Harvard Negotiation Master Class

Advanced Strategies for Experienced Negotiators
Monday to Wednesday, May 13–⁠15, 2024

Harvard Negotiation Master Class
Take Your Negotiation Skills to the Master Level

What if you could negotiate at an even higher level? The Harvard Negotiation Master Class is designed for people like you: strong negotiators who want to become even better ones.

Strictly limited to 60 participants who have completed a prior course in negotiation, this program offers unprecedented access to experts from Harvard Law School, Harvard Business School, and Harvard Kennedy School—all of whom are committed to delivering a transformational learning experience.

Through dynamic exercises with two-way feedback and intensive simulations, you will gain proven frameworks for addressing your most complicated negotiation challenges—and emerge a highly skilled and confident dealmaker.

The Harvard Negotiation Master Class has run biannually to sold-out classes, and along the way has taught nearly 1,000 global negotiators to become “Master Negotiators.”

Top Nine Reasons to Attend the Harvard Negotiation Master Class
  1. Learn to set the tone and build momentum at the outset of a negotiation.
  2. Identify shared, opposing, and tradeable interests.
  3. Recognize the indicators that your negotiation counterpart is ready to close—with a particular focus on thresholds of satisfaction with the process, the substance, and the relationship.
  4. Gain a robust framework for improving the quality of feedback conversations.
  5. Assess the deal versus the attractiveness of no-agreement alternatives.
  6. Learn to identify blind spots—the places where you are missing opportunities and frustrating others.
  7. Establish the groundwork for identifying the other side’s victory speech by addressing their underlying interests and concerns.
  8. Learn how to ask probing, clarifying, and investigative questions in a nondefensive manner.
  9. Understand how to manage difficult deals and ugly conflicts.
Join the Ranks of Master Negotiators

Mastering the art of negotiation is a lifelong journey. The Harvard Negotiation Master Class offers the rare opportunity to step away from your day-to-day responsibilities to self-reflect and focus on developing a competency that will serve you for the rest of your professional life. After three intensive days, you will emerge a highly confident negotiator who truly understands the game—and loves to play it.

Agenda

DAY 1: Monday, May 13

SESSION 1

THE FIRST 180 SECONDS: CREATING IMPACTFUL OPENINGS

8:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. ET | Led by Brian Mandell

Learn to set the tone and build momentum at the outset of a negotiation.

As a seasoned negotiator, you know how important it is to come prepared for the full arc of a negotiation. Research shows, however, that you should spend just as much time preparing for the first 180 seconds of a negotiation encounter as you do for the rest. That’s because the outcomes of the very first interactions—where negotiators act upon thin slices of information—disproportionately affect overall success. Moreover, when things go awry in these critical first few moments, it can be difficult to recover lost ground.

In this session, you’ll learn how to effectively set the tone and agenda, create rapport, and build momentum at the outset of a negotiation. Additionally, you will enhance your ability to:

  • Prepare for negotiation by evaluating sources of power and assessing barriers to negotiated agreement
  • Identify shared, opposing, and tradeable interests
  • Set a firm, collaborative tone, shape expectations, and propose a well-sequenced agenda that aligns with your priorities
  • Generate momentum and a trust-building conversation by sharing information
  • Invoke fairness standards to avoid early missteps likely to trigger an impasse or motivate potential spoilers
  • Ask probing, clarifying, and investigative questions in a nondefensive manner
  • Make opening offers grounded in high aspirations that signal a robust BATNA
  • Leverage your professional reputation to encourage concessions
  • Maintain emotional control and defend against hard bargaining tactics by reframing unacceptable early moves or offers designed to destabilize negotiators
  • Establish the groundwork for writing the other side’s victory speech by focusing on addressing their underlying interests and concerns
  • Signal your attentiveness to geographic and organizational cross-cultural differences

SESSION 2

Advanced Value Creation

1:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. ET | Led by Max Bazerman

Create the biggest pie possible through strategic negotiations.

Whether you’re executing a strategic sale, a vendor contract, or a high-stakes acquisition, your ability to analyze your interests, and the interests of the other side, is critical to creating value in negotiation. This session will focus on how to prepare thoroughly, with the goal of helping you to claim value, while simultaneously making sure that you and your partner are creating the biggest pie possible.

