home • Public Workshops • testimonials • contact
Copyright © 2002-2012 Baker Communications of Houston, Texas. All Rights Reserved.
Our public Negotiation classes and in house Negotiations classes are enlightening, educational, measurable and fun. Negotiation training classes can be scheduled at your offices or through our open enrollment classes. We do offer negotiation skills training classes to the general public.
Contact us today to discuss your specific Negotiation training needs or to sign up for one of our public negotiations classes.
Participants in the Win- Win Negotiations class will learn to:
You enter into the negotiating room and almost instantly you dislike the person you are negotiating with. You feel something slimy and distrustful in their approach but you can't pin your finger on what it is. You live through the negotiation but you feel ill at ease. Later on, when the other party backs out on what they promised, you think "I knew something like this would happen. Why didn't I just trust my gut reaction?"
Well you are not alone! Over 65-90% of every conversation is interpreted through body language, yet only about 4 % of the population actually understands how to read body language. When negotiating, this one point can make the difference between a stress free effective negotiation and a rocky one that ends with both parties ticked off.
WHY IT IS IMPORTANT TO UNDERSTAND BODY LANGUAGE WHEN NEGOTIATING.
Once you learn to read body language, you can see what a person is thinking but not saying. You can tell when they are in agreement with you, disagreement, bored, interested, upset, angry or confused.
I did some intense studying of body language in order to be able to negotiate better. I had studied the traditional ways of negotiating such as positional bargaining, but found that they didn't give me any insight into the other person. I wasn't finding a way to connect on a deeper level with them. Additionally, most of the people on the other side of the negotiating table were generally twenty years older than me. Even if I became adept at the tactics of traditional negotiating, these people had been doing it for so long they would always be able to out think me.
Negotiations: Make "I" Contact.
I also knew that much of the outcome of the negotiation is based on how you feel about the person and how the negotiation is being handled. I thought back to negotiations where I had agreed to less than I normally would. The common denominator in each instance was the sincerity and great approach of the other person. Instead of thinking about winning - which was ME oriented, I wanted to focus on adding value to the other person and be more WE oriented.
So, that left me with one solution - to understand what my colleagues or adversaries were thinking, but not saying. That way I would know when to make concessions, when to hold, and what questions to ask. Body language can provide those clues while at the same time redirecting your focus from yourself to the other person. You have to listen not only with your ears, but your whole body as well.
Yes, I see what you're saying.
For me this really came to light during a major negotiation with a vendor that I and another buyer did $12 million dollars of business with. The president of the company flew in to meet with my management, the other buyer and myself. They came with an entire entourage including the Sales Manager and their sales people.
The meeting was tense right up front. They sat on one side of the long boardroom table and we all sat on the other side. The other buyer started the session by reviewing our joint agenda. As she went through each point I just sat and watched their president. I tried to imagine what he was thinking and feeling by reading his body language.
I watched their president squirm. He switched legs from one side to the next. He adjusted his tie and picked lint off of his clothing. He looked at the ceiling. He flipped his tie. He crossed his arms, and uncrossed his arms. He looked at his fingers and drummed them on the table. Finally he took the agenda, flipped it over, crossed his arms and legs and leaned back. At that point, the room got quiet.
As I watched him, I saw from his body language that he was irritated, that he felt attacked and unappreciated. I saw that he felt we were asking for a lot and not giving enough in return. So I leaned forward, looked at him, and said, "You have built a very successful company in a relatively short amount of time. You found a niche for comfort shoes that can be worn to work. What I want to know is, what are your plans for the company in the next five years? How do you plan to advertise and grow and how can we assist you?"
He looked at me skeptically, leaned forward, and on the back of the agenda sheet started sketching his ideas. The more he talked the more animated he became. I learned he was launching a major advertising campaign that was going to cost him a bundle. He was planning radio, television and billboard advertising. We started talking about how we could link into his campaign. I mentioned that we had three major sales a year and it would be great exposure to get him into those ads. We brainstormed what shoes to put in and decided a family shoe ad would be great. He offered to discount his top two styles for us.
Finally we got to the issue of defective shoes in his warehouse. I remembered how he picked lint off himself (a sign that a person disagrees with what you said, but feels constrained in offering his opinion) while we discussed why we needed him to take the shoes back. So I said, "We know you build a great shoe and we want to drive your business as much as possible. Your "walk-test" campaign is a great example of your belief in your shoe quality. We also believe the shoes are so good that if people wear them they will like them. So we are willing to have people buy them, "walk-test" them and return them if they don't find them comfortable. We know the risk of returns, but we believe the risk of one return is worth the extra ten pair we can sell using this method. What we need to know is what you would prefer us to do. Should we stop having the stores support your "walk-test" campaign or should we go forward realizing that many of the shoes coming back to you will be due to customer discretionary returns instead of defects?"
He looked at me and replied that he would rather stand behind the walking program. He would continue to accept the shoes customers returned. He currently had thirty thousand pairs in his warehouse. When we finished, he laughed, flipped over the agenda, looked at it and said, "I guess I gave you more than you came here to ask for and I feel good about it!" We all shook hands and as he was about to leave, he stopped, turned around and announced, "I just think you should know that I came here today to pull your $12 million dollar account. I was so angry I was willing to walk away from our business with you. Instead I am leaving excited about our business with you."
