Title: Contract Negotiations 2
1Negotiations
2When do we negotiate
- Negotiations during contract drafting or as a
form of dispute resolution in the oil and gas
industry - A dispute is a situation in which two or more
parties perceive each others rights, interests,
duties and obligations on a particular subject
matter differently
3Important to Note
- Resource owners and companies share an interest
in exploiting the resource but have different
motives and may see this from a different vantage
point from each other - It is inevitable that we will hold divergent
opinions as to the true state of things - Consequently, they will need to argue their point
through or succumb to the opinion of the other or
in fact meet at some point along the line, the
middle
4Definition
- The process of stating views, listening to the
others opposing views and thereafter reaching a
consensus on the issues or issue in dispute is
negotiation - Negotiation has been defined as a basic means of
getting what you want from others
5Categories of negotiated agreements
- static agreements A static agreement is a
one-time deal, for example, if you are interested
in buying my house - dynamic agreements These involve extended
performance obligations, collaboration, or
partnering after the agreement is successfully
negotiated
6Negotiation outcome
- Negotiations can be Successful or Unsuccessful
- During every negotiation, the evolving terms and
conditions of a potential agreement are
constantly measured against the alternative of no
agreement - The concept is often stated as the best
alternative to a negotiated agreement, or
BATNA. - This refers to the line at which it becomes more
attractive to walk away from the transaction than
to accept the terms being offered or to continue
trying to resolve the disputes that have emerged
7The lawyer as negotiator
- Can a lawyer in a business negotiation think only
about the legal issues that can arise in the
transaction? - What value does the lawyer add to a business
clients negotiating team? - What are a lawyers weaknesses as a business
negotiator? What can a lawyer do to overcome
these weaknesses? - How does the culture of legal practice in a
particular country affect the functions of the
lawyer in a business negotiation
8 Role of the lawyer-negotiator
- work with the clients technical experts to
assist the client to navigate through the maze of
alternatives to identify the reasonable
compromises that facilitate the final agreement - To understand how the legal issues arising from
the business transaction can be resolved in ways
that advance the clients business object - Bridge differences, solve problems, and assits
parties in moving toward a common understanding. - To remain cognizant that not every negotiation
will have a favorable conclusion. - Ensure negotiation is headed toward an acceptable
end from the clients overall perspective.
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10Customary styles of negotiating
- soft bargaining techniques
- hard bargaining techniques
- the principled negotiation style
11Soft Bargaining
- Negotiator tries as much as possible to avoid
conflict - he places a high value on the relationship
between the parties and thus makes concessions in
order to avoid the escalation of the point of
divergence - He strives to reach an amicable settlement
This sort of negotiation style can be seen in a
situation where a company is in dispute with its
regulator.
12Hard negotiation style
- Take it or leave it kind of bargaining
- The negotiator assumes a position and is
unyielding to any sort of pressure or reasoning
emanating from the other party. - He sees the situation as a contest of wills in
which the strongest survives. It is either his
way or the highway - This method has no concern for future
relationships and often lacks objective
reasoning. - when this style is used, it has the tendency of
exhausting the negotiator, results in a waste of
resources and time, and usually ends with a
breakdown of relationships. - The hard negotiator succeeds where his opponent
is soft.
The hard negotiating style may be encountered
when in dispute with military/authoritarian
governments.
13The hard and soft negotiation styles are
encountered in positional negotiations or
competitive negotiations in which each party,
based on its perceived interest in the subject
matter, picks a position from which it
negotiates.
14The principled negotiation style
- This style is neither hard nor soft and is
designed to deal with issues on their merits as
opposed to a haggling process between the parties
(which usually leaves them exhausted in terms of
resources, time and emotions). - It suggests that mutual gains are looked for and
highlighted whenever possible and, where
interests clash, the resolution in such cases
should be based on an objective and fair
standard. - It is hard on the merits and soft on the parties.
The overall justification of this style is
fairness and mutual gains, which is pretty much
what is understood by consensual dispute
resolution. - In this type of negotiation, neither party is a
winner or a loser invariably, both parties are
winners to a large extent.
15Four principles used when practising principled
negotiation
- A negotiator should understand that he is dealing
with people and there is a tendency for their
emotions to overtake and overshadow their
interests thus, the negotiator should set apart
the people and their personalities from the
actual problem - The negotiator should avoid taking positions or
negotiating on positions rather, he should focus
on the interests of all parties concerned as
opposed to their respective positions - The negotiator should evolve a large range of
possible solutions geared at mutual satisfaction,
before he and his opposite number actually pick
one by which to settle their diffrence - Resolution should be based on objective and fair
criteria
16Negotiation Styles Should be reasonably judged on
the basis of three criteria
- it should produce a wise agreement
- it should be efficient and
- it should improve or at least not damage the
relationship between the parties
A wise agreement is one which meets the
legitimate interests of the parties to the extent
possible, resolves a dispute impartially, is long
lasting in nature and which considers the
interests of all concerned.
17DISADVANTAGES OF COMPETITIVE OR POSITIONAL
NEGOTIATION
- Positional bargaining is a situation where a
party takes an extreme stance in the hope that
the other party will make a concession favourably
to it. - A perfect example of positional bargaining
occurs in the buying and selling of a second-hand
car from an unreasonable private party. - When positional negotiation is used, although
parties are well informed of what the other side
wants explicitly (or in the worst case scenario
have an idea), it rarely produces a wise,
efficient or amicable settlement. - When negotiators take positions, there is a
tendency for them to become engrossed in the
positions and they often stray from their
interest in the subject matter. The more they
rationalise and defend their stance the more they
get sucked into it and the more difficult it is
to change.
