Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Strategic Negotiation [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 344 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 703 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Aug-2007
  • Kirjastus: Gower Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0566087979
  • ISBN-13: 9780566087974
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 344 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 703 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Aug-2007
  • Kirjastus: Gower Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0566087979
  • ISBN-13: 9780566087974
Teised raamatud teemal:
A first-rate organizational business plan demands an understanding of the dynamics behind remuneration, joint ventures, partnerships, alliances, major contracts; in fact, all of the commercial imperatives that will define success or failure over a five-year (or longer) period. And realizing this plan will involve complex and often multi-level or multi-party negotiations. The scale and context of these negotiations requires a level of strategic awareness because the interests of the parties are more complex, the options more numerous, and the outcomes more critical than at a tactical level. Strategic Negotiation is written for senior executives who provide input to or assessment of their organization's medium or long-term planning process, and who are engaged in implementing any aspects of their organization's plans. Part One focuses on the foundations of strategic negotiation: the commercial imperatives - what the organization must do to restructure and resource its operations to achieve commercial success - and the negotiation strategies associated with each. It also explains the logistics of managing complex public and private sector negotiations. Part Two includes the tools for successful negotiation: bid strategies; techniques for analyzing your position before you start and reassessing it during the negotiation; and the negotiation agenda and how to design and compile it. If you are operating at a senior level where negotiations are, by their nature, high value, complex, multi-level and often multi-party, what better guide than Gavin Kennedy, a long-standing world expert on negotiation, and his book Strategic Negotiation?

A first-rate organizational business plan demands an understanding of the commercial imperatives that will define success or failure over a five-year (or longer) period. And realizing this plan will involve complex and often multi-level or multi-party negotiations. Gavin Kennedy, a long-standing world expert on negotiation, provides guidance for senior executives who are involved in such negotiations. Part One focuses on the foundations of strategic negotiation: the commercial imperatives - what the organization must do to restructure and resource its operations to achieve commercial success - and the negotiation strategies associated with each. Part Two includes the tools for successful negotiation: bid strategies; techniques for analyzing your position before you start and reassessing it during the negotiation; and the negotiation agenda and how to design and compile it.

Arvustused

...an advanced text for people who already have negotiating skills but who need advice on applying those skills...Kennedy does very well at tailoring the content of this text to the needs of his target audience by giving them ample opportunities to apply the information to their individual organizations. - Legal Information ALERT 'The book is for the senior who provides input to or assessment of their organisation's medium or long-term planning processes, and who are engaged in implementing any aspect of their organization's plans.' - Educational Book Review India

List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xv
Introduction 1(4)
Part I Foundations
5(160)
Strategic Negotiation Process Model
7(24)
Introduction
7(1)
Foundations of the business plan
7(2)
Analysis and diagnosis
9(2)
Overview of seamless strategies
11(16)
Activities for
Chapter 1
27(4)
Basics of Contracts
31(20)
Introduction
31(1)
Promises, promises
31(1)
Anatomy of contracts
32(13)
Conclusions
45(2)
Activities for
Chapter 2
47(4)
Contracting as a Bargaining Process
51(18)
Introduction
51(1)
Memorandum of understanding
52(1)
Heads of terms
52(2)
Heads of agenda
54(1)
Offers and done deals
55(2)
Exchange of promises
57(2)
Acceptance
59(1)
Contract negotiation
60(7)
Activities for
Chapter 3
67(2)
Pay, Benefits and Union Negotiations
69(22)
Introduction
69(1)
National pay bargaining
70(1)
HR considerations
71(1)
Objectives of a pay system
71(4)
Union recognition and representation
75(2)
Gradations of recognition
77(3)
Formal negotiation procedures
80(3)
Communicating for major negotiations
83(4)
Activities for
Chapter 4
87(4)
Managing Complex Negotiations
91(20)
Introduction
91(1)
Transaction logistics
92(3)
Corporate risk
95(4)
Public sector negotiations
99(3)
Managing the negotiation team
102(7)
Activity for
Chapter 5
109(2)
Organic Growth Strategies
111(28)
Introduction
111(2)
Organic growth
113(7)
Joint ventures
120(5)
Mergers and acquisitions
125(7)
Three growth options
132(5)
Activities for
Chapter 6
137(2)
Licensing Negotiations
139(26)
Introduction
139(3)
Exclusivity
142(2)
Quality
144(3)
Terms
147(7)
Territory
154(2)
Performance
156(2)
Renewal
158(1)
Master franchises
158(5)
Activity for
Chapter 7
163(2)
Part II Tools
165(42)
Bid Strategies for Tenders
167(26)
Introduction
167(1)
Bid/no bid decisions
168(5)
Bid traps
173(1)
Bid theory and practice
174(4)
Bid strategies
178(3)
Two erroneous bid strategies
181(7)
Entry-price padded-bid strategies
188(4)
Activity for
Chapter 8
192(1)
Requests for Proposals
193(14)
Introduction
193(1)
Response problems
194(2)
Post-RFP negotiations
196(1)
Strategic choice of bid targets
197(1)
Bidders and the process method
198(7)
Activities for
Chapter 9
205(2)
Part III Applications
207(98)
Analysis and Diagnosis 1
209(22)
Introduction
209(1)
Force field analysis
209(5)
Expanded force field
214(12)
Activities for
Chapter 10
226(5)
Analysis and Diagnosis 2
231(30)
Power in proposals
231(3)
Subjectivism
234(2)
Power balance ratio: worked example
236(6)
McKinsey's multi-stakeholders model
242(15)
Summary
257(2)
Activities for
Chapter 11
259(2)
The Negotiation Agenda
261(44)
Introduction
261(1)
The approach
262(6)
Derivation of the Negotiation Agenda
268(6)
Content of the Negotiation Agenda
274(11)
Assembling the Negotiation Agenda
285(2)
Planning template for the Negotiation Agenda
287(16)
Activities for
Chapter 12
303(2)
Epilogue 305(6)
Index 311
Gavin Kennedy, Professor at Edinburgh Business School, recently retired from full-time academic work, but continues to facilitate courses at the Business School and to undertake negotiation consultancy for major corporates. He has worked with many blue chip organizations in the public and private sectors in the UK and many other countries across Europe, the Middle East and SEAsia, as well as in Australia, the USA and Canada, and South Africa. His experiences as a negotiator and consultant, from operational level for senior managers to strategising, managing and preparing for complex and high-value contracts at Board level for CEOs and directors, have been distilled into numerous books and training resources, including (for Gower) the video Do We Have a Deal?, the training manual Kennedy's Simulations for Negotiation Training and the book Kennedy on Negotiation.