1 / 54

High Impact Negotiations How do deal with suppliers, colleagues and customers

High Impact Negotiations How do deal with suppliers, colleagues and customers. Rich Weissman Endicott College. Session Objectives. Recognize the elements and process of negotiation Concentrate on negotiation tools and techniques Negotiate with internal and external clients

chelsieo
Télécharger la présentation

High Impact Negotiations How do deal with suppliers, colleagues and customers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. High Impact NegotiationsHow do deal with suppliers, colleagues and customers Rich Weissman Endicott College

  2. Session Objectives • Recognize the elements and process of negotiation • Concentrateon negotiation tools and techniques • Negotiatewith internal and external clients • Focus on process improvement • Highlightcommunication and the human approach to negotiation • Understand the benefits of successful negotiations

  3. Negotiation • An exploratory and a bargaining process (planning, reviewing, analyzing, compromising) involving a buyer and seller, each with their own viewpoints and objectives, seeking to reach a mutually satisfactory agreement on all phases of a procurement transaction including price, service, specifications, technical and quality requirements, payment terms, and elements. ISM Glossary of Key Purchasing Terms

  4. WHEN DO YOU NEGOTIATE?

  5. Brainstorming Exercise • What are the traits of a good negotiator? 1. 2. 3. ….

  6. Key Point! • Most negotiations occur over and over again. We tend to deal with the same customers, co-workers, suppliers, clients, directors, and managers for a long time. It is important to recognize and give proper weight to the context in which a negotiation is taking place. If it is within an on-going relationship, the significance of that relationship must be considered.

  7. Negotiation Guidelines • Understand your mission and business drivers • Understand their mission and business drivers • Be authentic to build credibility and trust • Works towards a positive outcome for all parties • Create a plan for evaluation and assessment • Determine needs and wants from both parties

  8. Reasons for Negotiation • Lack of competition • Price, quality, delivery, and service needs • High buyer or seller uncertainty • Single source strategies • Urgency • Long lead times • Need for flexible contracts • Lack of firm product specification • Reduce risk

  9. The 5 Ps of Negotiating • Preparation • Poise • Persuasiveness • Persistence • Patience

  10. Negotiate to Reduce Risk • Category 1: Preventable Risks • Category 2: Strategy Risks • Category 3: External Risks Kaplan and Mikes; HBR;

  11. Preventable Risks • Internal risks, arising from within the organization, that are controllable and ought to be eliminated or avoided • Unethical, unauthorized or inappropriate actions from employees and managers • Breakdowns in routine operational processes

  12. Strategy Risks • A company voluntarily accepts some risk in order to generate superior returns from its strategy • Strategy risks are not inherently undesirable • Companies need a risk management system designed to reduce the probability that the assumed risks actually materialize and to improve the change to manage the risks if they occur

  13. External Risks • Some risks arise from events outside the company and are beyond its influence or control • Sources of these risks include natural and political disasters and major macroeconomic shifts • A risk management focus is on identification and mitigation

  14. Major Modes of Negotiation • Cooperative (win--win) • Competitive (win--lose) • Counterproductive (lose--lose)

  15. Getting to Yes • Fisher, Vry & Patton of the Harvard Negotiation Project • Separate the people from the problem • Focus on interests, not positions • Invent options for mutual gain • Insist on using objective criteria

  16. Problems in Negotiation • Lack of formal negotiation training • Lack of preparation • Failure to establish realistic objectives • Unsound tactics • Cultural misunderstanding • Others…...? Focus on your organization

  17. Assessment of Trustworthiness • Competence • Reliability • Professionalism • Consistency • Open communication • Transparency • Caring • Fairness • Integrity

  18. Negotiator Temperaments • Distrustful • Self-protective • Calculating • Aggressive • Demanding • Dominating • Open • Indulgent • Conforming • Accepting • Supportive • Endearing • Engaging • Honest

  19. Problems of Long-Term Relationships • Loss of objectivity • Complacency • Loss of secrecy • Growing dependency • Cooperative forces lessen • Person factors influence decision making • Organizations “locked-in” • Trendy • Easy!

  20. Planning the Negotiation Process • Basic research and groundwork…an information quilt • Develop objectives aligned with the business • Gain support from senior management • Assemble the negotiation team • Action! • Verbal agreement • Written agreement (confirms the verbal agreement) • Making it work throughout its life

  21. Elements of a Written Negotiation Plan • Brief overview statement • Business objectives • Positions of strength for both parties • Internal support requirements • Development of negotiating team • Negotiation plan & tactics

  22. Documentation of Negotiation • Subject • Introductory summary • Particulars • Procurement situation • Negotiation summary

  23. Negotiating Styles • The Competing Style • The Accommodating Style • The Collaborating Style • The Avoiding Style • The Compromising Style