Adversary to Partner: Listen with your eyes and see with your ears.
He came in as an adversary and left a partner. Why? Because by using Outcome Thinking (talking from his perspective) and by reading his body language, I was able to connect with him as a person. The session wasn't about what can we get, it was about how we can grow two businesses. If I hadn't been able to read his body language, I wouldn't have known that he was feeling personally attacked about the defective shoes. I wouldn't have known that he was defensive, thinking we were saying his shoes were not top quality. And I would have probably approached it all wrong.
So what signs should you watch for?
The following body signs are key ones to watch for when negotiating. They are based on the European-American Culture and on the research work of Desmond Morris, Alan Pease, and Julius Fast to name a few.
I want you to think about these body signs as guidelines, not absolute truths. Whenever you see a sign you need to stop and ask questions to make sure you are correctly interpreting what the person meant. Body language is tied to our thoughts and not our words. This is why you can sometimes get mixed signals from people. When in doubt listen to the body language, not the words!
Signs the person is listening and absorbing what you say:
The One Telltale sign that a person can never control:
Body Signs that tell you the person disagrees with you, dislikes what you said or is just plain hostile:
The following gestures give a more negative connotation and can put the other person on the defensive. Remember to read the gestures in the cluster in order to not misread what is being said. For example, crossed arms can signal defensiveness, or it can simply mean the room is cold. If the room is cold, the arms will be held tight into the body and they will occasionally rub their arms for warmth.
TIP: Notice that all of my questions are open ended rather than yes/no questions. This gets the other party more involved in your negotiation.
Deceit Signs:
Take these signs with a grain of salt. You want to watch the gestures that accompany these signs or you will erroneously assume that everyone who scratches their nose is lying to you.
If someone uses these gestures while talking to you, it may indicate lying or withholding of information. If they do these gestures while you are talking to them, it may indicate they are skeptical of what you are saying. Either way, these are important gestures to watch for.
If they are deceit signs, generally you will see the gestures accompanied by some of the following: squirming, breaking eye contact, shifting of eyes, shifting of body, turning the body away from you, voice level rising in volume and pitch. In a negotiation this lets you know whether they are serious about the offer or if they are going to just keep pressing you to give in more.
Such gestures can be used for decent motives as well as dishonorable ones. Especially since we can't always say exactly what we are thinking. Think about the last time a friend asked you if you liked her new outfit, and you thought it was hideous. Maybe you said "Oh, where did you get it? It really is you!" At the same time you probably unconsciously employed one of these deceit gestures which betrayed your true opinion.
Do Men and Women use the same body language?
Now I want to quickly point out a difference between how men and women communicate in general. (I realize not all men or women communicate in a set style. This is just meant to give you an overview of how most men and women communicate.)
Gender Differences:
John Gray and Debra Tannen each talk about the differences in how men and women communicate. For ease here, I am going to simplify the difference, although please realize that not all men and women fit neatly into categories.
In a nutshell, men communicate with status in mind; they seek to solve problems. Women communicate with connecting in mind. These are two very different ways of communicating and neither way is better than the other. In order to be a more effective communicator, you do need to understand the differences.
Women will often come back to the same issue over and over again, not to find a solution, but just to air their feelings. Men like to bring something up once, resolve it, and move on. They close that mental file and move on to the next. This difference in communication style can result in women concluding that men are cold and withdrawn while men often find women emotional and irrational. These differences come through in body language.
And what about space?
Space plays a big role in negotiations. You have a definite space bubble you carry around you. If you trust people, you let them in to your space. Negotiations naturally make us more nervous and lead us to want as much space as we can possibly get. This is why most people tend to sit across the table from each other. This is the worst thing you can do! When you sit across from someone they naturally divide the table in half and half becomes your space and half becomes their space. To test this out, try going to lunch with someone and putting your beverage, the salt and pepper shaker, etc. on to their half of the table. You will find they will become agitated and move their chair back or they will slowly move things back so the space is even.
When negotiating, make sure you have a room that has enough space for each person to have elbow room. Once a person's body space is invaded they will stop thinking rationally and will instead put their energy towards getting their space back! And the negotiation will most likely never close. Your best bet is to have a room with a round table so there is no "head" spot. It brings a feeling of equality to the negotiation.
Pulling it all together.
Okay, so what do you do with all this new found knowledge? Do you just stare at the other person trying to read in to every little nuance? Believe me, you can find yourself watching the body language so much that you miss the words!
Use these guidelines to ask questions and to set up an atmosphere that is the most cooperative. Make sure negotiating room has enough space for everyone. Try to have a round table. Come prepared for a focused outcome and then read the body language to flex right on the spot.
Remember negotiating isn't about winning, it is about reaching an outcome that propels you forward! Use it as a time to build a relationship with the other person. Even the most stubborn negotiator likes to feel listened to and respected.
Anne Warfield http://www.impressionmanagement.com/negotiation_skills.shtml
Negotiating