One of the essential skills
for any entrepreneur is negotiation. How well you can negotiate a favorable
agreement or deal for your business can often spell the difference between
failure and success. Negotiation can occur between you and your employees, your
vendors, your customers, or even your investors.
Despite the possible sense
of intimidation or distaste many business owners might have around negotiating,
it is a productive skill that will enable you to build your business in
positive ways — and it does not have to be approached as an adversarial tactic
to be endured!
What's
Your Price?
One of the fundamental keys
to successful negotiation is to be certain of what you want to achieve and what
you are willing to settle for. In their 1981 bestseller, Getting to Yes:
Negotiating Without Giving In, Roger Fisher and William Ury state,
“The reason you negotiate
is to produce something better than the results you can obtain without
negotiating. What are those results? What is that alternative? What is your
BATNA — your Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement? That is the standard
against which any proposed agreement should be measured”.
The other key is to know, as best you can, what the other
party's true needs and objectives are.
- In negotiating salary increase requests from employees, for example, it is essential to solicit the employee's perspective — and to be able to accurately assess what may not be said aloud.
- With vendors or suppliers, knowing their break points — the bottom line they are willing to go to — as well as your own leveraging strengths with them, is critical to negotiating deals that are mutually acceptable.
Ten
Basic Steps
Entire books and business
school curriculum's have been written on negotiating and negotiation skills.
While we cannot provide everything you might possibly want or need to know,
here are some basic steps for effectively negotiating a favorable deal or
agreement:
- Decide on your starting position and your "bottom line," or lowest point you will accept in the deal.
- Consider the objectives and emotional motivation of the other party.
- Plan your sequence of proposals and possible counter-proposals. Open at the most you can reasonably ask for as this gives you room to negotiate.
- Prepare for the meeting by determining your own motives and objectives: Why are you negotiating? What do you expect to gain and why is it important to you? What do you think you will have to offer to achieve this?
- Be prepared with information, facts, comparable prices or costs, etc. Avoid going into any negotiation and coming across as either uninformed or unreasonably aggressive.
- If the other party makes the first offer or proposal, this can allow you to gauge your response and set the parameters of the negotiation to your advantage. Though some experts suggest that your proposal be the first one on the table, this tactic can allow the other party to open at a point that is more favorable to you than you may have anticipated.
- Start by discussing a mutually agreed upon point of the negotiation — something both parties will readily say yes to.
- When you do propose a deal or an offer phrase as "I will do such-and-such for you, and you will do this for me." This establishes a position of confidence and authority.
- Make your arguments and proposals incrementally and strategically. Avoid going immediately to your lowest point of acceptance, or bottom-line.
- Know when it is time to close or break off discussion. If the other party is ready to close the deal, and it is acceptable to you, make it easy for them to do as little as possible by having everything ready to sign, etc.
Remember: your objective is
what you want to achieve — your bottom line is what you absolutely have to
achieve. These are not the same thing when you are negotiating!
Everybody Wins With
Effective Negotiation
The ultimate goal of
business negotiations is to produce two satisfied parties and to have paved the
way for future negotiations when and where necessary. Having successfully
completed negotiations it is tempting to think that it's all over once you and
the other party have said, "Yes!" However, it isn't really
"over" until it's over. That is, proper and effective closure is key
to sealing a deal successfully.
Thomas Noble, an attorney,
says this regarding the "rules of closure", as he calls them:
“Master
Negotiators know how to close. They consider every element of closure: when,
where, documentation, pending issues. Novices either rush the end game or delay
it interminably, with equally bad results. Rushing the end game usually means
slapping a contract together with little time or thought; its ambiguities and
deficiencies inevitably result in disputes. Delaying the end game means failing
to ‘strike when the iron is hot' if you wait long enough, something will happen
to prevent closure. Time kills deals”.
As with any business
leadership skill negotiation is learned in the doing. Knowing the fundamentals
before going into any negotiations is essential for successfully securing your
objectives while preserving strategic relationships with employees, customers
or clients, vendors, or investors.
Share Your Negotiating
Story
How have you developed your
negotiation skills? Any tips you want to share with the GBSH community? Post
a comment and tell us about it.
GBSH Consult’s goal is to
help companies systematically and efficiently enhance their negotiation strategy
and organizational and operational capabilities in order to achieve or maintain
the leading position in the rapidly changing business environment. Follow us on twitter @gbshconsult
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