There is a method to any form of
negotiation that any woman bargaining for a trinket knows. A study called “Reciprocal Concessions
Procedure for Inducing Compliance: The Door-in-the-Face Technique,” explored
the idea of mutual reciprocal concessions, or give and take in negotiations. Previous studies had shown that the idea of
making an initial firm offer and holding to it was not an effective way to
negotiate. The best way is to start
higher and allow the other side to negotiate it down to an equitable level. This is sometimes known as the door in the
face approach.
How does it work? You begin by making a request that you know
the other side will not accede to. And
then you come back with what you really wanted in the first place. The idea behind this is that the person will
feel bad for refusing your first request, so when you ask for something lesser,
they feel obliged to give in. People
want to appear to be reasonable, and this allows them to do so, but at your
benefit. This works as long as the same
person is the one who asked both the greater and the lesser concession. And that is why, in a negotiating team, there
should be only one person making the demands.
This invariably works when there is some sort of relationship where both
sides are ready to deal.
This system is used in a gradated scale in
the course of the negotiation process, and as the other side denies larger
requests, they will increasingly agree to lesser ones, and will eventually
offer their own concessions. This way,
both parties leave the negotiating table believing they have achieved
something, while at the same time, ensuring that they got what they really
wanted.
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