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Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

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Page 1: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Negotiation

Spring 2011

Course convenors:

Ivar BredesenRobert Hartnet

Spring 2011

Course convenors:

Ivar BredesenRobert Hartnet

Page 2: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Negotiationhttp://home.hio.no/~ivar-br/fag/Negotiation/Negotiaton.htm

5 ECTS

7 lectures 11 January – 22 February

2 full days of practical training 3 and 4 March

4 hour closed book exam 22 March

Exam format: Case study + 3 essay questions

Slide 2

Page 3: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 3

Negotiation?

Page 4: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 4

Course objective

The course aims to provide a thorough grounding in the science and practice of negotiation. Various academic disciplines (economics, psychology, sociology, politics, anthropology and mathematics) have researched negotiation from their particular standpoints and much of this material forms the basis for the scientific analysis of negotiation

Page 5: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 5

Course contents

The course in negotiation will address:What is negotiation?

Preparation for negotiation

Debate in negotiation

Prososals and bargaining

Rational bargaining

Ploys and manipulation techniques

Page 6: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 6

Readings: Negotiation

Page 7: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 7

Course structure

The textbooks are international best selling books on negotiation

The texts give examples and theories and these will be further developed in the case studies and essay questions

Page 8: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 8

Behavioural negotiation

There are many ways to study negotiationFisher and Ury: Principled Negotiations

Karass: Ploys

Kennedy: Behavioural (process) model

Negotiation is a lot more than ploys and tactics

Page 9: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 9

What would you do?

You have been very busy at work lately, and this is the last day before your annual holidayYour family has already gone ahead to the

villa you have rented

Your taxi to the airport is waiting outside

Your boss comes in and asks you to work on some customer account over the weekend

Page 10: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 10

Alternative methods of making decicions

Say ”No”

Persuasion

Problem-solve

Chance

Negotiate

Litigation

Arbitrate

Coercion

Postpone

Instruct

Give in

Page 11: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 11

Adam Smith (Book 1, ch. 2)

Nobody ever saw a dog make a fair and deliberate exchange of one bone for another with another dog. Nobody ever saw one animal by its gestures and natural cries signify to another, this is mine, that yours; I am willing to give this for that.

But man has almost constant occasion for the help of his brethren, and it is in vain for him to expect it from their benevolence only. He will be more likely to prevail if he can interest their self-love in his favour, and show them that it is for their own advantage to do for him what he requires of them

Page 12: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 12

What is negotiation?

Give me some of what I want and I will give you some of what you want

The process by which we search for the terms to obtain what we want from somebody who wants something from us

Negotiation is an explicit voluntary traded exchange between people who want something from each other

Page 13: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 13

Negotiation

Negotiation is one of several means available to managers to assist in the making of decisions. It is neither superior nor inferior to other forms of decision-making - it is appropriate in some circumstances but not in others

Page 14: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 14

When do we negotiate?

We negotiate:When we need someone's consent

When the time and effort of negotiating are justified by the potential outcome

When the outcome is uncertain

Page 15: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 15

The four phases

Negotiations involve a four stage process:Preparation – what do we want?

Debate – what do they want?

Propose – what wants might we trade?

Bargain – what wants will we trade

Page 16: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 16

What do you think?

Agree Disagree

1Negotiators should not reveal their true feelings in case their opponents take advantage

2A magrinally acceptable deal is better than no dealat all

3If an opponent gives me an opportunity to takeadvantage discreetly, that`s their problem

4I will renegotiate profitable deals if the othernegotiator say they are in difficulties

5I look after my own interests and leaveopponents to look after theirs

6It is generally beneficial to be open aboutone`s true circumstances

7 I am worried about rejection when negotiating

8If opponents are too soft and can`t look afterthemselves, that`s their lookout

9 A good cause is more worthy than power

10When opponents buckle under pressure Ishould push harder

Page 17: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 17

Red and blue behaviour

Everyone will accept that an outcome will depend on both our own activity and the activity of others

Is the opponent ”red” or ”blue” ?

Red – exploits the other partyProtects oneself - ”I defect not because I want to,

but because I must”

Has dishonest agenda and often seek zero-sum outcomes

Page 18: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 18

Red assumptions

”In a successful negotiation, both parties gain – but one gains more than the other.”

”We recognise that, far from being honest, negotiation is a web of even more delicate lies. A skilled negotiatior will appear friendly if this is the role he considers to be most effective, but will never sacrifice profit for friendship in his business dealings”

Page 19: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 19

Red attitudes

Be aggressively competitive and non-cooperative

Dominate your opponents Seek always to win All deals are ”one-offs” Use ploys and tricks Bluff and coerce Exploit the submissive

Page 20: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 20

Blue behaviour

Blue – wishes to be part of a teamExtreme blue - naive, are often taken

advantage of

Within negotiations – purple behaviour is often recommended

Page 21: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 21

Prisoners dilemma

Prisoner A

Confess Deny

Confess

Deny

Prisoner B

-5, -5 -1, -10

-2, -2-10, -1

Page 22: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 22

Blue and blue

Only about 8 % av players in negotiation games open with blue

Blue is only selected if the other party opens with blue

If the other player selects red, you will respond with red (tit-for-tat)

Players need to trust each other before blue/blue behaviour will emerge

Page 23: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 23

Distributive Bargaining

Page 24: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 24

Single issue negotiation

Vital (but probably unavailable) information is how little is John prepared to accept

There is no obvious solution to this dilemma

Zero sum game – one loses what the other one gains

Lose-lose is a possible outcome too and both strive hard to make the other party moving

Page 25: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 25

Single issue negotiation

In negotiation we start with at least two solutions (yours and mine) to the same problem, and the objective is to end up with only one solution, if we can

What is to be the agreed price for the used car?

A negotiator opens with an entry price, the price he prefers to get. The gap between the entry prices for each negotiator is called the total negotiating range or the haggling range

Page 26: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 26

Negotiating range

The negotiating range implies distance and movement

”After 12 hours of talks, we are still a long way apart” Movement from entry prices are of course inevitable.

No one opens with his final price

Page 27: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 27

Negotiating range

There will always be a limit beyond which you do not want to go – this is the exit price

The exit price will normally lie somewhere in the negotiating range. Unless exit prices at least meet, there will be no agreement

Page 28: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 28

Negotiating range

Page 29: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 29

Settlement range

Page 30: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 30

Disclosing entry price can be dangerous

Page 31: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 31

The Run-down bar Negotiation

Page 32: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 32

The Run-down bar Negotiation

Page 33: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 33

Negotiators surplus

Assume you are willing to sell a property for 150 000 but hope to get 250 000

The difference of 100 000 can be divided between buyer and seller – settlement range

Page 34: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 34

Settlement range

115 is the lowest price the seller will accept and 120 is the highest price the buyer is prepared to pay

Any price in between can be a settlement price

Page 35: Negotiation Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet Spring 2011 Course convenors: Ivar Bredesen Robert Hartnet

Slide 35

Settlement price

Diffence between settlement price and the seller exit price is called sellers surplus, and difference between settlement price and buyers exit price is called buyers surplus.

Sum of buyers and sellers surplus is negotiators surplus