Business Negotiation and its US Evolution[Lecture Notes Sav]

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TUNGHAI UNIVERSITY Department of International Business - Taichung Business Negotiation and it’s Evolution in the US History and Evolution of Negotiation Pedagogy

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Lecture Notes from in class lecture

Transcript of Business Negotiation and its US Evolution[Lecture Notes Sav]

Page 1: Business Negotiation and its US Evolution[Lecture Notes Sav]

TUNGHAI UNIVERSITYDepartment of International Business - Taichung

Business Negotiation and it’s Evolution in the US

History and Evolution of Negotiation Pedagogy

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Goals/Challenges of Teaching Negotiation

To Address market needs…

– Increase analytical sophistication / expertise of managers

– Increase effectiveness, presumably in business.

Critics argue that it can’t be taught…you either have it or you don’t.

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Can Negotiation be Taught?

• Boston area:– >150 courses

• Introduction• Specific disciplines (e.g.

labor, government, business, family)

– Doesn’t include EMBA or corporate training courses

• Required courses in MBA programs such as Harvard – Often the most popular course.

• Extrapolate to the US and #’s > 10,000

Chinese Culture Center, Intl Expo, Beijing, 2008

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Can Negotiation Be Taught?

• Some people think:– Negotiation is more an Art that cannot be

systematically analyzed or taught.– Necessitates a change in one’s behavior– The theoretical models lack empirical

testing• Positional bargaining• Principled bargaining

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What has happened?

Dr. Roy Lewicki, initiated the 1st applied negotiation courses in the US (1973, Dartmouth) - also the main author to our custom text.

1. Formative (Developmental) Decade (1975-1985)

- Dynamics of Bargaining

2. Development (Maturity) of the Field (1985-1995)

- Active participation, skill development

3. Third Generation & Challenges (1995-2005)

4. Return to Humanist Factors (2005+)

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I Formative Decade: 1975-1985

• No managerial or applied teaching of negotiation

• Mainly drawn form social psychology: Boom in 1960’s– Theory of bargaining and conflict behavior– Classroom aid’s (cases) were primitive– Examples:

• Game theory (Luce & Raffia, 1957)

• International Relations (Schelling, 1960)

• Labor relations (Douglas, 1962)

• Real estate (Karrass, 1974)

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I Formative Decade Continued: 1975-1985

• Early 1980’s: Negotiation courses expanded to other schools

• Small group of scholars collaborated (Max Bazerman, Roy Lewicki)

• Momentum of interest increasing:– Books (GTY, Art & Science of Negotiation) 1982 & 1983

– Professional organizations (Power, Negotiation & Conflict Management Interest Group,1983)

– Research funding (National Institute of Dispute Resolution 1984, Hewlett Foundation,1986)

• Faculty developed role plays, simulations, doctoral programs, cases, workshops.

• Result: From a few courses to 100 in 1985,

200 by 1989.

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Early Course Curriculum (1975-1985) :

Recognizing Experiential Learning & Skill Development

1. Concrete experiences (real situations)

2. Reflection of experience (journal)

3. Derivation of concepts & tactical principles4. Planning for active experiments (readings) and

application to new settings (changing situations)

Sequence: Flow was varied; no standard approachtypically a balance of theory and application plus “Reflection Papers” to connect theory to practice.

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Two Branches of Negotiation Theory Emerged (1975-1985)

1. Negotiation as a decision-making process

-Rational game theory, chess game

-“Logic” driven, lowest cost or highest value

2. Interpersonal dynamics between negotiators

-Social – psychological thrust

-Interpersonal dynamics, contextual factors

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Major Course Elements of Both Approaches (1975-1985)

• Intro to Conflict & Negotiation Theory• Intro to Game Theory & Decision Making• Strategy & Tactics of Competitive, Distributive

Negotiations• Strategy & Tactics of Cooperative, Integrative,

Principled Negotiation• Time-Series (Stage) Model (Planning) of Negotiation

Process• Assessment of Individual Differences (Cultural, Cognitive &

Communication)

• Negotiation Within and Between Groups (Coalitions)• Advanced issues: Procedures for Deadlocked

Negotiations, Difficult Negotiators

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II Development of the Field (1985-1995)

Success in Business Schools• Participation was welcome and enjoyable

– Focus changed from “Abstract Theory & Discussions” to the “Real, actual experiences with one another”

• Included both Skill Development & Theory– Often cited as models of active listening, participant centered.

• Students remembered the experience much more

Content, Curriculum & Method’s Remained Stable– Growth of textbooks, cases & role-play’s– Teaching pans and delivery matured

Innovations: Videotape & Computers– Video: See yourself in action, 100X feedback– Computer: Negotiator Pro, Step-by-Step planner– Integration: McGraw Hill Negotiator Pro (Virtual opponent, video)

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III Third Decade (1996-2005)

A. Emphasis turned to Interpersonal Relationships– Versus one-time, calculated, economic, transaction

oriented negotiating– Reflects changes in the dynamic business environment– Stress collaboration within & across teams, business units,

joint ventures

B. Identified Weakness: the practice of distributive bargaining is likely to kill long-term relationships

C. Research from rational and calculated game theory, Decision Making towards the Emotional

context of personal relationships.• Identify that time in relationships is complex: trade something

today for something else tomorrow.

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III Third Decade Continued (1996-2005)

A. Emphasis on Individual Interpersonal aspects:– Trust: How it is developed & destroyed?– Emotion: Often treat as a negative factor, must

be better understood.– Feelings & Attachments effect the negotiators

performance & decisions.– Decision Making = Cognitive Process + Emotion

B. Recognize Most Models developed from a Western, Male perspective– Lack of literature into culture and gender factors that are present

throughout the world See further: Goleman (1995) “Emotional Intelligence”

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Ethics: What did we Learn from the New MBA Generation?

• 1980’s: Many negotiation course’s were poorly rated

• MBA Programs taught people how to “Get what they want” E.g. Gordon Geiko, “Wall Street”

• Faculty were criticized for being too soft (easy) on management issues (conflict, power, authority)

• Faculty were previously trained in the applied social sciences (1960’s) valuing a humanistic, cooperative orientation.

• Today(~2000) : Thankfully that period ended & cooperation is now the focus of management– Though we still see many of the victims.

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Looking Ahead (2006+): What’s Still

Needed: Focus on negotiation as a system of skills…

measurable, trainable, practiced in an overall negotiation program.

• Issue Definition, Understanding & Re-definition

• Identify Interests, Values, Preferences

• Argument Construction• Organization & Persuasion

• Effective Questioning & Listening

• Understanding Big Picture• Packaging of Issues &

Concessions• Brainstorming Creatively• Final Agreement Drafting &

Communication

Global Focus

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Based on: “Teaching Negotiation and Dispute Resolution in Colleges of Business: The State of Practice and Challenges for the Future”. (2000)Roy Lewicki, Teaching Negotiation, Ideas and Innovations, Michael Wheeler, editor Harvard PON, 2000.