Game theory: Two key principles for winning negotiations | Kevin Zollman
f you want to be an expert negotiator â or even a savvy game theorist â you must master one thing. Patience. Kevin Zollman, a professor at Carnegie Mellon an...
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f you want to be an expert negotiator â or even a savvy game theorist â you must master one thing. Patience. Kevin Zollman, a professor at Carnegie Mellon and one of the leading game theorists in America today, offers us some insight into how to gain the upper hand when it comes to negotiating, well, just about anything. Game theory comes in handy in a whole range of activities, from buying a car to asking for a raise. Zollman even goes as far to tell us not only how to attain negotiating power but how to sustain it, by simply telling the other other party to "take it or leave it."
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/kevin-zollman-take-it-or-leave-it-how-to-control-a-negotiation-like-a-game-theorist
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Game theorists have spent a lot of time analyzing various some models of negotiation. The idea is that you take what feels like a complex interaction, distill it down to itâs very simple elements and then you model it using the tools of game theory.
One of the things that game theorists have found is that in negotiation, especially in negotiations where weâre debating how to divide up some resourceâclassic example in game theory is dividing up a pie, but it could be anything, like money or some time with a toy, or anything where we have to decide how to divide it up.
Game theorists have discovered a couple of central principles that make a big difference to who does better in those negotiations.
One of the critical things is how patient you are, how willing you are to stay and continue to negotiate.
So if I come in in a rush to a car dealership and I say âI need a car right now,â everyone knows that the car dealer is going to try and take advantage of the fact that you need a car right now and say, âsorry, we canât give you a discount.â
But if you come into a car dealership and you say âI donât need a car anytime soon⊠if you give me a good deal today Iâll take it, but if you donât Iâll leave, maybe Iâll come back tomorrow, maybe the next day, maybe a month later,â then youâll get a better deal. So patience is very important.
If youâre trying to win in a negotiation you want to try and find ways to make it so that you are more patient than the other personâthat is you have less to lose from letting the negotiation drag out than does the person youâre negotiating with.
So donât wait until the last minute to buy a new car, donât run into the bosses office right before you need that big raise. Always choose situations where you just suggest it. Say âNo urgency, but I can come back later.â
By doing that you create this situation where the other person canât take advantage of your impatience, they canât give you a deal that is effectively a âtake it or leave itâ deal.
Another important thing in negotiation that can lead to better outcomes for you is: you always want to be in the position to be able to offer take it or leave it deals to the other person.
So if you can say to somebody else âhereâs the deal, take it or leave it,â now theyâre put in a position where they take it or they get nothing.
Now itâs tricky, of course, because I can say to you âtake it or leave it,â but that doesnât mean that it really is that way.
So by creating situations where it really is a take it or leave it situation, that can help you, but itâs also nerve-racking and dangerous so itâs a strategy that you have to be very careful about. But if you can be in a situation where you can offer somebody a true take it or leave it deal, that can often times improve the outcomes of the negotiation for you.
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/kevin-zollman-take-it-or-leave-it-how-to-control-a-negotiation-like-a-game-theorist
Follow Big Think here:
YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom
Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink
Game theorists have spent a lot of time analyzing various some models of negotiation. The idea is that you take what feels like a complex interaction, distill it down to itâs very simple elements and then you model it using the tools of game theory.
One of the things that game theorists have found is that in negotiation, especially in negotiations where weâre debating how to divide up some resourceâclassic example in game theory is dividing up a pie, but it could be anything, like money or some time with a toy, or anything where we have to decide how to divide it up.
Game theorists have discovered a couple of central principles that make a big difference to who does better in those negotiations.
One of the critical things is how patient you are, how willing you are to stay and continue to negotiate.
So if I come in in a rush to a car dealership and I say âI need a car right now,â everyone knows that the car dealer is going to try and take advantage of the fact that you need a car right now and say, âsorry, we canât give you a discount.â
But if you come into a car dealership and you say âI donât need a car anytime soon⊠if you give me a good deal today Iâll take it, but if you donât Iâll leave, maybe Iâll come back tomorrow, maybe the next day, maybe a month later,â then youâll get a better deal. So patience is very important.
If youâre trying to win in a negotiation you want to try and find ways to make it so that you are more patient than the other personâthat is you have less to lose from letting the negotiation drag out than does the person youâre negotiating with.
So donât wait until the last minute to buy a new car, donât run into the bosses office right before you need that big raise. Always choose situations where you just suggest it. Say âNo urgency, but I can come back later.â
By doing that you create this situation where the other person canât take advantage of your impatience, they canât give you a deal that is effectively a âtake it or leave itâ deal.
Another important thing in negotiation that can lead to better outcomes for you is: you always want to be in the position to be able to offer take it or leave it deals to the other person.
So if you can say to somebody else âhereâs the deal, take it or leave it,â now theyâre put in a position where they take it or they get nothing.
Now itâs tricky, of course, because I can say to you âtake it or leave it,â but that doesnât mean that it really is that way.
So by creating situations where it really is a take it or leave it situation, that can help you, but itâs also nerve-racking and dangerous so itâs a strategy that you have to be very careful about. But if you can be in a situation where you can offer somebody a true take it or leave it deal, that can often times improve the outcomes of the negotiation for you.
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Jun 6, 2018
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