Negotiation Exercise PM598 Many times throughout my life I have dealt with negotiations both on the job and off. I chose to write about this subject because what started off as a walk down the boardwalk ended up consuming a year and a half of my life. It’s January‚ the year is 2011‚ and I found myself using up a banked week of one of my timeshares in Myrtle Beach‚ SC. It’s not the best time of year but a break from work is always a welcome one. I’m walking down the boardwalk when I receive
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Nissan / Renault Negotiation If you are Renault‚ what would you present as the “Big Picture” (outlook and conditions proposal) for an alliance to the Nissan Board of Directors? Present it and negotiate it with Nissan. Your presentation shall include the points of: 1. Strategic objectives and scope of alliance 2. Analysis and proposal of potential operational synergies (brands‚ product range‚ geographic coverage‚ technology and expertise‚ production capacity‚ R&D‚ engineering‚ QC‚ manufacturing
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1. Without planning and determination of one’s initial offer‚ target point‚ and resistance point‚ a negotiator may be at a disadvantage during the negotiation. What evidence of planning was demonstrated by Alisa and Katherine? “Union negotiations are very much like a tug of war between labor and management. One side wants what the other doesn’t have or won’t give” (Patton‚ 2013). The process of planning and having the determination to offer‚ target and resist can put a negotiator at an advantage
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WALMART NEGOTIATION CASE: Walmart the world’s largest retailer‚ sold $315 billion worth of goods in 2006. With its single-minded focus on "EDLP" (everyday low prices) and the power to make or break suppliers‚ a partnership with Wal-Mart is either the Holy Grail or the kiss of death‚ depending on one’s perspective. There are numerous media accounts of the corporate monolith riding its suppliers into the ground. But what about those who manage to survive‚ and thrive‚ while dealing with the classic
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Introduction The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the importance of intercultural negotiation‚ and the reasons hereof. Equally so‚ it is to explain the differences between two closely linked concepts‚ namely international negotiations and intercultural negotiations. An account of Bülow and Kumar’s (2011) objections about the relevance of national culture is presented‚ and finally‚ the concepts of conflicting findings‚ imprecision in terminology and essentialism are discussed in further
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Interests: The Measure o f Negotiation D a v i d A. L a x arid J a m e s K. Sebenius People negotiate to further their interests. And negotiation advisers urge attention to interests--often solemnly‚ as if the suggestion were original and surprising. Yet Socrates ’ admonition to " K n o w Thyself" surety scoops any late twentieth century advice of this sort. So‚ academic compulsiveness aside‚ w h y write an article o n interests or‚ more to the point‚ w h y read one? The answer‚ in part‚ is that
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Amanda Hooper‚ Christopher Pesantez‚ Maria Rizvi‚ Syed Cross-Cultural Communication and Negotiation – Spring 2005 MANA 4340‚ Section 00586 TTH: 2:30 – 4:00pm. Room 128 MH Professor: Dr. Roger N. Blakeney Table of Content I. Introduction II. Negotiation A. The Western View: Direct confrontation B. Types of Negotiations: Transactional and Dispute Resolutions C. Forms of Negotiation: Distributive and Integrative III. Culture A. Individualism vs. Collectivism B. Egalitarian
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The Conrad-Demarest Model of Empire: Basic Principles for the Roman‚ Han Chinese‚ and Gupta Empires Necessary preconditions for the rise of empires: State-level government: Rome: republic then empire with emperor Han: kept most of Qin centralized government in place Gupta: decentralized; regionalism High agricultural potential in the area: Rome: wheat‚ grapes‚ cattle Han: wheat‚ millet‚ pigs Gupta: cotton‚ wool‚ calico (chief revenue – tax on agriculture) An environmental mosaic
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Essentials of Negotiations 1. Creating Value - Win-Win Negotiation 2. Claiming Value - Staying in Business! 3. Building Trust - Long-term sustainability Negotiations Sandtraps 1. Leaving Money on the table (Lose-Lose Negotiation) 2. Settling for too little (Winnerʼs Curse) 3. Walking away form the table 4. Settling for terms that are worse than the alternative (Agreement Bias) Why People are Ineffective Negotiators - Faulty Feedback - Satisficing - Self-reinforcing incompetence Negotiation Myths Myth
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1. What was your BATNA in this negotiation? What do you think were the BATNAs of the three other parties? • Mine: Urged all three departments to agree to utilize and give a rollout of an overall system that Jim Linehan suggested‚ including Executive Information System‚ in the eight months; the hardware and software deisn specifications and the accounting standards is uniform as an “open corporation”across Rosewell; I am in charge of the overall task force. • Helen Freeman: Set up an overall system
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