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EFFECTIVE PUBLIC MANAGEMENT SKILLS

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EFFECTIVE PUBLIC MANAGEMENT SKILLS NEGOTIATION AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION FOUNDATION SKILLS AND ADVANCED PROCESSES Robert Alan Bush Reference: Lewicki, et. al. (2003 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EFFECTIVE PUBLIC MANAGEMENT SKILLS


1
EFFECTIVE PUBLIC MANAGEMENT SKILLS
  • NEGOTIATION AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION
  • FOUNDATION SKILLS AND ADVANCED PROCESSES
  • Robert Alan Bush
  • Reference Lewicki, et. al. (2003) Essentials of
    Negotiation. Boston, McGraw-Hill.

2
Essentials
  • Negotiation requires
  • Good communication
  • Good cultural understanding

3
Learning Objectives
  • By the end of this session you well be able to
  • Describe key factors of the negotiation
    situation, the strategy options, actions and
    styles of the negotiation process
  • Understand the use of leverage
  • Consider differences in cultural styles
  • Adapt universal concepts to the Brunei situation

4
Part One - Universal Aspects of the Negotiation
Situation
  • LEVELS
  • Can be at interpersonal, inter-group or inter
    organizational levels
  • CONFLICT
  • There is a conflict of interest
  • INFLUENCE
  • People negotiate because they believe they can
    influence an outcome
  • AGREEMENT
  • People prefer to get an agreement rather than
    fight. Occurs when fixed sets of procedures have
    broken down or do not exist

5
Universal Aspects of the Negotiation Situation
  • GIVE AND TAKE PROCESS
  • In any negotiation there you can expect to give
    away something and to gain something. This is the
    nature of the process
  • INTANGIBLE AND TANGIBLE
  • There are intangible aspects (psychological)
    like needing to save face, dealing with the fear
    of something different, showing you have achieved
    good.
  • There are the tangible aspects the upfront
    aspects

6
Universal Aspects of the Negotiation Process
  • Inter-dependency
  • Both parties need each other
  • Goal interdependency win lose, win win
  • Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement (ref
    Fisher et al 1991) as a source of power
  • Mutual Adjustment
  • Needing to recognize that a settlement will mean
    making adjustments afterwards and planning for
    these
  • Value Creation
  • Differences in Interests, opinions, risk
    aversion, timing
  • Conflict
  • Needs to be managed (see later session)

7
So When should you not negotiate?
  • List and Think of Examples

8
So When should you not negotiate?
  • When it looks like you will lose everything do
    something else
  • When you have no room to move raise the stakes
    instead
  • When the demands are unethical its illegal
  • If you have no stake in the outcome
  • When waiting might improve your position
  • When you are not prepared well

9
Part Two - Strategy
  • Strategizing and planning a negotiation is what
    you do before you begin negotiating
  • It involves several steps

10
Strategizing - Step One
  • SETTING GOALS
  • Deal with the substantive issues first (those to
    be stated in the negotiation)
  • Deal with these through goals, goal priorities
    and multi-goal packages
  • Address procedural concerns

11
Step One
  • Address both tangible and intangible goals
  • Tangible e.g. price of something
  • Intangible e.g. Defending a principle, saving
    face, ensuring cultural integrity

12
Step One
  • Goals Effect Strategy
  • What you will be happy with after the negotiation
    effects how the negotiation is run.
  • Know the difference between a wish and a goal
  • Recognize that our goals are often linked to the
    other parties goals in some way. This defines the
    issues to be settled
  • There will be limits beyond which you will not
    negotiate
  • Goals have to be concrete and specific to be of
    use.

13
Step Two Strategic Options
  • Savage et. al. (1989) Academy of management 3 (1)
    37-48 suggest two basic concerns determine
    strategy.
  • How much concern is there to achieve substantive
    outcomes?
  • How much concern is there for the current and
    future relationship with the other party?

14
Step two Strategic Options
15
Step Three Framing the Problem
  • People walk into a room and see the same thing
    in quite different ways.
  • One persons hero is another persons loser.
  • Disputes are open to different interpretations.

