Yes, it really
is true, “the devil is in the details.” The critical
juncture, where your ability to close a profitable sale meets
your customer’s desire to get what he considers to be
a good deal, occurs at the negotiating table. He may like you
and love the product or service you are selling, but what will
it take for both of you to walk away from that table with a
smile on your faces? It will take some wise, skillful negotiating.
In our powerful training course – Negotiating Contracts
and Agreements – we can equip you with everything you
will need to nail down that smile, and also cement a long-term
working relationship with that customer to keep you both smiling
for years to come. Lets Make A Deal
How we negotiate reflects our respect for the
customer and how deeply we care about the life of that relationship.
Too often salespeople and entrepreneurs listen to bad advice
about hard-core negotiating tactics. In reality, those who
are peak performers at negotiating show a lot of style and
grace under pressure--something their co-negotiators remember
and appreciate.
Here's some negotiating advice from me and some
legends in the art.
1. Be prepared. Always go into a negotiation
well-rested. Long, drawn-out meetings--or, worse, negotiating
over the long haul for several months--are exhausting. Make
it a rule that you're not allowed to get exhausted. If you
do, take a powder for a while.
The person with energy has the will to continue.
Do everything in your power not to weaken your position by
losing energy. Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz puts it
brilliantly: "Nobody quits unless they think they are
not going to be successful. When someone is running in a marathon,
as long as he thinks he is going to finish, he will continue.
It is only when he starts thinking he is not going to make
it that he will quit before he completely exhausts himself."
I know for a fact I am one weak sister when
I am tired. Fatigue stops the positive thoughts necessary
for good negotiations. That's why, the day before every negotiation,
I make sure to eat well, watch my alcohol intake and get eight
hours' sleep. This ensures I'm in top mental and physical
condition, and that my head is clear to negotiate successfully.
Things go better for me when I walk into the deal just plain
feeling good.
2. Remember, it's only a game. Herb Cohen, America's
great negotiator and author of You Can Negotiate Anything
(Audio Renaissance), says, "Negotiation is just a game.
You care about the outcome, but not that much." That's
one reason I rarely negotiate for my own public speaking fees
with a client. I'm too emotionally attached and sensitive
when it comes to representing myself. It's easy to take an
unbiased position when representing somebody else's money,
time, family, product, service or even career, but when it
hits close to home, it is no longer a game.
The more emotionally attached we become to an
outcome, the harder we try to get our way. Pretty soon we
begin to lose our perspective. It's important to stay neutral.
3. Don't take a hard-and-fast position. When
you start negotiating, remind yourself that you want this
agreement to work satisfactorily for everyone involved. If
you take a position that says, "Either this goes my way
or it's not going," you could end up very sorry. I have
seen salespeople do their customers a terrible injustice by
using this ploy.
How do you deal with people who try to force
you to take a position? Refuse to negotiate with them. Remain
calm and mature no matter how they try to beat you down. Once
a prospect said to me, "Either you throw in 10 sets of
workbooks with this video system or I won't do business with
you."
As soon as I hear "Either you do this or
else," I step in and stop the game. "I would love
to work with you, but it doesn't sound like it could work
right now." Notice I haven't said anything offensive.
Because this type of individual may be looking for trouble,
you must weigh your words carefully and get them out of your
way fast.
4. Be prepared to walk away. I repeat: Negotiating
is a game, and if you don't care about the outcome that much,
you can detach yourself from the situation and walk away.
The purest negotiations occur when you have plenty of other
prospects in the pipeline and plenty of money in the bank.
If an inflexible customer is the only customer
you have going for you, it can be difficult to negotiate objectively.
"Control of the negotiation lies with the party who is
perceived to need the deal the least," says expert negotiator
and sales consultant Barry Elms.
The older I get, the more I realize how important
it is not to want something too badly. The more alternatives
I can come up with, the better off I am. When you care the
least at the negotiating table, you have the most strength.
Most people feel they have either failed or
walked away from an opportunity when they turn something down,
says Joanna Tamer, president of Los Angeles-based S.O.S. Inc.,
a consulting firm for new media developers, publishers, distributors
and retailers. But in reality, says Tamer, "there is
no shortage of opportunity. If you say yes to something, whether
it turns out to be good or bad, you still have to say no to
the next thing that comes along because you have already filled
that space."
Tamer's detachment in the face of negotiation
is the key to her success with clients, which include big
names like Blockbuster, Harper-Collins and Time-Life Inc.
"When I negotiate for myself or my clients," says
Tamer, "I tell them and myself: `Remember, there is no
shortage of business out there. If this deal doesn't fly,
it isn't going to end my career or kill your future business.'
"
Keeping this positive attitude is important.
And when you say no, Tamer advises, be alert because something
will show up soon to fill the place of the deal that didn't
work out. "You may feel awful when something doesn't
work out--but later, you'll be amazed how happy you are that
it didn't," she promises. "If it had worked out,
the new opportunity that is in front of you now never would
have presented itself."
5. Practice compassion, and negotiate in good
faith. Show compassion by listening for the real reason behind
your customer's objection or hesitation. Let customers air
their feelings, make comments, present objections and feel
comfortable telling you whatever is on their minds. Then and
only then will all parties come to the negotiating table in
good faith.
By Danielle Kennedy

"Ensure a Win-Win Outcome With Your Negotiation"
Negotiation Training Quote
"It's just as unpleasant to get more than you bargain
for as to get less."
George Bernard Shaw
Negotiation Training - Suggested Reading
Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In
by Roger Fisher
Getting Past No : Negotiating Your Way from
Confrontation to Cooperation
by WILLIAM URY
Harvard Business Essentials Guide to Negotiation
by Not Applicable
Negotiation: Readings, Exercises, and Cases
by Roy J Lewicki
Essentials of Negotiation
by Roy J Lewicki
Women Don't Ask : Negotiation and the Gender
Divide
by Linda Babcock, Sara Laschever
The Art and Science of Negotiation
by Howard Raiffa
Everyday Negotiation: Navigating the Hidden
Agendas in Bargaining
by Deborah M. Kolb
Breakthrough Business Negotiation: A Toolbox
for Managers
by Michael Watkins
Global Business Negotiations: A Practical Guide
by Claude Cellich, Subhash Jain
Texts Under Negotiation: The Bible and Postmodern
Imagination
by Walter Brueggemann
Negotiation: Readings, Exercises, and Cases
/ Roy J. Lewicki
by Roy J. Lewicki
Negotiation Theory and Practice
by J. William Breslin
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