Business Negotiation: Strategy & Practices
Business Negotiation: Strategy & Practices
Business Negotiation: Strategy & Practices
Practices
Course Focus
• We all negotiate on a daily basis. On a personal level, we negotiate
with friends, family, landlords, car sellers and employers, among
others. Negotiation is also the key to business success. No business
can survive without profitable contracts. Within a company,
negotiation skills can lead to your career advancement. Through this
course, you’ll learn the strategies and skills that can lead to
successful negotiations in your personal life and in business
transactions.
Basic Steps of Successful Negotiation
• Prepare: Plan Your Negotiation Strategy
• Negotiate: Use Key Tactics for Success
• Close: Create a Contract
• Perform and Evaluate: The End Game
Preparing for Negotiation
Can you go into Burger King or Pizza
Hut and get a bargain?
• is it position-based or interest-based?
• Traditionally, negotiations were very much positional.
• I take one position.
• I want a high price.
• You take the other position, low price.
• And then we fight over whether the price is a high price or low price
or maybe something in the middle
The Pizza Case
Position-based, as we just discussed, versus interest-based. My personal favorite
is dividing the pie could be called claiming value, as opposed to enlarging the
pizza, which is creating value. And so somehow you have to cut through all this
verbiage and keep in mind the central issue, which is what type of negotiation
am I involved with, is it dividing the pie or enlarging the pie, and that will help
shape your strategy. If it's a negotiation that creates opportunities for building a
larger pizza, then you'll want to spend a lot more time searching for mutual
interests that enable you to do this.
3. A Dispute Resolution or Deal Making
Negotiation?
Key differences between dispute resolution
and deal making
Dispute Resolution Deal Making
Backward Looking Forward Looking
Position Based Interest Based
Adversarial Problem Solving
Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)
• Arbitration
• Mediation
• Negotiation
Decision Making
Prescriptive
(Normative, decision
tree)
Descriptive or behavioral decision making
• Heuristics
We as human beings use certain rule of thumbs to simplify our decision
making process, these rule of thumbs are called heuristics.
- Though it has got a lot of benefits, it also can create serious error. In
order to avoid that there must be a checklist while going with your
heuristics
Psychological tools in negotiation
• Mythical Fixed Pie Assumptions
• Anchoring
• Overconfidence
• Framing
• Availability
• Escalation
• Reciprocation
• Contrast Principle
The Key Elements of Creating Contract
• Is there an agreement?
• Is there consideration?
• Is the agreement legal?
• Must the deal be in writing?
Is there an agreement?
• This will require to imply your common sense. If there is an offer and
its subsequent acceptance then we can term it to be of an agreement.
Example case
On Monday, a store offers to buy TVs from a manufacturer. Delivery of the TVs are to be made to the
store. On Wednesday, the manufacturer accepts the offer but tells the store you have to pick up the
TVs at our plant.
On Friday, the store says, okay, we'll pick up the TVs at the plant. But then after this series of
communications, the price of TVs drops and the store no longer wants to go through with the contract
or the agreement, if it is a contract. So that's my question to you. Actually two questions,
The first question is, is there a contract here when the manufacturer sues the store?
And second, if there is a contract, when was the contract made? Monday, Wednesday, or Friday?
So please write down your answer
The answer is that yes there is a contract. There was an offer by the store. There was an acceptance by
the manufacturer.
But then a little bit tougher question is, when did the acceptance occur? Wednesday or Friday? And
the answer to that question is Friday, because the Wednesday communication from the manufacturer
was not an acceptance, because they changed the terms of the offer. So legally, what the
manufacturer is calling an acceptance, is really a counter offer back to the store.
By counter offering the manufacturer has killed, the initial offer. And now it's up to the store to accept,
which the store did. The precise analysis is manufacturer makes offer on Wednesday, stores accept on
Friday.
Is the agreement legal?
• For example, let's say that I agree to sell you a truckload of cocaine.
