treating a negotiation like war very rarely leads to long-term success, but is what many people do. my negotiation principles: be fair and reasonable, figure out what the other side most wants and give it to them, assume good intent, and minimize your side’s tribal instincts.

Jun 25, 2022 · 7:43 PM UTC

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Replying to @sama
Should I give them the feeling as a top priority?
Replying to @sama
I like what you say; It’s better to build bridges than gain enemies
Replying to @sama
Also, avoid focusing too much on clause condition with low likelihood to occur and have any material impact.
Replying to @sama
…I believe you have to differentiate; - some, mostly the „good“ people (givers) this is the right strategy - others (takers) this is the wrong strategy. they just take, pull you don‘t and just leave…so u need to set bounderies… you got to be aware and play the game well…
Replying to @sama
Assuming good intent is very important. Out instincts tell us that the others want to harm us but this isn't true in the majority of cases.
Replying to @sama
Can I ask them what they want instead. Lol
Replying to @sama
Completely agree! Focus should be more on maximising benefits for both the sides.
Replying to @sama
figuring out what the other side wants and giving it to them... is that "negotiation"