hostage taking. Why and what would prompt an individual to take hostages? Several influential and background reasons will be examined. Finally‚ some successful and also failed negotiations will be explored‚ with possible reasons and explanations to what factors made them either a success or a failure. Hostage negotiation is as much of an art as it is a science. The negotiator not only holds the lives of the victims in his hands‚ but the lives of law enforcement and the hostage taker as well. His
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Facts * This negotiation was an important one from a career point of view as it involves a salary negotiation for an existing job. I have never been in a situation where I have actually negotiated a salary for a person working under me‚ so it was a good experience for me. I was playing the role of Pat Lynch‚ V.P. of marketing for Rapid Leatherhead Goods Company. There are 4 main product lines which comprise the major portion of the company’s online sales. A new director for marketing was hired
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haggling over price that happens at yard sale‚ flea market‚ or used car lot. bargaining 3. (p. 6) Negotiating parties always negotiate by __________. choice 4. (p. 6‚ 7) There are times when you should _________ negotiate. not 5. (p. 8) Successful negotiation involves the management of ____________ (e.g.‚ the price or the terms of agreement) and also the resolution of __________. tangibles‚ intangibles 6. (p. 9) Independent parties are able to meet their own ____________ without the help
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Negotiation is a basic generic human activity. The world is a giant negotiating table such that a person can negotiate many different things in many different situations. Negotiations can occur over labor relations‚ buying purchases‚ salaries‚ strikes‚ international affairs such as war and freeing hostages as well as family issues such as divorce‚ child custody and even who gets the car keys. There are two common characteristics of a negotiation or bargaining situation. The first characteristic
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Running Head: INTRODUCTION TO NEGOTIATION Introduction to Negotiation Module 1 – Case NCM512 TUI University Most people tend to take on a competitive approach to negotiation. They see everything as a win/lose situation. This unilateral strategy usually results in achieving unfavorable results. This way of thinking tends to vitiate the likelihood of serving long-term interest of the winner‚ even if the short term objectives are achieved. The solution to this is to change our way of
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THE NEGOTIATION PROCESS By Charles B. Craver When people prepare for bargaining encounters‚ they spend hours on the factual issues‚ the legal issues‚ the economic issues‚ and the political issues. They spend no more than ten to fifteen minutes on their negotiation strategy. When they begin their interaction‚ they have only three things in mind relating to their negotiation strategy: (1) where they plan to begin; (2) where they hope to end up; and (3) their bottom line. Between their opening
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* Choose negotiation you are likely to participate in‚ the near future & answer the following questions 1. What is that you really want? 2. Why will other side admit it is legitimate? 3. How will you communicate/relate? 4. Why will other participant say Yes why No? 5. Why will agreement go your Way? Negotiation I am likely to participate in the near future: As within the next six months‚ I would be completing the Executive MBA course‚ I would like to pursue a
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The collaborative negotiation A collaborative negotiation is where parties desire‚ and work towards achieving‚ a mutually beneficial outcome. In some cases this can mean reaching a “win/win” result. In a collaborative negotiation there is a greater focus on the genuine interests of the parties‚ rather than posturing or point scoring. In a collaborative negotiation‚ the parties will better understand each other’s interests. For example‚ A computer distributor approaches a Chinese supplier to tender
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INCEIF The Global University in Islamic Finance Kuala Lumpur‚ Malaysia (CIFP) AL IJARAH THUMMA AL BAI’ (AITAB) (SH1003) Semester September 2012 Name: NORHADIYATUL AKMA BINTI JAAFAR Student No: 1200335 TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract.....................................................................................................................................2 Key Terms of the Paper................
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Playing the Whole Game 3-D Negotiation by David A. Lax and James K. Sebenius Reprint R0311D Savvy negotiators not only play their cards well‚ they design the game in their favor even before they get to the table. 3-D Negotiation by David A. Lax and James K. Sebenius COPYRIGHT © 2003 HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL PUBLISHING CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. What stands between you and the yes you want? In our analysis of hundreds of negotiations‚ we’ve uncovered barriers in three
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