09 Multiple Party Negotiation Flashcards
1
Q
Dynamics of multiparty negotiations
A
- Number of parties
- Social complexity
- Procedural complexity
- Strategic complexity
- Informational and computational complexity
2
Q
What should effective groups do?
A
- Test assumptions and inferences
- Share all relevant information
- Focus on interests, not positions
- Explain the reasons behind one’s statements, questions, and answers
- Be specific - use examples
- Agree on what important words mean
- Disagree openly with any member of the group
- Make statements, then invite questions and comments
- Jointly design ways to test disagreements and solutions
- Discuss undiscussable issues
- Keep the discussion focused
- Do not take cheap shots or otherwise distract the group
- Expect to have all members participate in all phases of the process
- Exchange relevant information with nongroup members
- Make decisions by consensus
- Conduct self-critique
3
Q
Key stages of multilateral negotiations
A
-
Prenegotiation stage
- characterized by many informal contacts among the parties
-
Formal negotiation stage
- structures a group discussion to achieve an effective and endorsed result
-
Agreement phase
- parties select among the alternatives on the table
4
Q
Prenegotiation Stage
A
-
establish participants
- who is to be included/excluded
- who is likely to help parties achieve/miss their goal
-
form coalitions
- identify common objective
- determine own scope of influence
- will you lead the charge or are others willing to trumpet the common cause?
- will you recognize if other participants have retreated behind you?
- how will you control the communication of information?
- appreciate the coalition as a fragile and imperfect design
-
define group member roles
- task/relationship/self-oriented
-
understand the costs and consequences of no agreement
- knowing your BATNA, perceptions, and biases
- learn the issues and construct an agenda
5
Q
Formal Negotiation Stage
A
-
appoint an appropriate chair/facilitator
- neutral and objective
- use and restructure the agenda
-
ensure diversity of information and perspectives
-
Key process steps
- collect thoughts and composure before speaking
- understand the other person’s position
- think of ways both parties can win
- consider the importance of the issue
- remember parties will likely work together in the future
-
Key process steps
-
ensure consideration of all available information
-
The Delphi Technique
- an initial questionnaire, sent to all parties, asking for input
-
Brainstorming
- define a problem and generate as many solutions as possible without criticizing any of them
-
Nominal group technique
- Brainstormed list of solutions ranked, rated, or evaluated
-
The Delphi Technique
- manage conflict effectively
- review and manage decision rules
-
strive for a first agreement
- it is difficult to achieve everything all at once
-
manage problem team members
- be specific about problem behaviors
- describe problems as team problems
- focus on behaviors the other can control
- wait to give constructive criticism
- keep feedback professional
- verify the other has heard and understood
6
Q
Agreement Stage
A
-
select the best solution
- single alternative or combined alternatives in a package
-
develop an action plan
- including steps, objectives, timelines, resources, responsibilities
-
implement the action plan
- Important: it needs to follow the established guidelines
-
evaluate outcomes and the processes
- critical to examine the effectiveness
-
group chair or facilitators steps in moving toward successful completion:
- move the group toward selecting one or more of the options
- shape and draft the tentative agreement
- discuss whatever implementation and follow-up needs to occur
- thank the group for their participation, hard work, and efforts
- organize and facilitate the postmortem
7
Q
Reasons to use a third party
A
- emotional level between parties is high
- communication between parties is poor or has broken down
- stereotypic views of each other’s position and motives
- behavior is negative
- parties have serious disagreements about what information is necessary, available, or required
- parties disagree on the number, order, or combination of issues
- differences in interests appear to be irreconcilable
- values differ greatly and there is disagreement about what is right
- there are no established procedures or have not been followed
- there is an impasse
8
Q
Use of third party help
A
-
Arbitration
- arbitrator takes control of shaping and determining the outcome
- often used in business conflicts (labor relations, contracts)
-
Mediation
- a mediator does not solve the problem or impose a solution; just helps the parties to negotiate more effectively
- provides a procedure and rules of conduct
-
Process consultation
- counselors help parties improve, communication, reduce emotionality and increase negotiation skills
9
Q
Advantages and disadvantages of third party help
A
Advantages
- parties gain time to cool off
- communication can be improved
- asks parties to prioritize issues
- emotional climate can be improved
- time frame can be reestablished
- escalating costs can be controlled
- parties may learn from third party’s actions and use them in the future
- may actually lead to resolution and disclosure
Disadvantages
- parties may lose face (incompetence or incapable) if someone is called in
- loss of control of the process, outcome, or both