Executives commonly overlook mutually beneficial trades in their negotiations. They suffer from a “mythical fixed-pie”.

In this timely session, you will explore a range of strategic approaches for negotiating mutually beneficial trades:

  • Building and sharing information
  • Asking the right question
  • Strategically disclosing information
  • Negotiating multiple issues simultaneously
  • Making multiple offers simultaneously
  • Searching for post-settlement settlements

You will learn to create great relationships in negotiation and how to reach wise agreements when optimal relationships are not possible. You will also examine team negotiation dynamics, and how negotiations differ within an organization and with customers and suppliers.

DAY 2: Tuesday, May 14

SESSION 3

Managing “Trigger Point” Moments: Negotiating and Leading in Highly Charged, Emotional Situations

8:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. ET | Led by Rob Wilkinson

Identify—and capitalize on—game-changing inflection points.

Maybe this scene is familiar to you: You are engaged in some sort of interaction—a quick chat with a colleague in the hallway, a spirited political debate with an aunt at the dinner table, a friendly exchange with the stranger behind you in line at the bank. You and your counterpart are pleasant and cordial.

And then things change.
Your counterpart says something and the words you hear are an affront—to your values, your beliefs, and even your identity—and in that moment, you are frozen. You wrestle with the impulse to defend against personal attack, or the need to correct this person’s misguided views on such an important topic.

What should you do?
Call them out and risk escalating the situation, or walk away and risk validating their righteousness? Hear them out and risk amplifying their nonsense, or educate them and risk compelling them to dig in further?

You need to manage those tensions, control your emotions, and make decisions: on what you’re trying to accomplish, on whether to engage, on how to engage, on how to preserve the relationship, on how to end this conversation.

And it all has to happen in about two seconds.

This session will examine these moments—when we impulsively react or are clueless how to—through the lens of choice, and how we can manage our individual abilities to identify, analyze, and select one in a split second, thus charting the course for the rest of the interaction.

Participants will walk away with a set of concrete ideas, tools, and skills for how to avoid reacting instinctively, and instead diagnose what is going on in a heat-of-the-moment situation, and respond thoughtfully and strategically.

SESSION 4

Advanced Difficult Conversations—
Building (and Re-Building) Trust

1:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. ET | Led by Sheila Heen

Overcome the relational friction and frustration that can make joint-problem-solving impossible.

You can’t avoid difficult conversations. But you can learn to make them less painful—and more productive. In this session, we will take a look at three suites of skills that advanced negotiators can use to diagnose challenges and adjust their approach when things get tough. We will also draw on the Difficult Conversations framework for engaging tough issues in difficult circumstances, and under time pressure.

The centerpiece of this session will be preparing for and conducting a negotiation, in which frustration, mistrust, time pressure, grave consequences, and the need for complex problem-solving come together to create a perfect storm.

Alongside your peers, you will have the opportunity to:

  • Face a counterpart who is impatient, distracted, in a position of authority, and with whom you have some relationship history
  • Work with a teammate in order to learn from another’s negotiation approach and think about how to best prepare together as a team
  • Integrate sometimes conflicting information from multiple sources
  • Clarify your own purposes and priorities
  • Plan how to open and to frame the problem
  • Respond to unexpected surprises or resistance
  • Draw on your diagnostic skills to make good choices in the moment as that negotiation unfolds
  • Practice advanced skills that will enable you to repair trust, build a stronger working relationship, and solve problems together

DAY 3: Wednesday, May 15

SESSION 5

Multiparty Negotiations:
Managing the Challenges and Opportunities of Group Decision Making

8:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. ET | Facilitated by Morgan Franklin

Put your negotiation skills to the test.

Most decisions are made with input from a variety of stakeholders. As the number of parties at the decision-making table grows, negotiation challenges and the opportunities they present multiply as well. Additional parties create more opinions about the “right” process to follow and more views about which issues should remain central. Attempting to satisfy all of these various interests and perspectives can reduce the zone of possible agreement. This session explores how advanced negotiators manage the myriad challenges of multiparty negotiations, while also leveraging opportunities to improve relationships and create greater value.

