Collaborative Negotiation
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A Collaborative Negotiation is a negotiation that expands mutual opportunity (through joint problem solving and value creation).
- AKA: Win-Win Negotiation, Integrative Negotiation.
- Context:
- Core Characteristics:
- It can (typically) pursue Mutual Benefit through cooperative strategy.
- It can (typically) employ Open Communication for shared understanding.
- It can (typically) create Joint Solutions through creative problem solving.
- ...
- Process Elements:
- It can (often) share Key Information for option generation.
- It can (often) explore Underlying Interests for value creation.
- It can (often) build Trust Relationships for long-term cooperation.
- It can (often) maintain Flexible Positions for solution development.
- ...
- Range Variations:
- It can range from being a Simple Collaboration to being a Complex Collaboration, depending on its interaction depth.
- It can range from being a Short-Term Partnership to being a Long-Term Partnership, depending on its relationship duration.
- It can range from being a Basic Value Creation to being an Advanced Value Creation, depending on its opportunity scope.
- ...
- Success Factors:
- It can have Information Sharing for transparency promotion.
- It can have Relationship Building for trust development.
- It can have Creative Thinking for solution innovation.
- It can have Process Flexibility for adaptation capability.
- ...
- Outcome Focus:
- It can generate Expanded Value through opportunity identification.
- It can create Sustainable Agreements through mutual satisfaction.
- It can establish Long-Term Relationships through trust building.
- ...
- Examples:
- Business Partnerships, such as:
- Innovation Contexts, such as:
- Research Partnerships between organizations.
- Product Development Collaborations with stakeholders.
- Technology Integrations across platforms.
- ...
- Community Projects, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Adversarial Negotiation, which prioritizes individual gain over mutual benefit.
- Zero-Sum Bargaining, which assumes fixed value rather than value creation.
- Position-Based Negotiation, which maintains rigid positions rather than flexible approaches.
- Competitive Bidding, which focuses on price competition rather than value expansion.
- See: Win-Win Strategy, Value Creation, Joint Problem Solving, Trust Building, Long-Term Partnership, Mutual Gain Approach.