And you don't deliver. So I sue you in court. And the question is, is this
a legal contract? Well, of course not. We've got an offer and an
acceptance. We've got an agreement. Presumably we have
consideration. I agree to give you the cocaine, you agree to pay for
it. But the court, clearly, will not enforce that agreement, because it is
not legal. And in fact, after throwing us out of court, probably the
local police will grab us, and arrest us, and we'll end up in criminal
proceedings.
Does the contract need to be in writing?
Example Case
• You have a job offer from a company in New York City. So you negotiate an employment contract with that company in New York
City. And you discuss all the details of the contract. Let's say you have quite a bit of furniture, for example, and one of the questions
is will the company pay for shipping your furniture from Mumbai to New York City. Which is going to be fairly expensive, let's say
$10,000. And the company says to you, no problem we promise that we will pay to cover your shipping costs. So you negotiate the
deal, you then put the deal in writing. However, you forget to include the promise to pay for your shipping costs.
• So you ship your furniture to New York, you move to New York. You start your work, your job, and then you bring your bill for the
shipping costs to the company, your bill for $10,000. And the company says to you, oh, yes, we remember we absolutely made that
promise. However, things are a little tight here right now, and we're not going to cover the shipping bill.
• Now, let's assume that you eventually sued the company for the $10,000 shipping bill. The question is, is that an enforceable
contract or not?
• Now remember, the company clearly made the promise. And they'll admit they made it if you sue them in court. So the question is,
can you enforce the promise even though it was not in your written contract? Yes, you can enforce the promise and recover your
$10,000, or no.
• The answer to that question depends on something called the parol evidence rule. And here's a concise statement of the rule. The
rule seeks to preserve the integrity of written agreements, by precluding the introduction of evidence about contemporaneous
or prior declarations to alter the meaning of written agreements. what that means in plain English is once you reduce your contract
to writing, then the agreement is limited by the four corners of that writing. Courts In determining what your obligations are,
and what the other side's obligations are, are only going to look at the writing. They're not going to try to unravel the negotiations
and what was agreed to or not agreed to during the weeks or months of the negotiations. They're gonna focus on that written
agreement. Whatever you said prior to that written agreement, whatever you said at the same time as that written agreement,
aren't going to count. It's just whatever is in the written agreement.
• There are a number of contract terms that are implied by law. And so, it's very important that you have a basic
understanding of what goes beyond what you've put into writing. In other words, it's important that you not only
understand what you've expressly agreed to, but what the law automatically includes in your contract.
• Here's an example.
• Let's say we have Sam, who owns a small grocery store. And Clyde walks into the store, buys a large bag of potato
chips, which unknown to either Sam or Clyde were spoiled. Let's say Clyde becomes seriously ill after eating the chips,
and sues Sam for breach of warranty. Is Sam liable?
• We're going to assume here that the nationally known firm that processed and packaged the chips is not named as a
defendant. So the only question is whether the owner of the small grocery store is liable or not.
• Now let's make certain assumptions here. Let's assume number one that it's very clear that Clyde's illness resulted from
the spoiled potato chips, no other cause. Let's assume that Sam kept the potato chips in a safe area, at a proper room
temperature. And there was no sign of tampering with the chips.
• Let's assume that the chips were sold within the expiration date
• Let's also assume Sam did not spot check the potato chips for quality. But, that's probably unreasonable to ask somebody
who runs a little grocery store to test the quality of the chips.
• So, here we have a contract. It's a contract that was not negotiated. It's just a standard sale contract. Commodity contract.
• What is your decision? Would Sam, the owner of this small grocery store be liable or not in this situation?
• The answer to the question is yes, Sam would be liable. Because there is implied in a sales contract when somebody in
business, in this case the business of selling potato chips. Sells those chips to a customer, it is implied that there is a
warranty that the chips are of fair, average, ordinary quality. And they weren't of good quality in this case because they
were spoiled. So even though there's no written agreement where Sam expressly promised high quality chips, the law is
going to step in and imply that the goods have to be of good quality.
• So that's an example of the implied kind of term that the law will add to written contract.
Thanks