Through a fast-paced multiparty negotiation simulation, you will put the many skills you have honed throughout the workshop to the test. Led by Master Class coaches, the simulation debrief will help you to draw unique insights from your own experience—lessons that you can rely on during the many group processes you will lead in the future. Specifically, you will learn to:

  • Diagnose the peaked challenges inherent in multiparty negotiations
  • Identify key stakeholders and decide which to include at the table
  • Focus on value creation in the face of multiple, conflicting interests
  • Maintain relationships while managing diverse personalities and perspectives
  • Design a robust process that will keep your group moving forward and on task
  • Consider and choose the right forum for your group discussions
  • Establish group norms to help guide you through your deliberations
  • Set realistic deadlines that will keep your group centered on its purpose
  • Divide responsibilities appropriately so that each group member fills a meaningful and useful role

Participants will be supported by a group of coaches. Past coaches have included Clinical Instructors with the Harvard Negotiation & Mediation Clinical Program; Harvard Law School Negotiation Workshop; Harvard Kennedy School Negotiation Project; MIT-Harvard Public Disputes Program; and practitioners and consultants.

SESSION 6

THE LAST 180 SECONDS:
CLOSING THE DEAL WITH CONFIDENCE

1:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. ET | Led by Brian Mandell

Openings and closings are the critical bookend of any negotiation: the close.

You’ve made it to the end of a negotiation—are you ready for what comes next? The goal of this session is to prepare you to effectively manage those final minutes in a negotiation when an important, high-consequence deal hangs in the balance and any missteps could quickly undermine parties’ trust and confidence, resulting in the deal unraveling. Navigating this “last mile challenge” compels negotiators to multi-task—to maintain discipline, focus, and resilience, while simultaneously addressing the substantive and relationship dimensions of the negotiation needed for crafting a sustainable value-creating deal.

In this session, you’ll learn how to:

  • Assess willingness and readiness to close the deal
  • Overcome psychological and bureaucratic decision-making barriers to commitment making and closing the deal
  • Confront hard bargaining “take it or leave it” and yes-but tactics
  • Write your counterpart’s victory speech to reduce hesitancy and resistance to closing the deal now
  • Use the negotiator’s pause to better control the rate and scope of making any final concessions
  • Deal with impasse stemming from the last-minute introduction of new pre-conditions prior to signing the deal
  • Distinguish between hard and soft closings and when to use them to maximize your leverage
  • Manage intra-team conflict with your own back table to better communicate strong and consistent signals across the table
  • Limit gratuitous bargaining and conflict escalation
  • Leverage deadlines and time urgency
  • Build commitment to deal implementation
  • Frame and re-frame offers to scope and refine the deal components
  • Use dispute resolution mechanisms to safeguard against a counterpart’s non-compliance with commitments to deal implementation

Meet the Faculty

Sheila Heen

Sheila Heen

Sheila Heen is the Thaddeus R. Beal Professor of Practice and serves as a Deputy Director of the Harvard Negotiation Project, where she has been developing negotiation theory and practice since 1995. Heen also teaches executive education programs for and serves on the Executive Committee of the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School.

Heen specializes in particularly difficult negotiations – where emotions run high and relationships are strained. She is also a co-author of two New York Times best sellers, Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most (with Douglas Stone and Bruce Patton,
3rd ed Penguin 2023) and Thanks for the Feedback: The Science and Art of Receiving Feedback Well (Even When It’s Off-Base, Unfair, Poorly Delivered, and Frankly, You’re Not in the Mood) (with Douglas Stone, Viking/Penguin 2014). She has written for the Harvard Business Review, and the New York Times as a guest expert and as a Modern Love columnist.

Heen is also a Founder of Triad Consulting Group, a corporate education and consulting firm that serves clients on six continents. Her
corporate clients have included Pixar, Hugo Boss, the NBA, the Federal Reserve Bank, to name a few.

Brian Mandell

Brian Mandell is the Mohammad Kamal Senior Lecturer in Negotiation and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, a faculty associate at the Center for Public Leadership, director of the Harvard Kennedy School Negotiation Project, and serves as Vice Chair of Executive Education for the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School’s Executive Committee.

