Leigh Thompson

The following items are tagged Leigh Thompson.

Heading Off Deception

Posted by & filed under Business Negotiations.

In all types of negotiations and across all phases of the process, people can sometimes misrepresent or fail to tell the truth. Individual negotiators lie with the hope of improving their own outcomes. When negotiating his salary with the Cranbury, N.J.–based pharmaceutical marketing firm Carter-Wallace in 1997, Robert Bonczek misrepresented his prior title and salary at DuPont. Once Carter-Wallace detected the deception, it withdrew its offer. Sometimes entire teams of negotiators lie [or was this just a bluff?]. In the union-management negotiations between the United Autoworkers Union (UAW) and Textron that began in 1994, Textron’s management team misrepresented its intention of hiring nonunion workers. As a result, the UAW agreed to a contract that it later regretted accepting.

Leigh Thompson to Discuss “Stereotype, Reactance, and Regeneration in Negotiations” at January PPIN Seminar

Posted by & filed under Events.

The Program on Negotiation invites all interested parties to attend a Psychological Processes in Negotiation (PPIN) seminar featuring Leigh Thompson, J. Jay Gerber Distinguished Professor of Dispute Resolution and Organizations at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University. The title of Prof. Thompson’s presentation is Stereotype Threat, Reactance, and Regeneration in Negotiations.

The seminar