10 Techniques for Better Negotiation
By Sloan Brothers with Daniel Kehrer - StartupNation
Startup entrepreneurs are not always the best negotiators. They step into the
shoes of a business owner for the first time and find — to their surprise — that
nearly everything involves negotiation of some kind, and they may not
always have those negotiation techniques down.
Starting a
business requires, quite literally, hundreds of negotiations. Some are
small, like securing the best price on printing your letterhead and business
cards. Others are far bigger deals that can make or break your startup business
from the get-go. Sometimes you are the buyer; other times the seller. Either
way, the skills you need to be a good negotiator are the same.
For some small business owners, it comes naturally. They're the ones who
started negotiating an allowance and extra TV time with their parents at age
four. For most of us, however, it comes through effort and experience. Rarely is
it something you learned as part of a formal education.
Here are ten tactics that can make you a better, more confident negotiator on
behalf of your small business:
Ten Negotiation Techniques:
- Prepare, prepare, prepare. Enter a negotiation without
proper preparation and you've already lost. Start with yourself. Make sure
you are clear on what you really want out of the arrangement. Research the
other side to better understand their needs as well as their strengths and
weaknesses. Enlist help from experts, such as an accountant, attorney or
tech guru.
- Pay attention to timing. Timing is important in any
negotiation. Sure, you must know what to ask for. But be sensitive to
when you ask for it. There are times to press ahead, and times to wait.
When you are looking your best is the time to press for what you want. But
beware of pushing too hard and poisoning any long-term relationship.
- Leave behind your ego. The best negotiators either
don't care or don't show they care about who gets credit for a
successful deal. Their talent is in making the other side feel like the
final agreement was all their idea.
- Ramp up your listening skills. The best negotiators are
often quiet listeners who patiently let others have the floor while they
make their case. They never interrupt. Encourage the other side to talk
first. That helps set up one of negotiation's oldest maxims: Whoever
mentions numbers first, loses. While that's not always true, it's generally
better to sit tight and let the other side go first. Even if they don't
mention numbers, it gives you a chance to ask what they are thinking.
- If you don't ask, you don't get. Another tenet of
negotiating is "Go high, or go home." As part of your preparation, define
your highest justifiable price. As long as you can argue
convincingly, don't be afraid to aim high. But no ultimatums, please.
Take-it-or-leave-it offers are usually out of place.
- Anticipate compromise. You should expect to make
concessions and plan what they might be. Of course, the other side is
thinking the same, so never take their first offer. Even if it's better than
you'd hoped for, practice your best look of disappointment and politely
decline. You never know what else you can get.
- Offer and expect commitment. The glue that keeps deals
from unraveling is an unshakable commitment to deliver. You should offer
this comfort level to others. Likewise, avoid deals where the other side
does not demonstrate commitment.
- Don't absorb their problems. In most negotiations, you
will hear all of the other side's problems and reasons they can't give you
what you want. They want their problems to become yours, but don't let them.
Instead, deal with each as they come up and try to solve them. If their
"budget" is too low, for example, maybe there are other places that money
could come from.
- Stick to your principles. As an individual and a
business owner, you likely have a set of guiding principles — values that
you just won't compromise. If you find negotiations crossing those
boundaries, it might be a deal you can live without.
- Close with confirmation. At the close of any meeting —
even if no final deal is struck — recap the points covered and any areas of
agreement. Make sure everyone confirms. Follow-up with appropriate letters
or emails. Do not leave behind loose ends.
Our Bottom Line:
When it comes to entrepreneurial talents that spell success in the world of
startups, the ability to negotiate well is one of the most vital attributes you
can possess. Take care to develop this skill. Some people think they
are good negotiators, but in reality are not. From bringing in good people, to
arranging financing or nailing that first big deal, sound negotiating techniques
will be essential.
© 2005 BizBest Media Corp.
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