When you're negotiating with people who have studied negotiating, and are proud of their ability to negotiate, you can get ridiculously close to agreement, and the entire negotiation will still fall apart on you. When it does, it's probably not the price or terms of the agreement that caused the problem, it's the ego of the other person as a negotiator. When that happens, Power Negotiators use a simple technique that positions the other person for easy acceptance.
Let's say that you market advertising specialties, such as rulers, with the company's name on it-or custom printed baseball caps and T-shirts. You have made an appointment to meet with the manager at a local appliance store. What you may not realize is that just before you showed up in his office, the manager said to the owner of the store, "You just watch me negotiate with this advertising specialty representative. I know what I'm doing, and I'll get us a good price."
Now he's not doing as well as he hoped in the negotiation and he may be
reluctant to agree to your proposal because he doesn't want to feel
that he lost to you as a negotiator. That can happen, even when the
other person knows that your proposal is fair and it satisfies his
needs in every way.
So, when this happens you must find a way to make the other person
feel good about giving in to you. You must Position for Easy
Acceptance. Power Negotiators know that the best way to do this is to
make a small concession just at the last moment. The size of the
concession can be ridiculously small, and you can still make it work
because it's not the size of the concession that's critical, but the
timing.
So, you might say, "We just can't budge another dime on the price,
but I tell you what. If you'll go along with the price, I'll personally
supervise the printing to be sure that it goes smoothly."
Perhaps you were planning to do that anyway, but the point is that
you've been courteous enough to position the other person so that he
can respond, "Well all right, if you'll do that for me, we'll go along
with the price." Then he doesn't feel that he lost to you in the
negotiation. He felt that he traded off.
Positioning for Easy Acceptance is another reason why you should
never go in with your best offer up front. If you have offered all of
your concessions already, before you get to the end of the negotiation,
you won't have anything left with which to position the other side.
Here are some other small concessions that you can use to position:
1. You're selling a boat, so you offer to take the buyers out and show them how to sail it.
2. If you sell office equipment, offer to inventory their supplies and set them up on an automatic reordering system.
3. You're selling a car, so you offer to include the snow chains.
Hold this price for 90 days in case they want to duplicate this order.
4. You're hiring someone and can't pay him or her what they asked, but you offer to review it after 90 days.
5. Offer forty-five day terms instead of 30 days.
6. Offer three years for the price of two on an extended service warranty.
Remember, it's the timing of the concession that counts, not the size.
The concession can be ridiculously small and still be effective. Using
this Gambit, Power Negotiators can make the other person feel good
about giving in to them.
Never, ever gloat. Never, when you get through negotiating, say to
the other person, "Harry, you know, if you'd hung in there a little bit
longer, I was prepared to do this and this and this for you." Harry's
going to say unkind things about your mommy when you do that.
I realize that in the normal course of business you'd never be
foolish enough to gloat over the other person because you felt you
out-negotiated him. However, you get into trouble with this one when
you're negotiating with someone you know really well. Perhaps you've
been playing golf with this person for years. Now you're negotiating
something. You both know you're negotiating and you're having fun
playing the game. Finally, he says to you, "All right. We're all agreed
on this and we're not going to back out, but just for my own
satisfaction, what was your real bottom line there?" Of course you are
tempted to brag a little, but don't do it. He will remember that for
the next 20 years.
Always when you're through negotiating-congratulate. However poorly
you think the other people may have done, congratulate them. Say, "Wow.
Did you do a fantastic job negotiating with me. I realize that I didn't
get as good a deal as I could have done, but frankly, it was worth it
because I learned so much about negotiating. You were brilliant." You
want the other person to feel that he or she won in the negotiations.
Have you ever watched attorneys in court? They'll cut each other to
ribbons inside the courtroom. However, outside you'll see the district
attorney go up to the defense attorney and say, "Wow, were you
brilliant in there. You really were. True your guy got 30 years, but I
don't think anybody could have done a better job than you did." The
district attorney understands that he'll be in another courtroom one
day with that same defense attorney, and he doesn't want the attorney
feeling that this is a personal contest. Gloating over a victory will
just make the attorney more determined than ever to win the rematch.
Similarly, you will be dealing with that other person again. You
don't want her remembering that she lost to you. It would make her only
more determined to get the better of you in a rematch.
Key points to remember:
1. If the other person is proud of his ability to negotiate, his egotistical need to win may stop you from reaching agreement.
2. Position the other person to feel good about giving in to you with a small concession made just at the last moment.
3. Because timing is more important than the size of the concession,
the concession can be ridiculously small and still be effective.
4. Always congratulate the other person when you get through negotiating, however poorly you think he or she did.
Copyright
|