Mgt 373 Negotiations
Essay by Mash Ahmed • December 4, 2016 • Thesis • 5,082 Words (21 Pages) • 1,444 Views
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Alfaisal University
College of Business
Undergraduate Business Administration Program
Course Syllabus for
MGT 373 Negotiations
Course Instructor: | |
Name: | Dr. Joel M. Evans |
Office Address: | B3.037 Third-Floor, College of Business |
Email: | jevans@alfaisal.edu |
Profile: | |
Office Phone: | 215-8989 |
Office hours: | Sunday: Females: 10:00-11:00am; Males: 2:00-3:00pm Tuesday: Females: 10:00-11:00am; Males: 2:00-3:00pm |
Course Description:
We negotiate every day with potential employers, coworkers, roommates, landlords, parents, bosses, merchants, service providers, etc. Determining what price we will pay, the amount of our salary and compensation, what movie to watch, who will clean the kitchen… all of these are negotiations. Although negotiations are a ubiquitous part of our everyday lives, many of us know little about the strategy and psychology of effective negotiations. Why do we sometimes get our way, while other times we walk away feeling frustrated by our inability to achieve the agreement we desire?
Negotiation is the art and science of securing agreements between two or more dependent parties. The purpose of this course is to understand the theory and processes of negotiation as they are practiced in a variety of settings. The course is designed to be relevant to a broad spectrum of negotiation problems that are faced by the manager and the professional. A basic premise of this course is that while a manager needs analytical skills to develop optimal solutions to problems, a broad array of negotiation skills is needed for these solutions to be accepted and implemented. Successful completion of this course will enable you to recognize, understand, and analyze essential concepts in negotiations.
Learning Domains and Corresponding Learning Outcomes: | |
Learning Domains* | Learning Outcomes |
Knowledge | Recognize basic rules of negotiation strategy |
Cognitive Skills | Analyze the various, relevant parameters of a bargaining situation, and prepare an appropriate strategy |
Interpersonal Skills and Responsibility | Appraise the position, power, and strategy of a negotiation counterpart; and interpret the interests of the counterpart based on offers and counteroffers |
Communication, Information Technology, and Numerical Skills | Demonstrate the ability to conduct successful negotiations in multiple different contexts |
* See additional information section (at end of this document) for the NCAAA definitions of these learning domains. | |
Required Course Materials: | |
Course Pack: The course pack will be provided. Negotiation cases are included in the cost of the course pack, but will be handed out in class. | |
Optional readings: Fisher, R., Ury, W., & Patton, B. 1991. Getting to Yes. New York: Penguin | |
Acquiring textbooks: students have the below options to acquire required textbooks: (a) Order directly using stated ISBN from local bookshops (e.g. Jarir) or through on-line services (e.g. amazon.com). (b) Purchase an electronic version of the book (if available) through suitable on-line channel. (c) Join as a group and order multiple copies to save delivery costs. If in doubt, the students can seek assistance from admin staff at the UG Office. |
Grading: | ||
Attendance and participation in class discussions | 25% | |
Planning documents | 20% | |
On-going group negotiation | 10% | |
Real world negotiation analysis | 20% | |
Final Exam | 25% |
Letter Grades Conversion: | ||||
Letter Grades | Grade Points | Percentage | Descriptor | |
A | 4.0 | 95 – 100 | Excellent | |
A- | 3.67 | 90 – 94 | Excellent | |
B+ | 3.33 | 86 – 89 | Very Good | |
B | 3.00 | 83 – 85 | Very good | |
B- | 2.67 | 80 – 82 | High Good | |
C+ | 2.33 | 76 – 79 | Good | |
C | 2.0 | 73 – 75 | Good | |
C- | 1.67 | 70 – 72 | Good | |
D+ | 1.33 | 66 – 69 | Fair | |
D | 1.0 | 60 – 65 | Fair | |
F/WF | 0.0 | < 59 | Fail | |
