ARTICLE 33 – Health Insurance Section 1. Benefits Under Insurance Plan In addition to health care plans available to all Metro Government employees (hereafter “non-FOP plans”)‚ which are also available to members‚ Metro Government shall offer Members the option to enroll in of two hospital and medical coverage health insurance plans only available to Members (hereafter “FOP-only plans”). The benefit of FOP-only plans shall be the same as those contained in the FOP-only plans offered in the calendar
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Throughout this assignment I shall discuss how I have developed my self-awareness through dis-closure‚ feedback and reflection. “Being self-aware enables us to identify our strengths and also those areas that can be developed” (R Ashmore & D Banks 2000 p47)‚ self-awareness is continually being developed through the reflection of our life experiences. Reflection of my life experiences has given me the opportunity to become more aware of my strengths and weaknesses through being honest and the
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enterprise‚ that of negotiation. It is argued that the stability of contract which results from an earlier application of equitable principals in the negotiating process is just as crucial to integrative bargaining as the desire to increase the pie. With this conclusion‚ it becomes apparent that solutions which encourage integrative bargaining will result in more stable contracts. The increased stability rationale holds true even where there is no increase in the fixed sum negotiation. Integrative bargaining
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Research Reports The Illusion of Transparency in Negotiations Leaf Van Boven‚ Thomas Gilovich‚ and Victoria Husted Medvec The authors examined whether negotiators are prone to an “illusion of transparency‚” or the belief that their private thoughts and feelings are more discernible to their negotiation partners than they actually are. In Study One‚ negotiators who were trying to conceal their preferences thought that their preferences had “leaked out” more than they actually did. In Study Two
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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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Curriculum Vitae | | | |Name: MR. AMIT DNYANDEO DHAGE |ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE: | | |c/o Uttam Sopan Chorghe‚ | |e-mail : dhageamit@rediffmail.com
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NEGOTIATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL TRADING - Cultural aspects - Summary 1. Introduction in the negotiation process 2. Factors that influence the international negotiations 3. Cultural aspects of International Business Negotiations 3.1. Hofstede’s cultural dimensions 3.2. The influence of culture on negotiations 4. Negotiation patterns in cross- cultural negotiations 5. Analysis of cultural differences in international negotiations – A study case upon the American and Chinese culture
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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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Negotiation In a Cross-Cultural EnvironmentAmerican versus Japanese By Therese Perlmutter HR595 Negotiation Skills Keller Graduate School of Management Dr. Larry Ray May 10‚ 2005 Table of contents I. Introduction II. III. IV. V. Conclusion VI. References I. Introduction Negotiations always occur between parties who believe that some benefit may come of purposeful discussion. The parties to a negotiation usually share an intention to reach an agreement
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Negotiation Conflict Styles by Calum Coburn Five Negotiation Styles When to use? What’s the Danger? Self Defense Compete (I win - You lose) (aggressive) - Need to get results quickly. - Not to family or friends “More interested in "winning" rather than reaching an agreement.” - Overpowering relationships “Don’t Cave In!” Accommodate (I Lose - You Win) “The opposite of competing” - When you or your company are at fault - Repairing relationships - Generosity as a sign of weaknesses
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