3. Key Concepts
• Objectives of Negotiation
» Quality
» Fair and Reasonable Price
» On-time Performance
» Control
» Cooperation
» Supplier Relationship Management
• When to Negotiate
16-3
4. Key Concepts
• Supply Management‟s Role in Negotiation
» The Supply Management Professional Acting
Alone
» The Supply Management Professional as the
Negotiating Team Leader
• The Negotiation Process
» Preparation
» Establishing Objectives
» Identify the Desired Type of Relationship
• Three Powerful Preparation Activities
16-4
5. Key Concepts
• Face-to-Face Discussions
» Fact Finding
» Recess
» Narrowing the Differences
» Hard Bargaining
• Techniques
» Universally Applicable Techniques
» Transactional Techniques
» Collaborative and Alliance Negotiating Techniques
• The Debriefing: An Incredible Learning
Opportunity
• Documentation
16-5
6. Key Concepts
• Online Negotiation
• Negotiating for Price
» Price Analysis Negotiation
» Cost Analysis Negotiation
• Characteristics of a Successful Negotiator
16-6
7. Objectives of Negotiation
• Quality
• Fair and responsible price
• On-time performance
• Control
• Cooperation
• Supplier relationship management
16-7
8. When to Negotiate
• When any of the five prerequisite criteria
for competitive bidding are absent
• When many variable factors bear not only
on price but also on quality and service
• When early supplier involvement is
employed
• When the business risks and costs cannot
be predetermined
• When a customer firm is contracting for a
portion of the seller's production capacity
16-8
9. When to Negotiate
• When tooling and setup costs represent a
large percentage of the supplier's total
costs
• When a long period of time is required to
produce the items purchased
• When production is interrupted frequently
because of numerous change orders
• When a thorough analysis is required to
solve a difficult make-or-buy decision
• When the products of a specific supplier
are desired to the exclusion of others
16-9
10. Supply Management’s Role in Negotiation
• The Supply Management Professional
Acting Alone
• The Supply Management Professional as
the Negotiating Team Leader
16-10
11. Bidding or Negotiation?
• Recall the prerequisites to bidding…
» Dollar value must be large
» Specifications must be clear
» Market must consist of an adequate number of
sellers
» Sellers must be qualified and want the contract
» Time available must be sufficient
• If any of these are not true, then negotiation is the
best choice
16-11
12. Conditions Demanding Negotiation
• Impossible to estimate costs with a high degree
of certainty
• Price is not the only important variable
• Purchasing firm anticipates a need to make
changes in the specification
• Special tooling of setup costs are major factors
16-12
13. Even if the previous list is met…
here are two arguments for Negotiation
• The negotiation process is far more likely to lead
to a complete understanding of all issues of the
procurement
• Competitive bidding tends to result in sacrifices
in product quality, development efforts, and other
vital services
16-13
14. Negotiation Teams
• Cross functional members
• Supply manager frequently serves as leader
• Overall strategy is required
• Roles are defined
• Mock negotiations are needed
16-14
16. Preparation
• 90% of the time involved in a successful
negotiation is invested in preparation
• The negotiator must:
» Possess a technical understanding of the item
or service
» Analyze the relative bargaining positions of
both parties
» Have conducted a price or cost analysis
» Know the seller
» Be aware of cultural nuances
» Be thoroughly prepared
16-16
17. Determinates of the Seller’s Bargaining Strength
1. How badly the seller wants the contract
2. How certain he or she feels of getting it
3. How much time is available to reach agreement
on suitable terms
16-17
18. Establishing Objectives Related to Cost Positions
• An objective position
» Best estimate of what the seller's actual costs
plus a fair profit should be
• A minimum position
» Developed on the premise that every required
seller action will turn out satisfactorily and
with minimum cost
• A maximum position
» Developed on the premise a large number of
required seller actions will turn out
unsatisfactorily and with maximum cost
16-18
19. Traditional Cost Objectives
• Quantity of labor
• Wage rates
• Quantity of materials
• Prices of materials
• Factory overhead
• Engineering expense
• Tooling expense
• Administrative expense
16-19
20. Non-Cost Objectives
• All technical aspects of the purchase
• Types of materials and substitutes
• Buyer-furnished material and equipment
• The mode of transportation
• Warranty terms and conditions
• Payment terms (including discount provisions)
• Liability for claims and damage
• F.O.B. point
• General terms and conditions
• Details on how a service is to be performed
16-20
21. Other Objectives
• Progress reports
• Production control plans