16
Different strategies define different frames
  • Think about what these strategies imply for
    framing
  • Competition
  • Collaboration
  • Accommodation
  • HINT THINK.Goal, relationships, motivation, key
    attitude, remedy for breakdown

17
TYPES OF FRAMES
  • What the negotiators focus on and how they
    justify things
  • Substantive frame
  • Aspiration frame
  • Conflict management process frame
  • Identity frame
  • Risk (loss gain) frame

18
Other Frames
  • The Interests Rights power frame
  • Interests want the needs, wants desires are
  • Rights - What it is legitimate to have
  • Power - Imposing types of power over others
    like economic power, withdrawal of labor, denial
    of expertese

19
Other frames
  • Frames change as the negotiation proceeds and
    conflict rises and falls
  • Naming, blaming claming
  • Naming occurs when the problem get defined
  • Blaming occurs when how the problem that occurred
    get defined
  • Claming occurs when some type of action is taken

20
Using Framing in Negotiation
  • You can use framing to undertsnad and work out
    how to proceed in an a negotiation
  • we are looking at this this way and we believe
    you are looking at this that way, so how can we
    find some common ground.

21
The Negotiation Process
  1. Define the issues
  2. Assembling the issues and defining the bargaining
    mix
  3. Defining your interests
  4. Knowing your limits and alternatives
  5. Setting targets and openings
  6. Assessing your constituents
  7. Assessing the other party (Resources, interests,
    needs, reputation, alternatives, targets,
    openings, authority, startegy)

22
Continue
  1. What strategy do I want to pursue
  2. How I will present the issues to the other party
  3. What protocols are needed

23
END OF INTRODUCTION
  • NEXT SESSION -- LEVERAGE

24
Session TWO - Leverage
  • Definition
  • The tools negotiators use to give themselves
    advantage and increase the probability of
    achieving their goals

25
Leverage
  • Leverage is usually understood as power and
    influence. There are two basic situations within
    which leverage is applied
  • Where the negotiator believes they have less
    leverage than the other party
  • Where the negotiator believes they have more
    leverage than the other party
  • The tactics used depend upon theses starting
    positions

26
Leverage with more or less power
  • In the less power situation the negotiator uses
    power tactics to gain a more level playing field
  • In the more power situation the negotiator uses
    power tactics to stress differences to their own
    advantage

27
Example using Interests, Rights and Power Tactics
  • Often used when the other party is reluctant to
    negotiate
  • Focus of Interests used to achieve an working
    relationship to achieve mutual goals
  • Focus on Rights Used when resolution is sought
    through drawing up rules, standards, laws and
    ideas of fairness
  • Focus on Power Focus on this when you are
    trying to get concessions from the other party

28
How do Negotiators acquire Power?
  • Control of/possession of information and
    expertise
  • to get concessions build up shared information
  • Expertise requires respect for accomplishments,
    mastery over some aspect of knowledge, its a
    special form of information

29
How do Negotiators acquire Power?
  • Power based on control over resources like
  • Money
  • Supply line
  • Human capital
  • Time
  • Equipment
  • Interpersonal support

30
How do Negotiators acquire Power?
  • Power based on position
  • This is power based on a legitimate position and
    is not necessarily based upon likeing by others
  • It may be acquired in a variety of ways _
    inheritance for example

31
How do Negotiators acquire Power?
  • Location in a Network of relationships.
  • Both formal and informal. Often the inforaml can
    be very powerful
  • five steps to power
  • Example. If you were askedto get the former prime
    minister of Malaysia to come and give a talk who
    would you go thru to get him here

32
Managing power thru messaging
  • The use of information and the style and quality
    of messages sent by a negotiator and the way
    these are received will change perception about
    what is important
  • There are large individual differences in ability
    to do this can you be trained for it?

33
Managing power thru messaging
  • The Petty and Caioppo Two Path Model
  • Central Route to integrate the message into the
    already existing cognitive structure ( thoughts)
    of the receiver
  • Peripheral Route use of subtle cues and context
    that is less cognitive

34
The Petty and Caioppo Two Path Model
  • SEE CHART

35
INOCULATION
  • ALWAYS DO TWO THINGS
  • DEVELOP THE ARGUMENTS FOR YOUR CASE
  • DEVELOP THE AGRUEMNTS AGAINST YOUR CASE SO YOU
    KNOW WHAT YOU ARE UOP AGAINST

36
END OF SESSION TWO
  • Nest session Managing conflict

37
Session Three
  • Learning Objectives
  • Managing conflict
  • Cross cultural/international issues

38
What is the cause of conflict
  • Different needs/wants of the parties
  • Misunderstanding
  • Other Intangible factors ( personalities)
  • Any others????????????????

