A little over a year ago, I was boarding a flight when
a couple began to occupy the two adjacent seats. The wife got
into her seat, but her husband, Jimmy (who looked as if he was
held together by the medical equivalent of baling wire), couldn't
manage to sit. It was obvious he was in serious pain.
Sometimes you want to negotiate when
you don't feel as if you're in a position of power. In this situation,
I was a lowly airline passenger on a short flight. I derived power,
however, from the fact that there was nothing to lose and everything
to gain. It was in the husband's interest to sit in a roomier,
more comfortable seat. The flight attendant had an interest, as
well; unless she could get Jimmy in a seat, the plane could not
take off. It took a little work, but I was able to convince the
flight attendant to move Jimmy to the only empty seat in first
class. No one lost face, everyone's interest had been considered,
and the negotiation worked well for all. As a provider of negotiation
training for corporate clients, I felt pleased to see benefits
resulting from some of the techniques I teach.
Resolving, Managing and Preventing
Conflicts Whether the predicament is commercial lenders
who are stressed out by the direction to "never lose a deal because
of the rate," department chiefs contending over budget issues, or
human resources directors wrestling with issues of diversity -
the use of good negotiation skills can resolve, manage, and, most
importantly, prevent conflicts. According to the Rolling Stones,
"You can't always get what you want." The question now becomes,
"How many of the stakeholders can get what is in their interests?"
If a business is to succeed in today's climate, everyone must
be prepared to negotiate to arrive at favorable results.
Pillars of Negotiational Wisdom Negotiating is an art
practiced by virtually everyone; it is a craft practiced by few.
There are many techniques to making negotiation work. If you pay
careful attention to the following factors, which I call the Eight
Pillars of Negotiational Wisdom, you should find that negotiating,
with all the stakeholders who are clamoring for your attention,
will yield more efficiency, less stress, and greater long-term
success.
Be Conscious of
the difference between positions and interests.
If you can figure out why you want something - and why
others want their outcome - then you are looking at interests.
Interests are the building blocks of lasting agreements.
Be
Creative. Anyone can do things the same old
way. Using brainstorming techniques, listening to outlandish proposals
and opening up to unanticipated possibilities expands agreement
opportunities. If you respond with new ideas and do the unexpected,
you can open doors to far greater gains than when you behave predictably.
Creativity can make everyone look good.
Be fair.
If people feel a process is fair, they are more likely
to make real commitments and less likely to walk away planning
ways to wriggle out of the agreement. Sometimes things are helped
when a neutral, external authority issued to measure fairness
- a dictionary, a lab test, or an academic article, for instance.
Be prepared
to commit. You shouldn't
make a commitment unless you can fulfill it. Your commitment isn't
worth much unless the parties to the negotiation are Drop-Dead
Decision-Makers. Moreover, commitment is not likely to result
unless all parties feel the process has been fair.
Be an active listener. Communication
takes place when information passes from a source to a receiver.
If you spend all of your listening time planning how to zing the
other party, then, when they finally stop talking, you haven't
heard them. Focus on what others say, both on their words and
their underlying meaning. This will help you understand the interests
upon which agreement can be based. When your response makes it
clear that you've really been listening (and after the other party
gets over the initial shock), they, too, may be more prepared
to listen. Active listening can change the rules of the game and
raise the level of civility in the negotiation. Be conscious of
the importance of the relationship. Most of your negotiation is
with repeaters (people you run across time after time such as
your spouse and kids). The same is true for borrowers, directors,
and representatives of affiliated institutions. If you understand
the relative priority of the relationship, it can be easier to
know when giving on a particular point may yield short term costs
but long term gains.
Be
aware of BATNAs. BATNA stands
for the Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement.
Your BATNA is the situation you want to improve by negotiating
with a given party or set of parties. If you can improve things
on your own, you don't need to negotiate. But BATNA is not your
bottom line. It is a measure of the relative value of negotiating
a particular issue with a particular party -- or whether you can
fall back on better alternatives.
Be Prepared.
In order to negotiate effectively, efficiently, and
wisely, it is crucial to prepare. Your job is not to outline a
perfect, total solution; that would be a positional approach.
Preparation means studying the interests and BATNAs of every possible
party. It means understanding the short and the long term consequences
you use and the substantive results you pursue. Doing your homework
can save a lot of time.
Enhancing Negotiation Skills Enhancing
your negotiating skills is
an important element of personal development. Helping your colleagues
and staff to negotiate better will save time, reduce stress, and
increase productivity. The changing cast of stakeholders means
that successfully negotiating the minefields in the business world
can be crucial to your own health and success. **