The Risks of Brainstorm Negotiating
Many
of those who teach win-win negotiation theory advise negotiators to
brainstorm options to increase creativity and value creation.
Brainstorming can uncover many options for one or more interests by
generating a list contributed by its members without any trace of
judgment or commitment. While brainstorming is a great creativity
tool for groups who are working together, it can be risky if the
members of such a group also have a competitive tension between them,
as in most negotiations.
Brainstorming
can increase the number of options available, improve the spirit of
collaboration among the parties, enhance their potential to find new
value, expand the pie and thus get better outcomes. However,
brainstorming’s effectiveness for enlarging the pie for value
creation purposes is not without risks for the value claiming phase
of the negotiation.
The
lack of filters and rapid fire approach of brainstorming could reveal
too much about the parties’ limits or possibilities. As a result,
they may end up giving the counterparty a potential information
advantage when it comes to value claiming (dividing up the pie). The
fact that an idea is brainstormed hints to the counterparty that the
originator of the idea can and probably has the resources to make the
idea happen.
In
addition, the counterparty may play the brainstorming strategically
and opportunistically, pretending to collaborate, but playing it safe
and revealing just enough to keep the first party excited to continue
brainstorming and thus revealing more information. Directly or
indirectly, the counterparty may be collecting information that can
be later used to ask for more or to put pressure on the first party
during the value claiming phase.
Careful
what you brainstorm
It
is best, therefore, to separate brainstorming from
evaluation/commitment. This should benefit value creation as it frees
the parties to discuss ideas without having to justify them at every
turn, thus avoiding interruptions in the creative process. This
advice can be broken down into three different negotiation moves that
can make brainstorming valuable to negotiations.
1)
Do brainstorm, but do it first, during your preparation –
Brainstorming in front of your counterparty is to completely lower
your defenses. A value
negotiator,
positive, but not naïve, should also consider the risk that the
counterparty will not lower their defenses equally and instead will
see this as an opportunity to improve their value claiming position
instead of fully engaging in value creation.
Invite
a colleague or two if you can, and go as wild and as far as you can,
since you will be in a safe environment and thus can come up with any
idea, no matter how borderline or past the border it may sound. Once
that exercise is done, you can then go back to your list and prepare
for the brainstorming during the negotiation with pre-thought ideas
to further stimulate the process. During your preparation, you will
also realise which ideas reveal too much and are thus inappropriate
to the negotiation. It may be possible to tweak some of them so that
they expand the scope of options without revealing disadvantageous
information.
2)
Brainstorm structural options, not numbers – Frame the
brainstorming exercise as an exchange of ideas or options just for
the sake of exploring possibilities, since you may not even be
able to commit to some of the options you share. Make sure that this
understanding and “rule” are clear to the counterparty. The
evaluation or commitment should be set aside for later. Keep
brainstorming to the structure or the framework of the agreement
(structural options), but avoid brainstorming numbers (specific
options) since these are the ones that reveal the extent of your
limits and resources.
3)
Avoid early judgment or commitment of any kind – For a
brainstorming or any similar option generation process to work, it is
helpful to not have every idea being scrutinised and torn apart
before you move to the next one. The demotivation and internalisation
of the evaluation alone will kill the process. Besides, going from
creation to evaluation and then to creation again is a difficult
mental and emotional transition to make, especially if it is done
repeatedly.
As
a result, the parties will probably find the process too cumbersome
and revolve around a couple of options, avoiding the back-and-forth.
Even if the judgment or evaluation is positive, it will lead the
counterparty to perceive that this is something the counterparty
accepts and thus be understood as a commitment. This is also quite
dangerous, because it pushes the parties to commit to options or
issues in isolation, forgetting that an option is only good if it
fits the other options in a package or system that ultimately makes
sense and brings value to you.
So
if someone puts an option on the table and to some extent demands a
response, it may be wise to say: “I will be glad to share my
opinion on it once I see the full picture and all the other possible
options side by side. Why don’t we continue with our process and
see what else we can come up with?” If they insist and you feel
like giving some positive indication, it would be best to commit
tentatively: “This seems like a good idea for now but I can only
tell you if it works or not when I see how it will interact with the
other options. Since we do not know what else is there, let’s park
this one for now and continue our conversation.”
Brainstorming
in a negotiation is useful, but it must be done with care. Instead
of brainstorming, it could be thought of as brain irrigation, letting
both sides get their feet wet in the value creation process without
being fully soaked by the time it comes to the value claiming stage.
INSEAD Knowledge
The Risks of Brainstorm Negotiating
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, May 12, 2016
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