Title: Succeeding as a group
1Succeeding as a group
2Outline
- Success through negotiation of conflicts
- Success through project management
3Basic Architecture of Negotiation
conflict
intrapersonal
intergroup
interpersonal
consensus conflict
scarce resource allocation
Third-party intervention
...
Negotiation
Policies and rules
4Negotiation
- Is a process by which two or more parties,
linked by mutual dependence but with some
apparent conflict, seek to do better through
jointly decided agreement. - Negotiation is a decision making process
characterized by opportunistic interaction
(dilemma of collaboration).
5Eight Primary Conflict Causes
- 1. Unmet needs and wants
- 2. Values
- 3. Perceptions
- 4. Knowledge
6Eight Primary Conflict Causes
- 5. Assumptions
- 6. Expectations
- 7. Different Backgrounds
- 8 Willingness and ability to deal with conflicts
7Dilemma of collaboration
Kay
FULL
EMPTY
2
4
FULL
2
-1
Elena
- 1
0
EMPTY
4
0
8Types of negotiation
- Distributive fixed pie (zero-sum
win-lose or lose-win) - Integrative enlarge the pie before splitting
it (positive-sum win-win)
9Strategic Approach to NegotiationPREPARATION
- Step 1 brainstorm your alternatives
- Step 2 find your Best Alternative to Negotiated
Agreement (BATNA) - Step 3 try to improve your BATNA
- Step 4 determine your walk-out-price (W-o-P)
- Step 5 simulate step 1 to 4 from the others
perspective - Step 6 calculate Zone of Possible Agreement
(ZOPA)
10Strategic Approach to NegotiationPREPARATION
SELLER
W-o-P 500
ZOPA
W-o-P 630
BUYER
11Strategic Approach to NegotiationDURING THE
NEGOTIATION
- The role of information
- direct and indirect methods of acquiring
information - The importance of differences
- e.g., risk attitudes, time preferences, ...
- First move
- Reciprocity principle
- Bluffing
12ExerciseThe Salty Dog
- - take one sheet yellow or blue
- - find a partner with the opposite color
13Cognitive Biases
- Irrational Escalation of Commitment
- The mythical fixed pie
- Overconfidence
- Confirmation Bias
- Self-Serving Fairness Bias
14Level of analysis
Individual
P
15Level of analysis
Individual
P
Dyad
P1
P2
16Level of analysis
Individual
P
Dyad
P1
P2
P3
Polyad
P1
P2
17Level of analysis
Individual
P
Dyad
P1
P2
P3
Polyad
P1
P2
I
Intermediary Mediation or arbitration
P2
P1
18Level of analysis (cont.)
C
Collateral
P1
P2
19Level of analysis (cont.)
C
Collateral
P1
P2
M
M
M
Intra-group
M
M
M
20Level of analysis (cont.)
C
Collateral
P1
P2
M
M
M
Intra-group
M
M
M
M
Inter-group
M
M
M
M
M
M
21Negotiation in teamsAre 2 heads better than 1?
22ANSWERIt depends on the task
- Additive tasksteam performance S (individual
perf.) - Conjunctive tasksteam performance MIN
(individual perf.) - Disjunctive tasks team performance MAX
(individual perf.)
23Negotiation in teams
TEAM PERFORMANCE EQUATION PP IG - IL
PP potential productivity IG interaction
gains (group superiority effect) IL interaction
losses (coordination losses, motivation losses,
intellectual losses)
24Decision rules for teams
- Majority rule
- Unanimity rule
25The condorcet paradox
- A new product development team has created 3
designs. - The team members preferences are
- Member Design A Design B Design C
- Maurita 1 2 3
- Kay 2 3 1
- Tom 3 1 2
- which one will be implemented?
26The condorcet paradox (cont.)
- The winners of majority rule election will change
as a function of the order in which alternatives
are proposed. Alternatives proposed later are
more likely to survive. - Impossibility theorem (Arrow 1963)it is
impossible to maximize group preference if ngt2
and options gt2
27The condorcet paradoxlessons learned
- Avoid majority rule in team negotiation whenever
possible - Avoid strict issue-by-issue agendas whenever
possible - Focus on different interests and preferences of
team members to facilitate creative integrative
agreements
28Coalition
- DEFINITION A (sub)group of 2 or more
individuals who join together in using their
resources and have a greater influence on
outcomes. - Pros more power, effectiveness
- Cons instability, lower group welfare, status
quo bias
29Coalition
- How to divide the pie within the coalition ?
30Coalition Dilemma
- Whereas there are several defensible ways to
allocate resources among coalition members, there
is no single best way. - (Raiffa 1982)
31Negotiation with your client
- Team effect
- a team at the bargaining table increases the
incidence of integrative agreements. - Share information about the client and your
commitments to the client with your team members - post-meeting and post-telephone call reports
32Negotiation with your client (cont.)
- Allocentrism
- put yourself in the clients shoes
- Accountability
- negotiators who are accountable to their
constituents make higher demands, are less
willing to compromise, get better results. - Develop trust
- hard to earn, easy to lose, tough to restore
- Avoid ambiguity
- visual displays reduce risks of conflict
33Wrapping-up
- First rule there are no rules for negotiation
- Go prepared
- Essence negotiation is an educational process
- after the deal, negotiation goes on
34What is a project?
- It is a problem scheduled for solution
- a problem is a gap between where you are and
where you want to be, with an obstacle that
prevents easy movement to close the gap
35When is a projecta project?
- Activities involve more than 2 people for more
than 2 weeks effort, more than one months
elapsed time - Activities involve substantial risk failure will
have significant impact - Activities require coordination of 2 or more
departments, involve outside partners, involve
new technology, fall outside the scope of normal
operation
36What is a successful project?
- One which delivers expected results
- One which controls three components budget,
time and scope - Many managers are considered successful if they
hit 2 of the 3 - FINAL MARK must be IMPLEMENTED!
37What is project management?
- Project management differs from management
because it is only done once - It includes planning, scheduling, and controlling
of project activities to meet project objectives - Major objectives include performance, cost, and
time goals while controlling scope
38Relationship of project objectives
- Cost f(P,T,S) where cost is a function (f) of
performance (P), time (T) and scope (S) - As P and S increase, cost generally increasesbut
not linearly - Projects fail when estimates are faulty time,
talent and resources insufficient or incorrectly
applied
39Project Phases
Define the problem and deliverables
Plan the project
Execute the plan
Monitor and control progress
Implement/Close project
40Project management system
Control Check progress compare correct
Information Historical current(cost, progress)
Planning Define projectschedule
Methods CAD modeling scheduling
Organization Authority responsibilityaccounta
bility
Culture Values beliefsbehaviors
Human Team building communication decision
making
Human Motivationleadership negotiation
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