Arvind Upadhyay is the world's Best Business Coach and Strategist. He is author of several Business Books.

Win-Win Negotiation skill arvind business coach

Win-Win Negotiation skill arvind business coach

 Negotiation is the only skills which can make your more healthy and profitable if you can negotiate with any one better you can be better in any of the situation such as ranking as well get more profit and persepective of the value you should almost to negotiate as much as possible .I know a story once my friend and i was in retailer of bike store we was buying a second hand bike for our personal use that seller person told us that if you need this bike you should pay 30,000 but I was not agree with that deal i told them we can only pay 23000 for this bike the he told ok, now i can sold it at 28000 but still i was not good with this deal i was not so happy about it to getting more closer with deal. then after a long hours of negotiations we make a deal for 24,000 its was a big acheivement for us to get on 24,000 we make good deal as we was thinking at that time .


Please bear with me while I tell you my favorite negotiation story. 
It's very corny, but it makes the point. 
In this story, two sisters are quarreling over a single orange. 
The argument is heating up and getting personal. 
One sister says mom already promised it to me. 
The other sister says well dad said that I could have it. 
I'll never speak to you again. 
I'll never spend another holiday with you. 
It's clear that there's a lot of damage occurring in this relationship. 
Finally, the sisters decide to cut the orange exactly in half 
using scientific measurement. 
One sister takes her half, squeezes out the juice, and throws the peel away. 
The other sister takes her half, carefully zests the peel 
to make her famous orange scone recipe, and throws the juice away. 
And then the garbage truck comes and goes. 
Then they look at each other. 
The whole time you only wanted to the juice? 
And I only wanted the peel? 
And now it's too late. 
This story is very corny, but the point it makes is that if we 
never share our interests, we cannot reach win-win outcomes. 
If I don't tell you a dang thing, 
chances are we're not going to settle upon a win-win agreement. 
In my own research with corporate executives, CEOs, and managers, 
I find that over 80% of them leave money on the table or 
have some parts of the orange in the garbage truck. 
How do you reach win-win outcomes? 
We are going to introduce five key skills that you can use in personal and 
business negotiations. 
Number one, fractionate the negotiation into more than one issue. 
First rule of thumb, negotiations cannot have win-win potential 
unless there are two or more issues. 
For example, if the orange did not have juice and 
a rind, then we don't have the potential to give one sister all of the juice and 
the other the entire peel, so 
the first rule of thumb is to fractionate the negotiation into several parts. 
I find that a lot of my managers tend to focus on price 
to the exclusion of everything else. 
By definition, negotiations that are only about price are fixed-sum. 
By identifying other issues such as payment terms, conditions, volume, 
quality and so on, it is possible to create win-win negotiations. 
Number two, prioritize your interests. 
Second rule of thumb is to prioritize your interests for each issue. 
I often give my students and clients 100 poker chips, and 
tell them to stack the chips where they count. 
My colleague, professor Jean Brett, created a positions and 
interest chart to help negotiators prioritize. 
Start with the first column and 
list all of the issues, price, terms, quantity, delivery date. 
Then, rank order them in terms of importance. 
Then indicate what your position, state a demand, and 
interest underlying goal is for each issue. 
Finally, make your best guess about the opponent's priorities and interests. 
Number three, reveal your interests. 
Most negotiators are reluctant to share any information. 
I did a research study on this and coached some negotiators to do one of the three 
things within the first five minutes of a negotiation. 
Some revealed information about their priorities, 
others asked questions about the counter party's priorities, and 
then, a control group did whatever they dang well wanted. 
The results? 
Negotiators who revealed information about their interests and 
priorities improved their own outcomes by an average of 10%. 
Number four, ask questions about the other party's priorities. 
Asking questions is equally important. 
My favorite questions are what is more valuable to you, X or Y? 
What is your rank ordering of the issues? 
Would you rather I made a concession on issue Z or issue W? 
If I gave what you wanted on Z could you give me what I need on Y.
Number five, devise multi-issue proposals that logroll parties' interests. 
Had the sisters realized that one needed only the juice, and 
the other only the peel, they could have engaged in logrolling or 
fashioned a value-added tradeoff. 
Let me give you an example of this in the real world. 
Consider Greek yogurt producers Chobani and Fage in upstate New York. 
It takes about four gallons of milk to produce one gallon of Greek yogurt. 
The problem? 
The process of making thick Greek yogurt creates an acidic watery 
byproduct that's not toxic, but difficult and expensive to dispose of. 
A win-win solution was reached when the Greek yogurt producers discovered 
that the Albany Wastewater Treatment Plant valued the byproduct. 
In fact, the Albany Wastewater Treatment Plant Use millions of 
gallons of whey to run all the generators in the municipal plant, 

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