39
Defining Conflict
  • Lewicki (2003)
  • sharp disagreement or opposition as of interest,
    ideas, etc that includes PERVIEVED divergence of
    interests, belief, aspiration, at cant be
    achieved simultaneously
  • Not conflict may be different to aggression or
    inappropriate cultural behavior

40
Conflict levels
  • Intra-personal
  • Interpersonal
  • Intra-group
  • Inter-group

41
Conflict can be both dysfunctional and functional
- Discuss
  • Why is conflict dysfunctional ?

42
List of dysfunctional conflict reasons
  • Parties believe they must compete becsue they are
    different
  • Conflict distorts perception and bias
  • Things get uncomfortable emotional
  • Communication decreases
  • Issues get blurred
  • Communication get ridged
  • Differences magnified, similarites diminished
  • Conflict escalates

43
List of functional aspects of conflict
  • Discussing conflict increases peoles ability to
    cope
  • Conflict promises organisational change and
    adaptation
  • Conflict can strengthen relationships
  • Can enhance personal development
  • Can be stimulating and Fun???????

44
Conflict Management
  • Focus of research in recent years as been on the
    personal style of good resolutions what works,
    whats easy and hard to resolve
  • A two dimensional framework has been used to
    understand good conflict resolution SEE DIAGRAM
    the dual concerns model

45
The Five Strategies of Conflict Resolution Each
has its advantages and disadvantages
  1. Contending Threats , punishment, intimidation,
    domination with no concern for other party
  2. Yielding supporting others outcomes, even
    helping them achieve them
  3. Inaction people just withdraw
  4. Problem solving mixed concern over outcomes
  5. Compromising conflict management strategy
    requiring both parties to give and take something

46
Identifying your own interpersonal style in
conflict management
  • See separate page for excercise

47
Managing very difficult negotiations
  • What are difficult situations to negotiate
  • Charged atmosphere with anger, mistrust hostility
  • Communication closed off
  • Issues are blurred
  • Negotiators have become identified with some of
    the issues
  • Parties perceive great differences
  • Anger increases and parties lock down

48
Types of basic responses
  • Cognitive - very difficult
  • Emotional - easier (trust building)
  • Behavioral looking at what parties will do in
    the future and how to remove the problem of
    conflict in the future by setting up better ways
    to resolve issues

49
Strategy One Reducing tension and synchronizing
De-escalation
  • Separating the parties
  • Tension release
  • Acknowledging the the others feeling
  • Osgoods graduated and reciprocal initiatives in
    tensions reduction

50
Osgoods model
  1. Agree to make a public statement about a small
    concession on both sides that
  2. Says what the concession is
  3. That is part of a strategy to reduce tension
  4. The other side is invited to do the some
  5. States the timing of the concession
  6. Will be done whatever happens

51
Strategy Two Improving accuracy in Communication
  • Role reversal
  • Imagining exercises
  • Reframing words

52
Strategy Three Controlling as a conflict
Resolution Tactic
  • Reducing the number of parties at the table
  • Reducing the number of issues to be discussed
  • Stating issues in concrete terms NOT principles
  • Restricting procedural steps
  • Breaking down big issues
  • Depersonalizing

53
Strategy Four Building up good communication
  • Superordinate goals
  • Looking for common ground
  • Search for consensus on expectations
  • Changing time management
  • Reforming each parties view of the other
  • Build an integrity framework (time consuming)
  • Trust building, sematic change
  • Generate creative alternatives

54
Strategy Five Managing the other sides HARD
Tactics (e.g.ultimatums)
  • Ignore them
  • Call then on
  • Respond in kind
  • Offer to change to more productive modes of doing
    things

55
CULTURE CONSIDERATION
  • What are key differences
  • Individualism/ collective
  • Power distance
  • Masculinity
  • Uncertainty avoidance
  • Risk avoidance

56
How do cultural differences influence negotiation
What differences for Brunei? Consider.
  • Definition of the situation
  • Selection of negotiators
  • Protocol
  • Communication style
  • Timing
  • Risk propensity
  • Group v individual negotiation
  • Nature of agreements
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