06 Relational Aspects of Negotiation Flashcards
1
Q
Context of Relationships
A
- How can relationships affect the negotiation context
- Time: they have past, present and future
- Opportunity to learn: negotiation is often not a way to discuss an issue, but a way to learn more about the other party and increase interdependence
- More than distribution: resolution of simple distributive issues has implications for the future
- Emotions: distributive issues within relationships can be emotionally hot
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Finish line: negotiating within relationships may never end
- parties may defer negotiations over tough issues in order to start on the right foot
- issues on which parties truly disagree may never go away
- Problems: in many negotiations, the other person is the focal problem
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Preservation: In some negotiations, relationship preservation is the overarching negotiation goal
- parties may make concessions to preserve or enhance the relationship
2
Q
Parties in relationships
A
- more cooperative and empathetic
- craft better quality agreements
- perform better on both decision making and motor tasks
- focus their attention on the other party’s outcomes as well as their own
- focus attention on the norms that develop about that they work together
- are more likely to share information with the other and less likely to use coercive tactics
- are more likely to use indirect communication about conflict issues
- are more likely to use compromise or problem-solving strategies for resolving conflicts
3
Q
Reputation
A
How other people remember their past experience with you
Why is it important?
- perceptual and highly subjective
- an individual can have a number of different, even conflicting reputations
- shaped by past behavior
- influences by an individual’s personal characteristics and accomplishments
- develops over time; once developed, it is hard to change
- negative reputations are difficult to repair
4
Q
Trust
A
Willingness to put yourself in a position of vulnerability
Why is it important?
- tendency to approach new relationships with high levels of trust
- trust tends to cue cooperative behavior
- individual motives also shape trust and expectations
- of the other’s behavior (cooperation vs. competition motivated)
- trustors, and those trusted, may focus on different things as trust is being built (framing issues)
- the nature of the negotiation task can shape how parties judge the trust (distributive vs. integrative)
- greater expectations of trust lead to greater information sharing
- greater information sharing enhances effectiveness in achieving a good negotiation outcome
- increases the likelihood that negotiation will proceed on a favorable course over the life of a negotiation
- face-to-face negotiation encourages greater trust development than negotiation online
- negotiators who are representing other’s interests, rather than their own interests, tend to behave in a less trusting way
5
Q
Justice
A
Can take several forms (distributive, procedural, interactional)
6
Q
Relationship Repair
Difficulties and Issues
A
- the more severe the breach of trust, the more difficult the repair
- if past relationship was positive, it is easier to repair
- the sooner the apology occurs after the breach, the more effective it is
- apologies should be presented by an actor with personal responsability
- apologies are more effective if the breach was an isolated event
7
Q
Relationship Repair
Diagnostic Steps
A
- What might be causing any present misunderstanding, and what can I do to understand it better?
- What might be causing a lack of trust, and what can I do to begin to repair trust that might have been broken?
- What might be causing one or both of us to feel coerced, and what can I do to put the focus on persuasion rather than coercion?
- What might be causing one or both of us to feel disrespected, and what can I do to demonstrate acceptance and respect?
- What might be causing one or both of us to get upset, and what can I do to balance emotion and reason?
8
Q
Discussion: Emotions
A
- while some boil, others freeze-up
- you need to understand, channel, and learn from your emotions
- at an early stage of the negotiation, it is possible to predict which pairs will eventually reach agreement
- emotional intelligence is an important asset
- negotiations are inherently stressful
- lack of control, unpredictability, and absence of feedback
9
Q
Discussion: Liars
A
- few people go through a day without lying
- attempts to mislead are common in negotiations
- there are presumed giveaways but we are not good lie detectors
- there are no universal telltale signs of lying
- how to protect against deception in negotiaions?
- before: research background, set special ground rules
- during: look for potential signs, ask questions in different ways or to which you know the answer, take notes, trust but verify
10
Q
Discussion: Exploding Offers
A
- expiration dates are common
- ultimate hard-bargaining tactic
-
characteristics:
- power asymmetry
- “test of faith”
- restricting choice
- lack of consideration and respect
- lack of good faith
- has one of two functions:
- force quick acceptance by ending or
- restrict the ability of the recipient to comparison-shop
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potential solutions:
- try to create value (provide sensible counteroffers) or
- fight fire with fire by embracing (“provisionally” accept and then break the deadline)