Title: Negotiating to Build Partnerships
1Negotiating to Build Partnerships
- AASHTO Standing Committee on Quality
- Daniel Fodera, FHWA Georgia Division
2Overview
- What is BATNA and why is it important
- How do you clarify your interests and develop a
BATNA - How to think about the other party's interests
and BATNA - Some common negotiation traps.
3What is Negotiating?
- The process of reaching a mutually acceptable
agreement.
4Issues, Positions, and Interests
- Definitions
- Issues are concerns that will be on the table for
explicit agreement during the negotiation - Positions are the parties stands on the issues
- Interests are the underlying concerns that would
be affected by the negotiation outcome.
Interests can include price, relationships,
strategic goal implementation, reputation, etc - Positions Vs Interests
- Incompatible Positions, arent necessarily
Incompatible interests - Interest-driven bargaining leads to greater value
creation and provide more opportunities for
mutually satisfactory deals than position-driven
bargaining. - Identify Differences to create value
- Common ground can help, but different interests
can open unexpected opportunities - Differences may come in forms other than
interests risk tolerance, strategies, etc
5Issues, Positions and Interests
- Job offer example
- An issue is base salary.
- A position is your desired minimum salary.
- The interests underlying your position may
include your need for a good incomebut may also
include status, benefits, new opportunities, and
other needs that might be met in ways other than
salary. - Positions and interests aren't necessarily
identical, interests often include needs in
addition to price. - Interest-driven bargainers see negotiation as the
process of reconciling underlying interests. - When positions are incompatible, dont assume
that our interests must also be incompatible. If
you think "zero-sum"one party's gain must
necessarily be the other party's loss. Bargainers
miss out on creating potential, unanticipated
value.
Clarifying Interests
6Issues, Positions and Interests
- Identify possible issues, positions, and
interests in the following negotiations - Outdoor advertising?
- Proprietary specs on reflective sign sheeting?
- Public involvement on a single project?
- Joint Strategic goals Safety?
- Process Review Recommendations Implementation?
- Performance Measures Public or not?
7Part One Identifying your Interests and
Speculating about the other partys
- Describe a negotiation youre facing in the
future - Describe the issues, your position, and your
interests - Speculate about the other partys possible
issues, positions, and interests
Clarifying Interests
8Leveraging Differences
- (Be alert to new possibilities for creating
value) - Compare interests list differing interests
- Identify additional differences
- Brainstorm ideas for a deal
Clarifying Interests
9Improving Your Negotiating Skills
- Continually assess your own and the other partys
interests before, during, and at the end of a
negotiation. - Without a refined sense of one's own objectives
and trade-offs, it is difficult to formulate a
strategy or judge its success. - Avoid position driven bargaining phrases like,
"So, what's your position?" or "Here's my
position." - Probe beyond the other partys positions by
asking "Why?", "Why not?", and "How could this
idea be improved?", "What would this idea
accomplish for you?" You may discover new
interests that you were not already aware of. - Research the other side's concerns, ask
questions, and listen carefully. Not just during
negotiations, but during any important
conversation with another party.
Clarifying Interests
10BATNA
- Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement.
- What you would most prefer to do if you and the
other party are not able to reach a deal. - Importance of BATNA
- Help you make smarter choices because they remove
the pressure to reach an agreement. - Give you more bargaining power because they help
you quickly identify how a proposed deal stacks
up against your alternatives
Understanding and Developing BATNAs
11BATNA
- Developing a BATNA
- Brainstorm possible alternatives to a
negotiation. - Weigh your underlying interests for each of the
alternatives that you propose cost, time
constraints, relationships, etc. - Determine which alternative is your best
alternative. - Speculating About the Other Party's BATNA
- Consider what the other party's BATNA might be
and what value the other party places on it. - Don't fall into the trap of deciding how the
other party should see it versus how he or she
really views it.
Understanding and Developing BATNAs
12Identify your own BATNA
- Describe a negotiation youre facing in the
future - Ask yourself What will I do if this agreement
cannot be reached? - List Alternatives
- Outline the interests that the alternatives meet
or dont meet. Consider ease, process, time
pressure, relationships, risks - What else could you do to improve your analysis?
- Are the alternatives practical and actionable?
Could they be improved? - Which one is best? The highest value alternative
is your BATNA
Understanding and Developing BATNAs
13Speculate on the other partys BATNA
- Speculate what the other party will do if this
agreement cannot be reached - List Alternatives
- Speculate about the interests that the
alternatives meet or dont meet. Consider ease,
process, time pressure, relationships, risks - What else could you do to improve your analysis?
What can you do to better understand the others
environment? - Bias check have you fairly imagined the other
partys options? - Which one seems best? The highest value
alternative is the other partys BATNA. - What questions can you ask during negotiation to
uncover the other partys interests? List them - Youre ready to begin your negotiation. Remember
a BATNA is the standard against which any
proposed agreement must be measured.
Understanding and Developing BATNAs
14Determining BATNA
No
15Examples of BATNA
- What do you get if you walk away from the deal?
- Another day at another car dealer
- Keep the existing job
16Common Negotiation Traps
- Failing to identify your interests
- Avoid this trap by clarifying your full range of
interests. - In addition to price, consider other interests,
such as maintaining a positive working
relationship focusing on the "spirit of the
deal" (how the agreement will work in practice)
and ensuring that the negotiation process is
perceived as fair and respectful by both sides. - Neglecting your BATNA
- Avoid this trap by developing a BATNAyour best
alternative to a negotiated agreement. - Determine what you would do if an agreement
cannot be reached. - Ignoring the other side's problem
- Avoid this trap by viewing the negotiation from
the other party's perspective. - Speculate about their underlying interests and
BATNA. - Compare your interests with those of the other
party and look for opportunities for mutual gain.
- Overlooking differences
- Avoid this trap by searching for differences in
interests that can suggest new options for
mutually beneficial deals.
Tool Avoiding Common Negotiation Traps
17Common Negotiation Traps
- Introducing biases
- Avoid this trap by not letting cognitive biases
such as role bias (over committing to your own
point of view) and partisan perceptions (painting
your side with positive qualities while vilifying
your "opponent") enter into a negotiation. - Confusing the deal and the relationship
- Avoid this trap by keeping issues surrounding the
deal (such as price and service levels) and the
relationship (such as mutual understanding and
respect) separate. - When you and the other side don't feel that you
need to trade the quality of the relationship for
the terms of the deal, you exchange information
more freely and become more creative and
collaborative in your discussions. - Failing to make appreciative moves
- Avoid this trap by keeping a constructive
dialogue going. - When negotiations stall, solicit the other
party's ideas and perspectives on an issue and
express your appreciation of what the other party
brings to the table. - Ignoring the spirit of the deal
- Avoid this trap by clarifying expectations about
how your negotiation will be implemented. - Determine how you and the other party will work
together, resolve disputes, communicate, and
handle surprises, before the ink has dried on the
contract.
Tool Avoiding Common Negotiation Traps
18Summary
- Issues are on the table for explicit agreement.
- Positions are one party's stands on the issues.
- Interests are the underlying concerns that would
be affected by the negotiation's outcome - Common ground can help, but different interests
can open unexpected opportunities - Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement.
- What you would most prefer to do if you and the
other party are not able to reach a deal. - To develop a BATNA, you should
- Brainstorm and evaluate alternatives to a
negotiation - Determine which alternative is your best
alternative. - Speculate About the Other Party's BATNA