How To Negotiate
Positional Bargaining Method of Negotiation
Whether a negotiation concerns a contract, a family quarrel,
or a peace settlement between nations, people routinely engage
in positional bargaining. Each side takes a position, argues
for it, and makes concessions to reach compromise.
A typical negotiation
The classic example of this negotiating minuet is the
haggling that takes place between a customer and the proprietor
of a second-hand store:
Customer
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Shopkeeper
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How much do you want for this brass
dish?
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That is a beautiful antique, isn’t it? I
guess I could let it go for $75.
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Oh, come on, it’s dented. I’ll give you
$15.
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Really! I might consider a serious offer,
but $15 certainly isn’t serious.
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Well, I could go to $20, but I would never
pay anything like $75. Quote me a realistic
price.
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You drive a hard bargain. $60 cash, right
now.
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$25.
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It cost me a great deal more than that. Make
me a serious offer.
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$37.50. That’s the highest I will go.
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Have you noticed the engraving? Next year,
pieces like that will be worth twice what you
pay today.
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And so it goes, on and on. Perhaps they will reach
agreement; perhaps not.
Arguing Over Positions Produces Unwise Agreements
When negotiators bargain over positions, they tend to lock
themselves into those positions.
- The more you clarify your position and defend it
against attack, the more committed you become to it.
- The more you try to convince the other side of the
impossibility of changing your opening position, the more
difficult it becomes to do so.
Your ego becomes identified with your position. You now have
a new interest in saving face. Any agreement you reach must be
explained in light of your position. When more attention is
paid to positions, less attention is devoted to meeting the
underlying concerns of both parties.
Agreement actually becomes less likely.
Any agreement reached may reflect a mechanical splitting of
the difference between final positions rather than a solution
carefully crafted to meet the legitimate interests of the
parties. The result is usually an agreement less
satisfactory to each side than it could have been.
Arguing Over Positions Endangers Ongoing Relationships
Positional bargaining becomes a contest of will. Each
negotiator asserts what he or she will and won't do. The task
of jointly devising an acceptable solution tends to become a
battle. Each side tries through sheer will power to force the
other to change its position. Anger and resentment often result
as one side sees itself bending to the rigid will of the other
while its own legitimate concerns go unaddressed.
Positional bargaining thus strains and sometimes shatters
the relationship between the parties. Commercial enterprises
that have been doing business together for years may part
company. Neighbors may stop speaking to each other. Bitter
feelings generated by one such encounter may last a
lifetime.
Ask yourself this question: "Is what you are negotiating
about worth the risk to our relationship?"
Being Nice is Not The Answer
Many people recognize the high costs of hard positional
bargaining and try to avoid them by using a more gentle style
of negotiation. Instead of seeing the other side as
adversaries, they prefer to see them as friends.
Rather than emphasizing a goal of victory, they
emphasize the necessity of reaching agreement. In a
soft negotiating game, the standard moves are to make offers
and concessions, to trust the other side, to be friendly, and
to yield as necessary to avoid confrontation.
The following table illustrates two styles of positional
negotiating strategies as either of these two styles.
Soft Negotiation
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Hard Negotiation
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- Participants are adversaries
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- Make concessions to cultivate the
relationship
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- Demand concessions as a condition of
the relationship
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- Be soft on the people and the
problem
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- Be hard on the problem and the
people
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- Change your position easily
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- Disclose your bottom line
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- Don’t disclose your bottom line
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- Accept one-sided losses to reach
agreement
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- Demand one-sided gains as the price of
agreement
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- Search for the single answer: the one
they will accept
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- Search for the single answer: the one
you will accept
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- Try to avoid a contest of wills
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- Try to win a contest of wills
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There is an Alternative!
The answer to the question of whether to use soft positional
bargaining or hard is “neither.”
Change the game!
This method can be boiled down to four basic points that
define a straightforward method of negotiation that can be used
under almost any circumstance. Each point deals with a basic
element of negotiation and suggests what you should do about
it.
- People: Separate the people from the problem.
- Interests: Focus on interests, not positions.
- Options: Generate a variety of possibilities before
deciding what to do.
- Criteria: Insist that the result be based on an
objective standard.
Separate the People from the Problem
Everyone knows how hard it is to deal with a problem without
people misunderstanding each other, getting angry or upset, and
taking things personally.
Negotiators are People First
A basic fact about negotiation is that you are dealing with
human beings. They have emotions, deeply held values, different
backgrounds and viewpoints, and they are unpredictable. So are
you.
Failing to deal with others sensitively as human beings
prone to human reactions can be disastrous for a negotiation.
Whatever else you are doing at any point during a negotiation,
from preparation to follow up, it is worth asking yourself, “Am
I paying enough attention to the people problem?"
Every Negotiator Has Two Kinds of Interests: Substance and
Relationships
Every negotiator wants to reach an agreement that satisfies
his/her interests. That is why one negotiates.
Beyond that, negotiators also have an interest in their
relationship with the other side. It is important to carry on
each negotiation in a way that will help rather than hinder
future relations and future negotiations.
In fact, with many long-term clients, business partners,
family members, fellow professionals, or government officials,
the ongoing relationship is far more important than the outcome
of any particular negotiation.
Ask yourself this question: What is most important to me in
this negotiation?
Relationships Tend to Become Entangled With the
Problem
A major consequence of the “people problem” in negotiation
is that the relationship tends to become entangled with their
discussions of the problem or substance. On both the giving and
receiving end, we are likely to treat people and problem as
one. Anger over a situation may lead you to express anger
toward some human being associated with it in your mind.
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