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By Carolina Eder Annalena Koehler Anton Hristov Vilhelm Öhrn

Negotiation Subprocesses

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Negotiation Subprocesses. By Carolina Eder Annalena Koehler Anton Hristov Vilhelm Öhrn. Negotiation. Everyone uses negotiation in day to day life. Negotiation is a process in which a group or involved parties resolve matters, by discussing and coming to an agreement. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Negotiation  Subprocesses

By Carolina EderAnnalena Koehler

Anton Hristov Vilhelm Öhrn

Page 2: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Everyone uses negotiation in day to day life. Negotiation is a process in which a group or

involved parties resolve matters, by discussing and coming to an agreement.

Page 3: Negotiation  Subprocesses

To analyze negotiation rationally the negotiator has to understand the psychological forces which have a big impact on the negotiator´s effectiveness.

Page 4: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Structure problems Processes information Frame the situation

Page 5: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Situation adapted from Russo and Schoemaker

Difference between the two situations Actually for both it should be worth it to

invest the same amount of time First Scenario – Very Good deal Second Scenario – Not that attractive

◦ Frame represents percentage of discount

Page 6: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Situation Richard Thaler Content In both versions, the result is the same. No negotiation with the seller Percentage of elasticity of the demand of

the product Frame – high cost is expected at hotel

High cost is considered “rip-off” in the store

Page 7: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Those two examples show how importantframing is to solve problems and makeDecisions

Page 8: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Framing potential gains or potential losses Framed either as “gains” or “losses”

◦ Gains of similar value – prefer certainty over lottery

◦ Losses of sim. Value – prefer lottery over certainty

Example : $3500 gain considered a loss◦ Personal goal was a $5000 increase◦ Frame based on available information

(info not known – average raise = $2000)

Page 9: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Crucial in forming the Frame

◦ Basis for evaluating if option is a gain or loss

◦ Determine our willingness to accept/reject an option

◦ It is a result of our expectations

◦ Usually what we own is our automatic reference point

Page 10: Negotiation  Subprocesses

“Buyer” and “Seller” have different reference points◦ Seller – personal attachment to the object he owns◦ Values this attachment, therefore puts higher value◦ Buyer is not attached, he estimates a lower value

for an object

Ex: Coffee Mug priced from $.50 to $.9.50◦ Sellers - $7.12◦ Buyer – $2.88 (closer to market value)◦ Chooser - $3.12 (get $ or mug, no buying/selling)

Page 11: Negotiation  Subprocesses

Strategically manipulate framing to direct negotiation performance

Framing the options in terms of potential gain

◦ Situation perceived as more favorable

Same option Framed in terms of losses

◦ Lower chance of a favorable perception

Page 12: Negotiation  Subprocesses