Negotiations “Negotiation” steams from the Roman word negotiari meaning “to carry on business”. It was true for ancient Romans as it is for businesspersons of today that negotiations and business involves hard work. (Hendon‚ Hendon & Herbig 1996) Negotiations are a frequent part of international business. Parties involved in a negotiation face different problems in reaching a successful outcome. When parties have different cultural backgrounds the faced problems becomes even more complex.
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Nissan / Renault Negotiation If you are Renault‚ what would you present as the “Big Picture” (outlook and conditions proposal) for an alliance to the Nissan Board of Directors? Present it and negotiate it with Nissan. Your presentation shall include the points of: 1. Strategic objectives and scope of alliance 2. Analysis and proposal of potential operational synergies (brands‚ product range‚ geographic coverage‚ technology and expertise‚ production capacity‚ R&D‚ engineering‚ QC‚ manufacturing
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Culture refers to the unique characteristics of behaviors and norms that are identified with a certain community (Luthans 2008 p 45). Different communities around the world have different social structures that are governed by rules either borrowed from the community’s history or through religious and secular cults. The cultural norms dictate the way a community integrates with other communities and the level of business relationships that can be accepted in the community. It is therefore necessary
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Essentials of Negotiations 1. Creating Value - Win-Win Negotiation 2. Claiming Value - Staying in Business! 3. Building Trust - Long-term sustainability Negotiations Sandtraps 1. Leaving Money on the table (Lose-Lose Negotiation) 2. Settling for too little (Winnerʼs Curse) 3. Walking away form the table 4. Settling for terms that are worse than the alternative (Agreement Bias) Why People are Ineffective Negotiators - Faulty Feedback - Satisficing - Self-reinforcing incompetence Negotiation Myths Myth
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Negotiation Conflict Styles by Calum Coburn Five Negotiation Styles When to use? What’s the Danger? Self Defense Compete (I win - You lose) (aggressive) - Need to get results quickly. - Not to family or friends “More interested in "winning" rather than reaching an agreement.” - Overpowering relationships “Don’t Cave In!” Accommodate (I Lose - You Win) “The opposite of competing” - When you or your company are at fault - Repairing relationships - Generosity as a sign of weaknesses
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Reflective Essay on Negotiation Negotiation occurs on a regular basis in a daily life and individuals negotiate in business occasions or outside of the workplace. Having superior negotiation skills is conductive to the success in personal life and career development. This essay will indicate that my natural preferences for different influencing tactics‚ comparisons between theory and practice‚ and a personal action plan to improve negotiation skills based on the role-play activity in my class.
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University of Phoenix Material Negotiation Outcome Matrix Negotiation Outcome Type Definition Associated Negotiation Type (distributive bargaining or integrative negotiation) Example Win–win “…win–win situations such as those that occur when parties are trying to find a mutually acceptable solution to a complex conflict” (Lewicki‚ et. al.‚ 2010‚ p. 3) The associated negotiation type of a win-win is integrative negotiation. An example of an integrative negotiation is planning a wedding. Both
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Integrative and Distributive Bargaining Whether a negotiation involves working together toward a goal or working against one another to win‚ each party must use a strategy to reach a solution. The differences of distributive bargaining and integrative bargaining are parallel. The ways in which one method is competitive and the other is cooperative is described and related to a well-known case involving basketball player Juwan Howard. Distributive Bargaining In a competitive bargaining situation
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Negotiation and Conflict Management Final Report “It’s time to go to the next level of my career‚” I told myself a few months ago. Life and life experiences have put me in the right place at the right time to make my daydream a reality. As a natural born citizen of another country and as a newly-married person‚ I have a unique perspective as well as a set of obstacles and opportunities on the road ahead as I pursue my Executive MBA while being in transition. GOALS My current short-term goal
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Chapter 1 Claiming Value in Negotiation 5-Step pre-negotiation framework: 1. Assess your BATNA 2. Calculate your reservation value 3. Assess the other party’s BATNA 4. Calculate other party’s reservation value 5. Evaluate the ZOPA Responding to their initial offer (Strategies): 1. Ignore the Anchor 2. Separate information from influence 3. Avoid dwelling on their anchor 4. Make an anchored counter offer‚ then propose moderation 5. Give them time to moderate
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