Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement. That is the standard against which any proposed agreement should be measured. o Your BATNA has the advantage of being more flexible Instead of ruling out any solution which does not meet your bottom line, you can compare a proposal with your BATNA to see if it better satisfies your interests. o The insecurity of an unknown BATNA If you have not thought carefully about what you will do if you fail to reach an agreement, you are negotiating with your eyes closed. Whether you should agree on something in a negotiation depends entirely upon the attractiveness to you of the best available alternative. Making the most of your assets o The better your BATNA, the greater your power People think of negotiating power as being determined by resources like wealth, political connections, friends, or power over subordinates. In fact, the relative negotiating power of two parties depends primarily upon how attractive to each is the option of not reaching agreement. For example, how would you feel walking into a job interview with no other job offers? Think how the talk about salary would go. Now contrast that with how would you feel walking in with two other job offers. The difference is power. o The results of knowing your BATNAs Knowing what you are going to do if the negotiation does not lead to agreement will give you additional confidence in the negotiating process. The greater your willingness to break off negotiations, the more forcefully you can present your interests and the basis on which you believe an agreement should be reached. o Should you disclose your BATNA to the other side? This depends upon your assessment of the other sides thinking. If your BATNA is extremely attractive if you have
Getting To Yes Page 9 of 11 another customer waiting in the next room it is in your best interest to let the other side know. If they think you lack a good alternative when in fact you have one, then you should almost certainly let them know. However if your best alternative to a negotiated agreement is worse than they think, disclosing it will weaken rather than strengthen your hand. o Consider the other sides BATNA. The more you can learn of their alternatives, the better prepared you are for negotiations. Knowing their alternatives, you can realistically estimate what you can expect from the negotiation. If they appear to overestimate their BATNA, you will want to lower their expectations. If both sides have attractive BATNAs, the best outcome of the negotiation for both parties may well be not to reach agreement. o When the other side is powerful Developing you BATNA thus not only enables you to determine what is a minimally acceptable agreement, it will probably raise that minimum. Developing your BATNA is perhaps the most effective course of action you can take in dealing with a seemingly more powerful negotiator.
Getting To Yes Page 10 of 11 Instead of asking them to accept or reject an idea, ask them whats wrong with it. Examine their negative judgments to find out their underlying interests and to improve your ideas from their point of view. Rework your ideas in light of what you learn from them. o Recast an attack on you as an attack on the problem. Dont defend yourself when attacked. Listen to what they are saying and when they have finished, you recast their attack on you as an attack on the problem. o Ask questions and pause. Those engaged in negotiation jujitsu use two tools: They use questions instead of statements, which allows the other side to get their points across and lets you understand them. Silence. If they make an unreasonable proposal or an attack you regard as unjustified, the best thing is not to say anything. Silence creates an uncomfortable situation especially if they have doubts about the merits of what they just said.
VIII. What If They Use Dirty Tricks? (Taming the Hard Bargainer)
Tricky bargaining tactics are in effect one-sided proposals about negotiating procedure, about the negotiating game that the parties are going to play. To counter them, you will want to engage in principled negotiation about the negotiating process. How do you negotiate about the rules of the game? There are three steps in negotiating the rules of the negotiating game: o Recognize the tactic Learn to spot particular ploys that make you feel uncomfortable or indicate deception. o Raise the issue explicitly Discussing the tactic not only makes it less effective, it also may cause the other side to worry about alienating you. Simply raising a question about a tactic may be enough to get them to stop using it. o Question the tactics legitimacy and desirability bringing it up gives you the opportunity to negotiate about the rules of the game. This negotiation focuses on the procedure (or how the two sides will negotiate) instead of the substance of the negotiation.
Getting To Yes Page 11 of 11 Some Common Tricky Tactics o Phony facts knowingly making false statements o Ambiguous authority the other side may allow you to believe they have full authority to compromise when they dont. After they have pressed you as hard as they can and you have worked out a firm agreement, they announce that they must take it to someone else for approval. To counter, insist on reciprocity. All right. We will treat it as a joint draft to which neither side is committed. You check with your boss and Ill sleep on it and see if I come up with any changes I want to suggest tomorrow. o Stressful situations Be aware that the setting might have been deliberately manipulated to make you want to conclude the negotiations promptly or to yield points in order to do so. o Personal attacks use of both verbal and non-verbal communication to make you feel uncomfortable. o The good-guy/bad-guy routine o Threats o Heardhearted partner the other side justifies not yielding to your request by saying that he personally would have no objection but his hardhearted partner will not let him. Recognize the tactic. o A calculated delay frequently one side will try to postpone coming to a decision until a time they think favorable to them and disadvantageous to you. o Take it or leave it. As an alternative to explicitly recognizing the Take it or leave it tactic, consider ignoring it at first. Keep talking as if you didnt hear it, or change the subject, perhaps by introducing other solutions. If you do bring up the tactic specifically, let them know what they have to lose if no agreement is reached and look for a face-saving way to get them out of the situation. Dont be a victim Whatever you do, be prepared to fight dirty bargaining tactics. You can be just as firm as they can, even firmer. It is easier to defend principle than an illegitimate tactic. Dont be a victim.