Improve Your Negotiation Skills By Discovering The One Factor That Separates The Novice From The Professional Negotiator In The Negotiation Game

There is one central idea, one important concept that is critical to understand.

If you have this right, you will be rewarded with profitable, enjoyable and long lasting business relationships in which price is not the only element. If you don't have this right, you will struggle with sub optimal relationships and you will likely end up haggling about price in almost all of your negotiations.

The one thing that matters most is comprehending the interests of the other side in your negotiations; this is an important element taught in negotiation training.

Generally we have a good awareness of our own objectives, needs and desires. When we negotiate with others, we typically set about trying to convince them of our opinion. We think to ourselves that because it makes sense to us, surely it must make sense to our counterparts. The problem with this approach is that it completely disregards the objectives, needs and desires of the other side.

What will it achieve trying to convince someone to do something that they don't believe would be in line with their objectives, viewpoints and wishes?

You will not under any circumstances persuade someone to agree with you by arguing with them, quite the opposite will happen. Because you tell someone that they are wrong and you are the one that is correct, you will force them to defend their stance rather than agreeing with you. Nobody likes to be wrong and if you express to them that they are wrong it will become key for them to defend their position because their personal credibility is on the line.

Not often will you achieve consensus with anyone after you have told them that they are incorrect, you have also managed to paint yourself into a corner. If it was key for you to reach agreement and you do not manage to win the argument, then you will have to sacrifice your own credibility by departing from your 'correct' stance to adopt the argument of your counterpart.

If you want to reach consensus the easy way rather than have your negotiations escalate into a positional argument, here's my suggestion:

Start by making some enquiries, the best of which you can ask will be questions designed to show the interests behind the positions that your counterparts have assumed in the negotiation. Open questions are the best kind of questions to reveal the interest or motivators that support your counterpart's positions.

A good question to can use and simultaneously endorsing your negotiation skills: Why are you negotiating with me / my organisation?

This is very probably the best question to ask at the start of a negotiation. Follow this question by asking your counterpart to elaborate on and to rank the reasons offered in response to your questions. This will give you a prioritised list of their key interests.

Sample Interests:
- Individual: Security, Recognition and Control
- Organisation: Profit, Risk Avoidance and Strategic Fit (Some key factors you would have learned in purchasing training)

Once you have an awareness of your counterparts' key interests it is a good idea to reveal your own interests. Once all the parties to the negotiation have disclosed their interests it will be much easier to identify the areas of common ground and then it is useful to present your argument in the context of how it would serve their interests. This way, you will not have to convince your counterpart that your stance is correct; you will only have to show that your suggested course of action would meet their interests.

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