How positional communication almost ruined my Christmas holiday

Negotiation Nuggets: Realizing that you are always in a negotiation; How to look beyond positions; How to train yourself to find interests.

“I’m sorry, the check-in is now closed.”

Over a decade ago, I called New York City home. I had a flight from NY to Uruguay booked to spend the Christmas holidays with my friend and her family.

The worst of all things happens. On December 22nd, the morning of my flight, my phone mysteriously died during the night, and my 4 AM alarm did not ring.

I wake up at 6:45. Fifteen minutes before boarding! Without wasting a second, I call a cab, grab my suitcase, and rush off to the airport. I arrive 40 minutes later, where luckily boarding has only begun 20 minutes ago.

I sprint to the check-in counter with my huge suitcase. Closed.

An airline employee is close by so I rush over and say, “I’m terribly sorry; I’m running late. I have to catch that flight!” She responds, “I’m sorry, but the check-in is closed.” So, I plead, “Isn’t there anything we can do?” “I’m afraid I can’t assist with check-in anymore; the system is closed,” she replies.

My expression freezes. I mutter a simple “Thank you” and walk away. For a moment, I stand in the terminal filled with people heading to their Christmas destinations, contemplating how all other flights are likely fully booked or exorbitantly priced on December 22nd. I can already see myself spending Christmas alone in cold and snowy New York.

Then, my inner negotiator springs into action.

I sprint back to the counter and say, “Look, the plane is still here. I can make it to the gate in time. What can we do? I need to be on that flight. I don’t care if you can’t check in my suitcase, we can put it on the next plane or in the mail or whatever, I don’t care. I just need to be on that flight!

Have you checked in online?” she asks.

Yes, I have.

But you have a suitcase, right?

Yes, I do. But I don’t care! Send it on the next flight, send it by mail, whatever. I need to be on that flight.”

She starts talking into her walkie-talkie. Five minutes later, she and I are running through security with my bulky suitcase. Just before the plane’s doors close, we arrive at the gate where they take my suitcase and simply check it in there.

This was before I started Negotiation Academy. But these two key negotiationlessons will always stay with me.

  1. Positional communication can ruin your chances of getting what you want. Her position was, “The check-in is closed”. That seemed perfectly reasonable to me. No one was there. I was late. And boarding had started. So my brain said, “Okay, that means I can no longer check in, I am screwed.” What I didn’t realise was that she thought I needed to check myself in when really it was just my suitcase (and turns out even that can be done at the gate).
  2. Life is a negotiation. This lady had full power to run through security with me to get me on that plane with my suitcase. I was in a negotiation. But I didn’t notice that at first. To get her to go out of her way, ask security for special permission, and drop everything and run with me, I needed to do some persuasion. “Okay, thank you” after the first “check-in is closed” wasn’t gonna do that.

Become an Investigator of Interests

Our default style of thinking and communication is positional. Our brain needs to be efficient, so there is no conscious thought process that gets us from our interests to our positions. And neither does your counterpart. The positions just pop right up and we share them.

What this example shows is that the positional speaking and thinking that we are used to do often gets us nowhere when we try to negotiate.

To boost our chances of getting what we want we have to learn to actively go beyond positions. In this case, it would have meant to ask her (even if it sounds silly at first) “WHY is it a problem that the check-in is closed?” – “Because we cannot check you in any more “ “Oh, I am checked in, online“, “and because we cannot check the suitcase in” Oh, so it’s about the suitcase?” “can we put it on the next flight, use UPS or (as it turned out) do that at the gate?”.

Realizing what was behind her position made the difference between staying snowed in and spending Christmas alone OR flying off to Uruguay for sun and holidays that winter. Or it probably saved me some $$$ for new tickets.

Whenever you feel like you are getting nowhere in your negotiation, ask yourself: Am I really talking about interests? And do I really know theirs?

Don’t get held back by your and their positional thinking and communication. Go beyond!

Happy negotiating!

To your success!

Dr. Claudia

Your Negotiation Whisperer

 

If you enjoyed this content, feel free to sign up for our free 10-week Email course on the fundamentals of Collaborative and Competitive Negotiation skills by clicking HERE.
Each week, you will get a bite-size email unpacking some of the most fundamental negotiation concepts that you can apply in your everyday negotiations, along with an insight video and book recommendation to go further in areas you want to learn more about.

Give yourself negotiation power with Limit Price & BATNA – Part 1/3

Today you will learn: Setting your Limit Price – Calculating your BATNA – Knowing the exact point when to leave a negotiation (with video example for calculating your BATNA in a court case).


There are 2 key forms of negotiation:

1) Collaborative Negotiation (aka Harvard win-win)

2) Competitive / Distributive Negotiation (aka Bargaining)

The best negotiators master both forms and know how to integrate them by first growing the pie with win-win strategies and then securing the bigger piece of the pie with distributive negotiation strategies.

This month I want to focus on how you secure the biggest piece of the pie and share the three key numbersyou need to prepare for any monetary (=distributive) negotiation.

  1. Limit price
  2. Goal Price
  3. Opener

These numbers are so key, that the GC of a Fortune 500 company I work with tells his managers to not even knock on his door before they have them hashed out. And it takes them a day, sometimes two, to do just that. So take good note!

Let’s dive in and talk about the first one, the Limit Price.

Your Limit Price is best determined by your BATNA (Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement). BATNA is the answer to the question “What will I do if this deal/negotiation tanks?” This needs to be specific! Not just “I’ll just get another job” or “We will acquire another business” or “We will just take it to court if we cannot settle” but which job, for how much, when, under what terms, what is a likely outcome in court?

This always needs to be a specific number! Yes, even and especially going to court! The below video excerpt from our Master Negotiator Course shows how to calculate your BATNA in a business dispute lawsuit.

The bottom line is: The more specific your alternative and the more you work on improving it, the greater your negotiation power.

Knowing your BATNA is critical because it is your walkaway point. Too many times, people overpay or undercharge because in the heat of the negotiation, due to poor preparation, or due to the length of the negotiations (sunk cost principle) they do not realize they would have gotten a better deal somewhere else.

Sometimes the best deal is no deal. You have to know where that walkaway point is for your situation to apply it, regardless of whether this is a settlement negotiation, your salary, a new home or any other purchase or business contract.

Improve your BATNA – give yourself negotiation power!

Keep Negotiating!

Dr. Claudia

Your Negotiation Whisperer

Next Topic: Goal Price. How “let’s do the best we can” NEVER gets you the best you can – setting ambitious goals in negotiations.


PS: Book recommendation for German lawyers who want to dive deeper: Jörg Risse: Prozessrisikoanalyse: Erfolgsaussichten vor Gericht bestimmen. Highly recommend!

If you enjoyed this content, feel free to sign up for our free 10-week Email course on the fundamentals of Collaborative and Competitive Negotiation skills by clicking HERE.
Each week, you will get a bite-size email unpacking some of the most fundamental negotiation concepts that you can apply in your everyday negotiations, along with an insight video and book recommendation to go further in areas you want to learn more about.