BATNA

Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement. The true measure by which you should judge any proposed agreement. It is the only standard which can protect you both from accepting terms that are too unfavorable and from rejecting terms it would be in your interest to accept. (Roger Fisher and William Ury, Getting to Yes [Penguin Books, 1991], 100-01)

The following items are tagged BATNA.

January 2007

Posted by & filed under Negotiation Monthly Archives.

Taking BATNA to the Next Level: By enhancing your best alternative to a negotiated agreement, you can gain a critical advantage at the table
Dealing with a Spoiler? Negotiate Around the Problem: Sometimes the best way to deal with obstinate negotiators is to bypass them completely. Here’s how to execute an effective workaround
When Dividing the

Negotiation and Leadership: Dealing with Difficult People and Problems

Posted by & filed under Uncategorized.

It’s often said that great leaders are great negotiators. But how does one become an effective negotiator? On-the-job experience certainly plays a role, but for most executives, taking their negotiation skills to the next level requires outside training.

Widely recognized as the preeminent leader in the field of negotiation and negotiation research, the Program on Negotiation is an interdisciplinary, multi-university research center based at Harvard Law School. Our flagship program—newly renamed Negotiation and Leadership—has a long legacy of effectiveness, with more than 25,000 international participants over the past 30 years.

Designed to accelerate your negotiation capabilities, Negotiation and Leadership (formerly called Program on Negotiation for Senior Executives) examines core decision-making challenges, analyzes complex negotiation scenarios, and provides a range of competitive and cooperative negotiation strategies.

Read more | Faculty

A Conversation with the Founders of PON

Posted by & filed under News, Webcasts.

A Conversation with the Founders of the Program on Negotiation
RealPlayer Recommended (download here)

Recently, the scholars of negotiation, mediation, and decision analysis who founded the Program on Negotiation gathered at PON to discuss the early days of the Program and the field they helped pioneer. Present were Roger Fisher, Bruce Patton, Howard Raiffa, Frank E.A. Sander,