• Escalation/de-escalation provisions
• Incentive arrangements
• Patents and infringement protection
• Packaging
• Title to special tools and equipment
• Disposition of damaged goods and
off-spec (non-conforming) materials
16-21
22. Identify the Desired Type of Relationship
• The three primary approaches presented
earlier in the book in Chapter 4 are:
» Transactional
» Collaborative
» Alliance
• The desired type or relationship is
strongly related to the negotiation tactics
a negotiator should and should not use
16-22
23. Five Powerful Preparation Activities
• The BATNA
• The Agenda
• “Murder Boards” and Mock Negotiations
• Crib Sheets
• Draft Agreements
16-23
25. Universally Applicable Techniques
• Getting to Know You
• Use Diversions
• Use Questions Effectively
• Use Positive Statements
• Be a Good Listener
• Be Considerate of Sellers
16-25
26. Transactional Techniques
• Keep the Initiative
• Never Give Anything Away
• Frame the question
• The Dynamics of a Transactional
Negotiation
16-26
27. Dynamics of a Transactional Negotiation
Minimum Objective Maximum
Buyer‟s position
Heart of
Transactional
Negotiation
Seller‟s position
Minimum Objective Maximum
Cost
16-27
28. Collaborative and Alliance Negotiating
Techniques
• Separate the people (negotiators) from the
problem (quality, price)
• Focus on interests, not positions
• Invent options for mutual gain
• Insist on using objective criteria
16-28
29. The Debriefing: An Incredible Learning
Opportunity
• Conducted by the negotiation team
» A self assessment/evaluation
• Debriefing must be done in a timely
manner accurate and timely feedback”
• Identify what was done well
• Identify what could be improved upon
• Document lessons learned
• Provide individual and team feedback
16-29
31. Online Negotiation
• Agreements founded solely on written
communication tend to have problems
• Those that include written and telephone
communication are sustainable
• The best relationships are those that go
beyond other forms of communication to
involve face-to-face meetings
16-31
32. Advantages to Online Negotiation
• Can help focus on the issues separately from
personalities
• Brainstorming may be more productive
• Online communication can free the buyer and
supplier from location dependency
• If the negotiation is not being done “live” on
the Internet, the time for conducting the
negotiations is relatively flexible
16-32
33. Drawbacks to Online Negotiation
• Some of the drawbacks listed could also
be advantages, depending on the firm‟s
objectives and needs
• It is far easier to say „no‟ in writing
• Psychological separation makes the
termination of the relationship much
easier
• Online negotiators are likely to feel a need
to be more persuasive – more convincing
• A lack of nonverbal cues forces careful
consideration of the impact of each word
• It is difficult to evaluate perceptions 16-33
34. Hypotheses Regarding Negotiations
• The more important the issue, the more
likely it is that it will be negotiated face-to-
face
• The more politically sensitive the issue,
the more likely it is that it will be
negotiated face-to-face
• If either negotiator will be personally
affected by the outcome, that person may
want to conduct the negotiation in person
16-34
35. Hypotheses Regarding Negotiations
• If the topic involves issues of firm
sensitivity, such as trade secrets or core
competencies, the negotiation is more
likely to take place face-to-face
• Buyer-supplier relationships will be
perceived as more distant, the more online
communication and negotiation are used
• Less formal planning will occur prior to
online negotiations than for those
conducted face-to-face
16-35
36. Negotiating for Price
• Price Analysis Negotiation
» Negotiation time is shorter
» Support of technical specialists is seldom
needed
» Pricing data are relatively easy to acquire
• Price Comparison
• Trend Comparisons
• Cost Analysis Negotiation
16-36
37. Characteristics of a Successful Negotiator
• All realize that specialized training and practice
are required to become an effective negotiator
• All habitually enter into negotiations with more
demanding negotiating objectives than their
counterparts, and generally they achieve them
• All are pragmatic and flexible in their capability to
deal with different negotiation techniques from
“hardball” to “collaborative”
• All are included, or are destined to become
included, among an organization's most highly
valued professionals
16-37
38. Concluding Remarks
• Negotiation is free enterprise at its very best!
• Negotiation is a powerful supply management
tool which competent professionals use to
achieve maximum value at minimum cost
• By rewarding efficiency and penalizing
inefficiency, the negotiation process benefits the
negotiating firms and the nation's economy as a
whole.
• The increasingly common collaborative approach
to negotiations substitutes a win-win approach
for the more traditional, transactional one
16-38