CHAPTER 3 INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATION AND CROSS …
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Transcript CHAPTER 3 INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATION AND CROSS …
INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATION
More
complex than domestic
negotiations
Differences in national cultures and
differences in political, legal, and
economic systems often separate
potential business partners
EXHIBIT 3-1: STEPS IN THE
INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATION
PROCESS
STEP 1: PREPARATION
STEP 2: BUILDING THE
RELATIONSHIP
STEP 3: EXCHANGING
INFORMATION/FIRST OFFER
STEP 4: PERSUASION
STEP 5: CONCESSIONS
STEP 6: AGREEMENT
STEP 1: PREPARATION
Is the negotiation possible?
Know what your company wants
Know the other side
Send the proper team
Agenda
Prepare for a long negotiation
Environment
Strategy
DIFFERENCES IN CULTURES IN
KEY NEGOTIATING PROCESSES
Communication
styles—direct or
indirect
Sensitivity to time—low or high
Forms of agreement—specific or
general
Team organization—a team or
one leader
STEP 2: BUILDING THE
RELATIONSHIP
No
focus on business
Partners get to know each other
Social and interpersonal matters
Duration and importance vary by
culture
STEP 3: EXCHANGING
INFORMATION AND THE FIRST
OFFER
Task-related
exchanged
First offer
information is
STEP 4: PERSUASION
Heart
of the negotiation process
Attempting to get other side to
agree to a position
Numerous tactics can be used
VERBAL AND NONVERBAL
NEGOTIATION TACTICS
Promise
Threat
Recommendation
Warning
Reward
Punishment
Normative appeal
OTHER NEGOTIATION TACTICS
Commitment
Self
disclosure
Question
Command
No
Interrupting
EXHIBIT 3-4: FREQUENCIES OF VERBAL NEGOTIATION
BEHAVIORS
C o m m itm en t
B razilian
C o m m an d
U .S .
R eco m m en d
Japanese
P ro m ise
NO
In terru p t
0
20
40
60
80
100
“DIRTY TRICKS” IN
INTERNATIONAL
NEGOTIATIONS
Dirty tricks are negotiation tactics
that pressure opponents to accept
unfair or undesirable agreements or
concessions
PLOYS/DIRTY TRICKS POSSIBLE RESPONSES
Deliberate
deception - point out
what is happening
Stalling - do not reveal when you
plan to leave
Escalating authority - clarify
decision making authority
Good
guy, bad buy routine - do not
make any concessions
You are wealthy and we are poor ignore the ploy
Old friends - keep a psychological
distance
STEPS 5 AND 6:
CONCESSIONS AND
AGREEMENT
Final
agreement: The signed
contract, agreeable to all sides
Concession making requires that
each side relax some of its
demands
STYLES OF CONCESSION
Sequential approach - consider
each issue as a separate point
Each side reciprocates
concessions
Holistic approach - more
common in Asia
Concession making begins after
all issues are discussed
BASIC NEGOTIATION
STRATEGIES
Competitive
– The
negotiation as a win-lose
game
Problem solving
– Search for possible win-win
situations
COMPETITIVE OR PROBLEM SOLVING
INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATION
Cultural
norms and values may
predispose some negotiators to
one approach
Most experts recommend a
problem solving negotiation
strategy
THE SUCCESSFUL INTERNATIONAL
NEGOTIATOR: PERSONAL
CHARACTERISTICS
Tolerance of ambiguous
situations
Flexibility and creativity
Humor
Stamina
Empathy
Curiosity
Bilingual
BASICS OF CROSS-CULTURAL
COMMUNICATION
LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
The
Whorf hypothesis
LOW CONTEXT
The
words provide most of the
meaning
Most northern European languages
including German, English, and the
Scandinavian languages are low
context
HIGH CONTEXT
Communications
have multiple
meanings interpreted by reading the
situation
Asian and Arabic languages are
among the most high context in the
world
PRACTICAL ISSUES IN CROSSCULTURAL VERBAL
COMMUNICATION
INTERPRETERS
Provide simultaneous translation
of a foreign language
Requires greater linguistic skills
than speaking a language or
translating written documents
Insure the accuracy and common
understanding of agreements
COMMUNICATION WITH NONNATIVE
SPEAKERS
Use the most common words with
most common meanings
Select words with few alternative
meanings
Follow rules of grammar strictly
Speak with clear breaks between
words
Avoid
“sports” words or words
borrowed from literature
Avoid slang/words that represent
pictures
Mimic the cultural flavor nonnative
speaker’s language
Summarize
Test your communication success
NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION COMMUNICATING WITHOUT WORDS
KINESICS
Communicating
through body
movements
Facial expressions
Body posture
PROXEMICS
The
use space to communicate
The personal bubble of space - nine
inches to over twenty inches
North Americans prefer more
distance than from Latin and Arab
cultures
TOUCH
A basic form of human
interaction
In greeting - shake hands,
embrace, or kiss
Latin European and Latin
American cultures-more
touching than Germanic, Anglo,
or Scandinavian cultures
AVOIDING ATTRIBUTION ERRORS
Attribution
- process by which we
interpret the meaning and intent of
spoken words or nonverbal exchanges
Attribution errors
CONCLUSIONS
Successful
negotiators
– Understand the negotiation steps
– Build cross-cultural
communication skills
– Understand nonverbal
communication
– Avoid attribution errors