This book provides a comprehensive reference guide to negotiation and mediation. Negotiation skills can be learned--everything from managing fairness and power and understanding the other side and cultural differences to decision-making, creativity, and apology. Good negotiation is best approached from a multidisciplinary perspective that combines the best of theory and practice.
Foreword by Roger Fisher, author of the bestselling Getting to Yes Diagnostic test to help readers determine their own-and their opponent's-negotiating style Lum was named Director of the Center for Negotiation and Dispute Resolution at the University of California Hastings College of Law, the largest law school negotiation center in the country
"A must-read for lawyers, business people, and other professionals wanting helpful negotiation advice." -Robert Mnookin, author of Bargaining with the Devil: When to Negotiate, When to Fight "As social creatures, we are always trying to influence each other. Russell Korobkin’s book lays out five techniques that anyone can use to ensure you get what you want and leave enough on the table so others win, too. The book moves quickly, is full of examples, and provides step-by-step actionable instructions to help you negotiate anything. Everyone needs this book." -Paul J. Zak, author of Trust Factor: The Science of Creating High-Performance Companies From leading negotiation expert Russell Korobkin comes this revelatory guide that distills the keys to bargaining into five simple-yet-sophisticated tools that anyone can master. The Five Tool Negotiator stands apart in a category saturated with breezy, self-help volumes as a compulsively readable and highly researched must-have for anyone looking to improve their bargaining skills. Nationally renowned UCLA law professor Russell Korobkin distills insights drawn from his decades of studying and teaching the keys to successful negotiations into five simple-yet-sophisticated strategies: Bargaining Zone Analysis * Persuasion * Deal Design * Power * and Fairness Norms. Incorporating lively anecdotes and fascinating social science experiments, Korobkin brings to life concepts from the disparate fields of psychology, economics, and game theory. Designed for use at both the flea market and in the C-suite, this game-changing, universal approach provides a formula that a savvy reader can implement immediately: · Tool #1, Bargaining Zone Analysis, enables you to identify the range of agreements that will benefit both parties. · Tool #2, Persuasion, convinces your counterpart that reaching an agreement will benefit them more than they otherwise would have recognized, making them willing to give you more. · Tool #3, Deal Design, structures the agreement in ways that increase its value to both parties. · Tool #4, Power, forces your counterpart to agree to terms relatively more desirable to you. · Tool #5, Fairness Norms, enables you to seal a bargain that both parties can feel good about. From negotiating the price of a used car to closing a multimillion-dollar merger, Korobkin meticulously explains how to answer the following questions that arise in every negotiation: Should you make the first offer or let the other side go first? What makes some proposals seem more fair than others? How do you decide whether to accept an offer, reject it, or make a counteroffer? When should you propose an unusual agreement structure? What steps can you take to make a bluff believable? Readers will come away with a roadmap to becoming a truly complete negotiator, able to understand bargaining as both a strategic and social activity. Intuitively accessible and reassuringly persuasive, The Five Tool Negotiator promises to be a classic in the art of bargaining strategy.
Edited by Chris Honeyman and Andrea Kupfer Schneider and featuring 100 contributors, The Negotiator's Desk Reference is the most comprehensive book on negotiation available. This book supersedes the same editors' Negotiator's Fieldbook (American Bar Association 2006), with an even more comprehensive work in which almost 60% of the chapters are entirely new and the rest are updated. The Negotiator's Desk Reference (NDR) pulls together the relevant ideas on negotiation from business, economics, law, psychology, cultural studies and more than a dozen other fields to show how not only how successful negotiation really works, but how you can make it work for you. The NDR balances the research with real-world stories from top negotiators in many areas. And not only do negotiators with deep experience in business, diplomacy, hostage situations and many other settings speak here, their conclusions are interrelated, to show how one set of ideas and experiences may be used successfully in a very different setting. There is simply no other book like it.
Fresh perspectives and guidance for one of today's most essential business skills--negotiation Virtually every step in business involves negotiation of some kind, yet the actual process of conducting a successful negotiation is rarely taught. The Negotiation Fieldbook features proven as well as innovative strategies for handling each phase of negotiation with skill and confidence and provides yous with no-nonsense guidance that can be difficult, if not impossible, to find. The Negotiation Fieldbook explains how to create more value at the table by leading a negotiation first to collaboration and then to agreement. Offering concise, straightforward coverage of a topic too often shrouded in confusion and mystery, this hands-on book describes: Essentials negotiators must focus on to be successful How to sequence each move, from first to last Techniques for rescuing a negotiation that has "broken down"
"Where do you turn if you are an architect or student wanting to deepen those skill sets that will make you a more successful professional? Well, taking a look at Ava Abramowitz's new book, "The Architect's Essentials of Negotiation" will be a step in the right direction." —Robert Greenstreet, Dean, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning This is an essential guide for architects and their clients and consultants who need professional advice on negotiations, from design development to agreements and fees. Contractors will want to read it, too, especially if they are involved with Integrated Project Delivery. This new edition offers updated insights related to negotiation, with references to the AIA Contract Documents, communication, collaboration, and handling disputes, change, and claims.
President Carter's words are as relevant today as when first spoken. This first address of the Carl Vinson Memorial Lecture Series at Mercer University is a masterful assessment of the difficulties of resolving disputes. President Carter's guidelines for establishing a more stable peace in the world are concise and imaginative without sacrificing their essential practicality.
A textbook version of this important new book on negotiation, this book presents Kathleen Reardons unique process approach to negotiation and provides many "real deal" examples from real-world master negotiators to illustrate her points. The book shows how to: identify your negotiation using the book's LSI inventory; identify and navigate particular types of negotiations; the advance-and-retreat; use communication technology (e-mails, phone, conference calls) strategically in negotiations; position and persuade artfully; negotiate in teams; and deal with heated emotions on both sides of the table.
In May 2010, more than 50 of the world's leading negotiation scholars gathered in Beijing, China for the Rethinking Negotiation Teaching project's third international conference designed to critically examine what is taught in contemporary negotiation courses and how we teach them, with special emphasis on how best to "translate" teaching methodology to succeed with diverse, global audiences. We chose China is the ideal venue to conclude our project's inquiry, not only because of its own long history with negotiation, internal and external to the country, but because it is a nation with which, tensions or no tensions, every other nation must negotiate in the future. Yet, China has been almost unrepresented in the modern literature - at least, in the literature that is expressly about "negotiation." Chinese scholars and practitioners also have yet to assert much influence in the global negotiation training market. Our hope was that the conference would serve as a springboard for the entry into this field, at a sophisticated level, of Chinese and other Asian scholars whose deep experience in many related subjects has yet to be fully felt in their implications for the field of negotiation. The contents of this volume, as well as the fourth and final volume in this teaching series - Educating Negotiators for a Connected World (Honeyman, Coben, and Lee 2012), suggest we may have succeeded in that particular goal.