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Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Lesson
23
ASSESSING
THE NEGOTIATING STYLE
Quotation:
Anger
can be an effective negotiating
tool.
Mark
McCormack (1930
- ) U.S. sports agent,
promoter, and lawyer.
You
must never try to make
all the money that's in a
deal. Let the other fellow
make some money
too,
because
if you have a reputation for
making all the money there is in a
deal, you won't make
many deals. J.
Paul
Getty (1892 - 1976) U.S.
oil magnate.
Quotation:
War is
the trade of kings.
John
Dryden (1631
- 1700) English poet, playwright, and
literary critic.
We
will discuss the following
points in this lecture.
· The
best negotiation styles to
use for preserving
cooperation.
· The
best negotiation styles to
use for self-protections.
· The
negotiation skills of the best
negotiators.
· Some
ways of assessing your own
preferred negotiation style and
those of your clients,
associates,
team,
and other disputant
team.
· Tactics
that can be used to develop
win-win solutions to conflict.
Dual
Concern Model
Dual
Concern Model
High
Obliging
Integrating
Conc
Compromising
ern
for
other
Low
Avoiding
Dominating
Low
Concern
for self
High
Masochism:
Self-misery
Limitations
of Dual Concern
Model
Research
in the field of negotiation is highly
complex and situations vary
significantly.
Dual
concern model assumes that no disputant
has negative orientation,
which is not the case.
Sometimes, a
disputant
may be sadist and get
pleasure by harming others.
Negotiation
style is an overall strategy
not just a tactic.
85
Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Dual
Concern Model
Very
Obliging
Obliging
Integrating
positive
and
masochistic
Compromising
Conc
ern
Masochistic
Avoiding
Dominating
for
other
Dominating
Very
Sadistic
and
and
negative
masochistic
Sadistic
masochistic
Very
negative
Concern
for self
Very
positive
Masochistic:
inviting abuse or
misery
The
Parable of the two sisters
and the orange
The
situation
Two
sisters go to the Fridge at the same time
for an orange. There is only
one orange and a dispute
arises
between
them as who will take the
orange.
Avoiding
(Low concern for self and
other)
The
sisters do nothing, since they
can't decide. Two weeks
later, there are two
dissatisfied sisters and
the
orange
got stale in the
fridge.
The
orange is wasted and there
is a cost of disposing it
off.
Dominating,
or competing (High Concern
for self and low concern
for other)
The
sisters agree to an arm-wrestling
contest, with the winner
taking the orange. Naila
wins the orange and
Ayesha
loses. Naila juices the
orange and drinks it and
Ayesha is unhappy.
The
skin of the orange is wasted and
there is a cost of disposing it
off for the tax payers,
which is better
than
wasting the whole
orange.
Obliging,
or accommodating (Low Concern
for self and high concern
for other)
Naila
says, "You take the orange,
Ayesha". Naila replies, "No,
no, dear, you take
it. I want you to have
it."
Naila
rejoins, "I couldn't possibly, Ayesha
Bahan. You take it."
Unless one or both sisters
can recover from
their
case of terminal etiquette, the result
will be same as for
avoiding.
Another
possible outcome is that one
sister relents and takes the
orange, an outcome similar to
that for
dominating,
except that animosity may be
less.
Compromising
(Moderate Concern for both self and
other)
The
sisters agree to divide the
orange in half. Naila juices
her half and has a
tiny glass of juice. Ayesha
grates
the skin
from her half orange
for a cake (except she
doesn't have quite enough).
The result is two
half-
satisfied
sisters and a half-wasted
orange.
Taxpayers,
have about the same bill for
waste disposal that we had
for the dominating/competing
outcome.
86
Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Integrating,
Collaborating, or Problem-solving (High Concern
for both self and
other):
Naila
asks Ayesha, "What do you
need an orange for?" Ayesha
replies, "I need the skin for my
cake."
(Integrating
always includes an investigation of the
disputants' underlying needs.)
Naila smiles and
says,
"Then
there is no problem. I just want a
glass of juice." The result
is two satisfied sisters and
a fully utilized
orange.
The
taxpayers have less waste to
dispose of. (Now, if we could
only find use for the
seeds!)
Considerations
involved in using five negotiation
styles
While
deciding which negotiation style
would be the most suitable
for a particular situation, there are
certain
points
which need to be considered,
such as
1.
Usefulness in inducing cooperation (motivate
cooperation)
2.
Self-protectiveness (high degree of
motivation to protect one's
own interests)
3.
Integrating is good especially
when there is power
imbalance
4.
Effective interests analysis is a
must for using integrative
style
5.
Creative problem solving for
meeting the underlying needs of
all the disputants
6.
Mutual and unilateral styles:
Integrating and compromising require
mutuality.
Integration
style not possible in some
situations
There
are certain situations when integrating
style can not be adopted
e.g.
1. A relatively
powerful disputant does not want to
cooperate
2. A disputant is
disempowered due to lack of
information
3.
When one disputant is forced to
litigation
4.
When there is constraint of time or
limited mental energy
5.
Integrating style is difficult
for those who have
limited cognitive
capacities.
Tactics
Used In Integrating
Expert
integrators are familiar with
five common tactics that
support the integrating style of
negotiation
(Rubin,
Pruitt, & Kim 1994
173-79)
1.
Expanding the pie: it involves making the
resource pool larger
2.
Cutting costs: it is the converse
expanding the pie: it relies on cost
reduction to increase the net
revenues
available
for distribution
3.
Nonspecific compensation: It refers to
giving the other disputant "unrelated"
compensation for giving
up
something
of value
4.
Logrolling: it is simply the exchange of
items that have values
personal to the disputants
5.
Bridging: It is responding to underlying
interests rather than to positions. In essence,
every effective
integrating
negotiation is a bridging
process.
Integrating
style is the best style but
it has its own limitations.
It assumes that all
disputants are rational
and
in actuality
some disputants may be
irrational and masochistic.
These limitations of individual
disputants can
influence the
choice of negotiation
style.
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