国际商务谈判教案Chapter4 (预习复习)(8页).doc
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1、-国际商务谈判教案Chapter4 (预习复习)-第 7 页Chapter 4Negotiation: Strategy and PlanningOverviewIn this chapter, we discuss what negotiators should do before opening negotiations. Effective strategy and planning are the most critical precursors for achieving negotiation objectives. With effective planning and targ
2、et setting, most negotiators can achieve their objectives; without them, results occur more by chance than by negotiator effort.Regrettably, systematic planning is not something that most negotiators do willingly. Although time constraints and work pressures make it difficult to find the time to pla
3、n adequately, for many planning is simply boring and tedious, easily put off in favor of getting into the action quickly. It is clear, however, that devoting insufficient time to planning is one weakness that may cause negotiators to fail.The discussion of strategy and planning begins by exploring t
4、he broad process of strategy development, starting with defining the negotiators goals and objectives then moves to developing a strategy to address the issues and achieve ones goals. Finally, we address the typical stages and phases of an evolving negotiation and how different issues and goals will
5、 affect the planning process.Learning Objectives1. Goals The focus that drives a negotiation strategy.2. Strategy The overall plan to achieve ones goals.3. Getting ready to implement the strategy: The planning process.I. Goals The Focus That Drives a Negotiation StrategyA. Direct effects of goals on
6、 choice of strategy 1. There are four important aspects to understand about how goals affect negotiations: a. Wishes are not goals, especially in negotiation.b. Goals are often linked to the other partys goals.c. There are boundaries or limits to what goals can be.d. Effective goals must be concrete
7、, specific and measurable. If they are not, then it will be hard to:(1) Communicate to the other party what we want(2) Understand what the other party wants(3) Determine whether an offer on the table satisfies our goals.2. Goals can be tangible or procedural.3. The criteria used to determine goals d
8、epend on your specific objectives and your priorities among multiple objectives.B. Indirect effects of goals on choice of strategy1. Short-term thinking affects our choice of strategy; in developing and framing our goals, we may ignore the present or future relationship with the other party in a con
9、cern for achieving a substantive outcome only.2. Negotiation goals that are complex or difficult to define may require a substantial change in the other partys attitude. In most cases, progress will be made incrementally, and may depend on establishing a relationship with the other party.II. Strateg
10、y The Overall Plan to Achieve Ones GoalsA. Strategy versus Tactics1. A major difference between strategy and tactics is that of scale, perspective or immediacy.2. Tactics are short-term, adaptive moves designed to enact or pursue broad strategies, which in turn provide stability, continuity, and dir
11、ection for tactical behaviors.3. Tactics are subordinate to strategy: they are structured, directed, and driven by strategic considerations.B. Unilateral versus bilateral approaches to strategy1. A unilateral choice is made without the active involvement of the other party.2. Unilaterally pursued st
12、rategies can be wholly one-sided and intentionally ignorant of any information about the other negotiator.3. Unilateral strategies should evolve into ones that fully consider the impact of the others strategy on ones own.C. The dual concerns model as a vehicle for describing negotiation strategies.
13、This model proposes that individuals have two levels of related concerns: a concern for their own outcomes, and a level of concern for the others outcomes.1. Alternative situational strategiesa. There are at least four different types of strategies when assessing the relative importance and priority
14、 of the negotiators substantive outcome versus the relational outcome: competitive, collaboration, accommodation, and avoidance2. The nonengagement strategy: Avoidancea. There are many reasons why negotiators may choose not to negotiate:(1) If one is able to meet ones needs without negotiating at al
15、l, it may make sense to use an avoidance strategy(2) It simply may not be worth the time and effort to negotiate (although there are sometimes reasons to negotiate in such situations(3) The decision to negotiate is closely related to the desirability of available alternatives the outcomes that can b
16、e achieved if negotiations dont work out3. Active-engagement strategies: Competition, collaboration, and accommodationa. Competition is distributive win-lose bargaining.b. Collaboration is integrative or win-win negotiation.c. Accommodation is as much a win-lose strategy as competition, although it
17、has a decidedly different image it involves an imbalance of outcomes, but in the opposite direction. (“I lose, you win” as opposed to “I win, you lose.”)d. There are drawbacks to these strategies if applied blindly, thoughtlessly or inflexibly:(1) Distributive strategies tend to create “we-they” or
18、“superiority-inferiority” patterns, which may result in a distortion of the other sides contributions, as well as their values, needs and positions.(2) If a negotiator pursues an integrative strategy without regard to the others strategy, then the other may manipulate and exploit the collaborator an
19、d take advantage of the good faith and goodwill being demonstrated.(3) Accommodative strategies may generate a pattern of constantly giving in to keep the other happy or to avoid a fight.III. Understanding the Flow of Negotiations: Stages and PhasesA.Phase models of negotiation:1.Initiation2.Problem
20、 solving3.ResolutionB.Greenhalgh (2001) suggests that there are seven key steps to an ideal negotiation process:1.Preparation: deciding what is important, defining goals, thinking ahead how to work together with the other party.2.Relationship building: getting to know the other party, understanding
21、how you and the other are similar and different, and building commitment toward achieving a mutually beneficial set of outcomes.3.Information gathering: learning what you need to know about the issues, about the other party and their needs, about the feasibility of possible settlements, and about wh
22、at might happen if you fail to reach agreement with the other side.4.Information using: at this stage, negotiators assemble the case they want to make for their preferred outcomes and settlement, one that will maximize the negotiators own needs.5.Bidding: the process of making moves from ones initia
23、l, ideal position to the actual outcome.6.Closing the deal: the objective here is to build commitment to the agreement achieved in the previous phase.7.Implementing the agreement: determining who needs to do what once hands are shaken and the documents signed.IV. Getting Ready to Implement the Strat
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