He is a preeminent teacher and curriculum designer at the Harvard Kennedy School, where he leads an innovative, intensive annual workshop course on advanced multiparty negotiation and conflict resolution.

Professor Mandell refined his case teaching methods in international affairs as a Pew Faculty Fellow and subsequently trained faculty from across the United States in case-method pedagogy with a special emphasis on teaching and writing cases for international security
studies.

He is a multiple recipient of the school’s Most Influential Course Award, the Manuel C. Carballo Award for Excellence in Teaching, and the Dean’s Award for Teaching Excellence. Through the Negotiation Project, Professor Mandell designs and produces multiparty negotiation exercises that focus on the challenges of cross-boundary collaboration.

Additionally, he is designing and developing curriculum material for graduate students and congressional staffers in the Hewlett Foundation’s Madison Initiative on strengthening bipartisan legislative negotiation in Congress.

Robert Wilkinson

Robert Wilkinson

A negotiation and leadership specialist, Rob Wilkinson is on the faculty at Harvard Kennedy School, where he teaches graduate courses on leadership in complex environments and negotiation theory and practice.

Wilkinson has won several Dean’s Teaching Awards at Harvard and also served as a special advisor on negotiation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Previously, he was on the faculty at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy for eight years.

As a management consultant, Wilkinson has nearly 25 years of experience in more than 45 countries within the private, public, and nonprofit sectors. From General Mills and IBM to the Gates Foundation and the World Wildlife Fund, he has helped numerous Fortune 500 companies, government agencies, international organizations, and charities increase their effectiveness.

Wilkinson has worked overseas on a variety of international negotiation projects, including spending threeyears in Rwanda working with Hutu and Tutsi communities and two years working with the UN Peacekeeping Mission in Angola.

Max Bazerman

Max Bazerman

Max Bazerman is a Jesse Isidor Straus Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School and an Executive Committee Member for the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School. He is a leader in the fields of decision making, negotiation, and behavioral ethics. He has consulted, taught, and lectured in 30 countries, and is the author, co-author, or co-editor of 20 books and more than 200 research articles and chapters, including Negotiation Genius (Bantam Books).

His other honors include an honorary doctorate from the University of London, the Aspen Lifetime Achievement Award, being named as one of Ethisphere’s 100 Most Influential in Business Ethics, and both the Distinguished Educator and the Distinguished Scholar Awards from the Academy of Management. He was additionally named a Daily Kos Hero for going public about how the Bush administration corrupted the RICO tobacco trial.

Morgan Franklin

Morgan Franklin

Morgan Franklin is a Clinical Instructor for the Negotiation & Mediation Clinical Program (HNMCP) at Harvard Law School. Her work focuses on the role of cognitive and behavioral science in negotiations and dispute resolution.

Prior to joining HNMCP, she worked in Washington, D.C., helping facilitate effective reentry for recently incarcerated individuals by convening groups with divergent views and identifying workable policy solutions.

She holds a B.A. in Political Economy from Tulane University and received her J.D. from Harvard Law School, where she studied problem solving, dispute resolution, and negotiation.

Fees and Dates

Fees: $5,997

Harvard Negotiation Master Class sessions:
Monday to Wednesday, May 13–⁠15, 2024

Location: The Charles Hotel, 1 Bennett Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

Upon completion of the course and a program evaluation, participants receive a certificate of completion.

Master Class

Who Should Attend

The Harvard Negotiation Master Class attracts a diverse group of participants—all of whom are proficient negotiators who wish to take their skills to the next level.

To be eligible for the Harvard Negotiation Master Class, applicants must demonstrate at least 10 to 20 years of negotiation experience, as well as a prior course with PON or a comparable program centered on mutual gains bargaining. In addition, we require a minimum of 6 months between any foundational training and attendance at the Master Class to allow for practical experience and implementation between learning.

Participant Feedback

“This course is designed to truly change the way one thinks about negotiating on many levels.”

“This is the best program of negotiation in the world.”

“This is definitely a very good investment of time, effort, and money.”

Past Participants

Google
US Dept of Defense
FEDX
Tesla
Southwest
TD Bank
World Bank
Novartis
Blue Cali
Penguin
Wells Fargo
Dana Farber
Manulife
Berkshire
Bell

…And Many More!