Title: Seeking a Negotiator, Mediator, or Fact-Finder
1Seeking a Negotiator, Mediator, or Fact-Finder
2Introduction
- Before you Start
- Negotiating
- Establishing equality to other party
- Alternative Dispute Resolution
- Getting to Yes
- Principled Negotiations
- People
- Interests
- Options
- Criteria
3What is a Negotiator?
- A negotiator represents one party to a
negotiation. - Most negotiations in a community are on a smaller
scale (e.g. neighborhood disputes)
4When is a negotiator needed?
- Interactions between and among organizations,
businesses, institutions. - Legal issues
- Settlement of potential lawsuits, insurance
claims, etc. - Labor/management negotiations
- Involve formal contract issues
- Resole grievances or other workplace disputes.
5When is a negotiator needed? (cont.)
- Divorce and child custody
- Estate settlements
- Landlord/tenant disputes
- Very large private purchases
- Any negotiation to resolve a conflict or gain
agreement.
6What is a mediator?
- An impartial facilitator with no link to either
party in a negotiation. - He has no interest in the substance of an
agreement itself.
7Some things mediators ensure
- Each party understands the positions and needs of
the other. - Each party operates in good faith.
- The parties come up with their own solutions
8What is a fact-finder?
- A fact-finder is impartial.
- Fact finding is
- a process by which both parties present arguments
and evidence - to a neutral person
- who then issues a nonbonding report on the
findings - usually recommending a basis for settlement.
9What do fact-finders do?
- Come to some determination in a negotiation.
- Used in internal investigation of irregularity or
illegality - Determine which party to a dispute is
representing the facts accurately.
10Why would you seek a negotiator, mediator, or
fact finder?
11Negotiator
- You don't think you have the skills to negotiate
for yourself. - You need a negotiator to protect your interests.
- The other side has one
- You've already tried to negotiate the issue
yourself and found it too difficult.
12Mediators
- You want to devise your own agreement, but you
don't trust the other party. - To avoid an adversary negotiation.
- The other party can't negotiate fairly face to
face. - Negotiations are stalled
- The other party has requested a mediation.
13Fact Finders
- You and the other party disagree on the facts.
14How do you seek a negotiator, mediator, or
fact-finder?
- Let your fingers do the walking.
- Check the yellow pages
- Look on the internet.
- Consult the Federal mediation and Conciliation
Service. - Check with your state alternative dispute
resolution agency.
15How do you seek a negotiator, mediator, or
fact-finder? (cont.)
- Ask the court system for a referral
- Look for local community mediation programs.
- Check Nearby Universities.
- Ask your local bar association.
16Convincing the other party to seek negotiation,
mediation, or fact-finding.
- Start with the concept of ADR.
- A matter of mutual benefit
- A convincing cost-benefit argument
- Demonstrate good faith by involving the other
party equally
17Convincing the other party to seek negotiation,
mediation, or fact-finding.
- Agree upon the following.
- The particular mediator
- The place
- The time
- Who'll be present
- Who actually has the authority to approve an
agreement - How long you'll continue the attempt before going
to the next step.