A Tug of War
You can't have it all. To negotiate successfully, you've got to master the art of give and take.
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When it comes to creative negotiation, deal-makers must master
two tools: the concession and the condition. Simply put, a
concession is what you give, and a condition is what you get.
Grammatically speaking, a condition is the "if" clause; a
concession is the "then." If you pay now,
then I'll knock off 15 percent. If you finish by
Tuesday, then you get a bonus.
Clever use of concessions and conditions is the trademark of an
inventive deal-maker. Each concession is a minideal. You give in
order to get. Even seemingly unilateral concessions create tacit
obligations, jump-start talks and generate goodwill, all of which
are benefits to you. Before you give, always consider what
you'll get. And if you cut a really hard bargain, don't
just go tit for tat. Use each "give" to get as much as
possible. Besides, being stingy with your concessions will wear the
other side down and discourage additional demands.
On the other hand, not only is the condition the better half of
any exchange since it's what you get, it's also a great way
to control the negotiation. In some ways, it's even more
powerful than the concession. Here are some applications:
Refuse to make any concessions
until you know all the demands. This is a really
effective use of the condition. Make it part of your standard
repertoire. If you don't, just when you think you're done,
you'll get another demand . . . and another and another and
another.
Negotiate how you'll
negotiate. Call this a "metanegotiation."
Condition your very participation on the time, place, number of
participants, agenda and so on, cleverly stacking the deck in your
favor. Remember the Vietnam peace talks? Given upcoming
presidential elections, the North Vietnamese gained tremendous
power by delaying discussion over more substantive issues with
endless bickering over the shape of the bargaining table.
Condition your agreement on the
approval of a "higher authority." It buys you
time to think or regroup, and that authority can be anybody-your
spouse or your business partner, for example.
Condition all your concessions on
each other. This is sometimes called a package deal, and
it gives your opponent a strong incentive to close. After all, one
more demand, and you may revoke everything. For example, trading in
a car is often three deals in one: the deal for your old car, the
deal for your new car and the deal for your loan. To make a good
deal overall, you must make a good deal on each one. So condition
your agreement to each individual deal on your agreement to the
other two.
A speaker and attorney in Los Angeles, Marc Diener is the author of
Deal Power.
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