18DISADVANTAGES OF COMPETITIVE OR POSITIONAL
NEGOTIATION
- Their ego becomes attached to the position and
the position becomes the argument this way, the
parties main interests becomes sidelined by a
war of wills as opposed to the resolution of the
underlying interests of the parties - A perfect example is when parties argue as to the
number of times the Health and Safety Inspector
visits the offshore platform as opposed to the
quality of inspections per visit
19Major disadvantage of Competitive Negotiation
- It is inefficient and time-consuming Parties try
to increase their chances of a favourable
settlement - by starting from extreme positions the process
continues with each party making ridiculous
concessions calculated at keeping the
negotiations going - Each side offers a position that it knows the
other will counter this invariably leads to a
long time-consuming process and poses a risk of
non-agreement - When positions are taken, the situation becomes
adversarial and there is a high possibility of
one party perceiving the other as inconsiderate
20PRINCIPLES OF PRINCIPLED NEGOTIATION
21Separate the people from the problem
- Put yourself in their shoes
- Do not deduce their intentions from your own
fears - Do not blame the other side for your problem if
you want to discuss a problem you think they
might have caused, identify the problem and then
ask for their opinion - Discuss each others perception
- Find opportunities to act inconsistently with
their perceptions - Give them a part to play in the outcome let them
play a part in the process and give credit
generously for ideas even though emanating from
you - Help them save face for example, by letting them
announce the agreement or rephrasing the
agreement to suit them but containing the same
substance
22Important to negotiators in separating people
from problem
- The negotiator needs to understand the emotions
of all parties including his - Voice out your personal views on the subject
matter talk about your emotions to the other
side and listen to theirs - Allow the other side to let off the steam allow
any pent-up anger or frustration to be aired - The negotiator should never react to emotional
outbursts - A negotiator should use symbolic gestures and
apologise whenever necessary
23Three problems identified in communication during
negotiations
- negotiators may not be talking to each other and
rather are playing to the gallery - negotiators may not be paying attention as they
are thinking of the next step or counter argument
or listening to their principal - negotiators may be misunderstanding each other,
eg when translation is involved
24Solving communication and people issues
- These problems can be solved by active listening,
acknowledgment of what is said by the other
party, speaking comprehensibly, speaking about
problems in terms of their effect on your party
and speaking only when necessary and for a
purpose. - Once the psychological problems have been
identified and dealt with properly, the
relationship between the parties is strengthened
parties can then work together in finding a
mutual solution to their problem. - Separating the people from the problem is a
continuous process lasting the life of the
negotiations and beyond. It is a principle that
should be adhered to whenever there is a conflict
of interest.
252) Disregard positions rather focus on interests
- In order to arrive at a wise solution, one needs
to focus on the interests of the parties as
opposed to their stance on the issues. What
exactly does each party desire? How can this be
resolved amicably? Not, How can we divide the
subject? - Interests define the problems and also define the
positions. The positions become diluted and
influenced by ego, perception, emotions and other
psychological factors thus, it is better to go
beyond the positions taken by the parties and
identify the interests, as within the interests
lie the wisest solutions. - The parties need to communicate properly and
effectively with one another, and share their
interests in the subject matter of dispute. The
only way an efficient and wise agreement occurs
is when all interests are taken into account in
the deduction of a resolution.
26 How Interests are discovered, discussed and
focused on
- when speaking about his interests the negotiator
should give specific examples - should acknowledge everyones interests when
deducing the problem - should lay down his interests and reasoning with
respect to the problems before proffering
solutions and not the other way round - should always look forward and not
retrospectively at what has been said or done - should be constantly thinking of various options
that could satisfy his interests - should be hard on the problem, pursuing his
interests vigorously, and soft on the people,
giving positive support to the other party,
acknowledging their time and effort
273) Deduce options for mutual gains
- It is often misconstrued that the solution to a
dispute or problem is one that can be found along
a straight line between positions or reaching the
middle ground of the subject matter in dispute. - Deducing options for mutual gains has the
advantage of bringing the negotiating parties
closer, looking at the dispute from a different
perspective and espousing the winwin scenario of
a principled negotiation.
28Major obstacles that may hinder the creation of a
variety of options
- Premature judgement
- Trying to find the solution
- Assumption of a fixed pie
- Leaving the other sides problem to be their
problem not yours
29These obstacles can be overcome by the following
techniques
- separate the process of inventing from the
process of deciding - creating a variety of possible solutions
- searching for mutual gains
- inventing methods of making the decision easy.
- Brainstorming, where parties come together to
invent all sorts of possible options with the
prior knowledge that these are only options and
not concessions. The best options are selected,
improved and deliberated upon by all parties at a
future date. - Look at the problem from the perspective of
different experts, inventing agreements of
different strengths, - identifying shared interests mutual gains can be
deduced
30EXECUTIVE NEGOTIATION
- This negotiation is usually used in dispute
resolution where the dispute is taken out of the
hands of the direct disputants and passed on to
their higher-level managers to deal with - This process is often used in the resolution of
conflicts of a personal nature, principles or
differences in the modus operandi of the
different organisations or government agencies
involved
31Senario and problem questions