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This is an episode of 'Negotiations Ninja' Episode 409 hosted by Mark Raffin! I'm simply resharing it here.
What is Paul’s PIER negotiation process?
If, at any point during the dating process, something goes wrong, you can amicably leave the process. And the more you know about who you’re negotiating with, the better you can serve them.
You know you’re going to be meeting with someone. You know the topic you’ll be talking about. Hostage negotiators don’t have that luxury. They have to prepare for the unexpected. They do that by running through mock scenarios that they’d practice monthly. If you have a large negotiation in 3-4 days, you need to run through it. Ask someone to roleplay with you. Answer as thoroughly as you can. Most people don’t do this.
Negotiating and selling is like dating. When you start dating someone, you want to see if you have a connection. It’s an exploratory process. It’s the same in a negotiation. You want to ask questions to see if they can work together.
If you ask someone out on a date, your intent has to be focused on that person. You want to make it about them. You want to learn about them. Why? To build trust and likability and determine whether or not you’ll ask for date number two.
If you talk about yourself like you’re the best thing that’s come along, you’ll never get a second date. Your date might just leave. So would a company. Provide people with something they truly want that fits the needs they have.
People want to be seen, understood and appreciated. It’s the same in business. They’ll come back to someone who listens to them and knows their pain points.
The goal isn’t to sell someone something they don’t want. You wouldn’t want a family member to work with someone who sells just for a commission. You’d want to send them to someone who cares about their outcome. They seek to understand what someone is looking to do with their product. You want to be that person.
Paul emphasizes that negotiations are not hard. They’re about connecting with another human being. It’s when two or more people get together to reach an agreement. You’re negotiating every day of your life. Don’t make it complicated. Seek to listen and understand the other person and focus your intent on them; it will open doors and build relationships.
Subscribe to Negotiations Ninja
Overcoming Information Asymmetry in
5
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This is an episode of 'Negotiations Ninja' Episode 409 hosted by Mark Raffin! I'm simply resharing it here.
What is Paul’s PIER negotiation process?
If, at any point during the dating process, something goes wrong, you can amicably leave the process. And the more you know about who you’re negotiating with, the better you can serve them.
You know you’re going to be meeting with someone. You know the topic you’ll be talking about. Hostage negotiators don’t have that luxury. They have to prepare for the unexpected. They do that by running through mock scenarios that they’d practice monthly. If you have a large negotiation in 3-4 days, you need to run through it. Ask someone to roleplay with you. Answer as thoroughly as you can. Most people don’t do this.
Negotiating and selling is like dating. When you start dating someone, you want to see if you have a connection. It’s an exploratory process. It’s the same in a negotiation. You want to ask questions to see if they can work together.
If you ask someone out on a date, your intent has to be focused on that person. You want to make it about them. You want to learn about them. Why? To build trust and likability and determine whether or not you’ll ask for date number two.
If you talk about yourself like you’re the best thing that’s come along, you’ll never get a second date. Your date might just leave. So would a company. Provide people with something they truly want that fits the needs they have.
People want to be seen, understood and appreciated. It’s the same in business. They’ll come back to someone who listens to them and knows their pain points.
The goal isn’t to sell someone something they don’t want. You wouldn’t want a family member to work with someone who sells just for a commission. You’d want to send them to someone who cares about their outcome. They seek to understand what someone is looking to do with their product. You want to be that person.
Paul emphasizes that negotiations are not hard. They’re about connecting with another human being. It’s when two or more people get together to reach an agreement. You’re negotiating every day of your life. Don’t make it complicated. Seek to listen and understand the other person and focus your intent on them; it will open doors and build relationships.
Subscribe to Negotiations Ninja
Overcoming Information Asymmetry in
157 Listeners