  24. The Competing Style • Focus on self-interest or substantive out…generally at the expense of the other party or relationship. • Persisting until you get what you want • Competing to ensure that your needs are met • Trying to outsmart and out talk the other party • Using your power to influence the outcome • Exploiting the other party’s weakness

  25. The Accommodating Style • The accommodating style is concerned with preserving the relationship, even if it means giving up substantive outcome. • Focusing on the other party’s concerns more than your own • Going along with the other party’s suggestions • Trying to preserve the relationship at all costs • Focus on agreement not disagreement

  26. The Collaborative Style • Collaboration involves exploring individual and mutual interests in an effort to satisfy everyone’s needs. • Bringing issues or concerns into the open • Dealing with issues important to both parties • Looking for creative solutions that make both parties winners • Seeking to build trust • Seeking to satisfy the needs of both parties

  27. The Avoiding Style • Avoiding not only the issues but the other party or parties and negotiation itself. • Avoiding conflict with difficult negotiations • Avoiding controversy • Avoiding situations that might create tension • Avoiding open discussion of issues and concerns • Withdrawing from negotiation, even when you might win • Postponing facing difficult negotiations

  28. The Compromising Style • Compromising is a partial-win, partial-lose proposition, where you get some of what you want but not everything, and likewise for the other party. • Splitting the difference • Backing off on demands • Giving up something for something in return • Taking an intermediate position • Engaging in give and take

  29. Competition Legitimacy Commitment Knowledge Risk-taking Time Effort or work Money Negotiation skills Friendly associations Sources of Power

  30. Types of Authority • Escalating authority • Limited authority • No authority • Full authority • Escape from authority

  31. Anchor • An initial offer in a negotiation, often set from external experiences. • The sticker price of an automobile is an example of an anchor. • When anchors are used, creativity in a negotiation suffers.

  32. Concessions • Small concessions give the impression that the bottom line is not far off. • Large concessions indicate that a lot more can still be conceded before the bottom line is reached. • Rapid or large concessions undermine the credibility of the initial offer. • All concessions teach the lesson that more concessions will be made. batna.com

  33. Signals • True signals.People send signals instead of saying things outright in order to convey information while preserving some degree of deniability. • False signals.These signals are designed to mislead you. • Unintentional signals.Signals made in error that may be valuable. Schatzki, Negotiation: The Art of Getting What you Want

  34. Framing • How an object, event, or situation is depicted or presented • Emphasize the value of their concessions • Provide a justification for the other party to make concessions • Offer a standard of fairness for dividing the value created by negotiating

  35. Limits • Dollar limits • Term limits • Policy limits • Legal limits • Engineering limits • Customer limits • Committee limits • Miscellaneous limits

  36. Agreement in Principle • May be part of the final agreement. • May be a way-station toward reaching an agreement. • May be used as a tactical approach to the negotiation. • May be a combination

  37. BATNA • Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement • No agreement may be better than a poor agreement • The better your BATNA, the higher your leverage • Successful negotiations may not result in agreements

  38. International Negotiations • Barriers and obstacles • Miscommunication because of language • Time zones • Cultural differences • Limited authority of foreign negotiators • Industry and business concepts

  39. Ethics • Individual Ethics: A personal code of conduct when dealing with others • Professional Ethics: Standards that outline appropriate conduct in a given profession • Organizational Ethics: The values and principles that an organization has chosen to guide the behavior of people in the organization and /or what stakeholders expect of the organization • Societal Ethics: Principles and standards that guide members of society in day-to-day behavior with one another

  40. Ethical Issues • Misrepresentation of position • Bluffing • Deception • Selective disclosure • Bribes • Spying • Theft • Humiliation • Sharp practice

  41. Some Negotiation Tactics • Agenda • Deadline • Concessions • Missing person • Bogey • Take it or leave it • Good guy / bad guy • Best and final offer

  42. Nibbles…or Key Tactics? • Cash terms • Extended warranty • Service / support • Spare parts • Training • Freight • Testing

  43. Negotiable Aspects of a Purchase & Sale Agreement • Quality • Support • Supply • Transportation • Price

  44. Quality • Specification compliance • Performance compliance • Test criteria • Rejection procedures • Liability • Reliability • Design changes

  45. Support • Technical assistance • Product enhancements • Research & development • Warranty • Spare parts • Training • Tooling • Packaging • End user support

  46. Supply • Lead times • Delivery schedule • Inventory programs • Consigned inventory • Stocking programs • Cancellation / reschedule options

  47. Transportation • FOB terms • Carrier • Commodity classification • Freight allowance / costs • Multiple delivery points • Timing

  48. Price • Purchase order price • Discounts • Foreign exchange • Escalation / de-escalation • Duties / taxes • Cost analysis / material / labor / overhead / profit

  49. A Negotiation Checklist • Identify the primary supplier • Identify a second supplier based option • Determine the format and location for negotiation • Insist on a negotiator with decision making capabilities • Assess your leverage over the supplier • Determine your negotiation strategy

More Related