Course Instructor Professor Evans is from the USA and completed his PhD in Management at the University of Arizona, as well as an MS at Penn State University, and a BS at Brigham Young University. After completing his doctoral studies in 2009, he spent six years at SKK Graduate School of Business in Seoul, Korea, where he studied the business cultures of Korea and China. In addition, he has had the opportunity to provide corporate training for some of Korea’s largest corporations, including Samsung, LG, and Doosan, lecturing on global leadership, cross-cultural management, negotiations, and ethics and social responsibility. Professor Evans is also a former Visiting International Faculty Fellow at MIT, where he studied innovation and knowledge creation. He has published research on team creativity and innovation, knowledge transfer, and managerial communications. He currently studies the difficulties faced by customer service employees as they seek to reconcile customer needs with the organization’s goals, including the policies under which they operate, and the sometimes unusual behaviors utilized by employees to meet customer demands (such as rule-breaking). Course Objectives The course will highlight the components of an effective negotiation and teach you to analyze your own behavior in negotiations. The course will be largely experiential, providing you with the opportunity to develop your skills by participating in negotiations and integrating your experiences with the principles presented in the assigned readings and course discussions. This course is designed to foster learning through doing, and to explore your own talents, skills, shortcomings, and strengths as a negotiator. The negotiation exercises will provide you with an opportunity to attempt strategies and tactics in a low-risk environment. Learn about yourself and how you respond in specific negotiation situations. If you discover a tendency that you think needs correction, this is the place to try something new. The course is sequenced so that cumulative knowledge can be applied and practiced. As a result of this course, I hope you will: Experience the negotiation process, learning how to evaluate the costs and benefits of alternative actions.
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Course Format
- Negotiation Exercises: The course is built around a series of negotiation exercises. We will be negotiating in each and every class. While the class officially meets at scheduled course times, students will be expected to meet with other students outside of class to prepare for and execute certain negotiation exercises. Students should also be prepared to stay a few minutes after class to arrange meetings with other members of the class.
- Preparation for Negotiations: Your classmates expect you to be fully prepared for each negotiation exercise. Prior to each negotiation, you are required to submit a planning document. Also, note that some exercises require students to prepare outside of class as a team, either by phone, email, or in person.
- Negotiation Debrief: We will debrief every negotiation in class. You are expected to participate in these class discussions. Your agreements will be posted so that the class can analyze the relationship between different negotiation strategies and outcomes and learn from everyone’s experience.
- Learning: You are encouraged to experiment with alternative styles in this “safe” environment. This is where you can “lose” a million dollars and in retrospect be happy because you will never forget that lesson! Recognize your strengths and weaknesses and track your individual progress over the quarter.
- Readings: It is important to do the session’s readings AFTER class. The concepts will be more comprehensible if you have already experienced them directly and foreknowledge of the concepts could prevent mistakes that are the critical part of the learning process.
Assignments and Methods of Assessment
- Attendance and Participation in Class Discussions (25%)
Because negotiation exercises are critical to the learning process in this course, you should be fully prepared for every negotiation. Thus, you should plan for every exercise; this requires that you come to every class with a written planning document that will help guide you through the negotiation. You should try your hardest to get the best possible outcome for yourself or group. You are not graded on the outcomes of your negotiations (except for Round 2 of the on-going negotiation exercise), but rather on the quality of your preparation prior to the negotiation and your participation in post-negotiation discussions.
Your participation in class discussion will be evaluated on the quality of your contributions and insights. After each negotiation exercise, a debriefing session will include sharing information about results, sharing information about strategies attempted, and sharing reactions to the process. Quality comments possess one or more of the following properties:
- Offer a different and unique, but relevant, perspective based upon analysis and theory (not intuition or casual observation).
- Contribute to moving the discussion and analysis forward.
- Build upon the comments of your classmates.
- Link relevant concepts to current events.
- Planning Documents (20%)
To help you prepare fully for the role you will play in each negotiation, you are required to submit a negotiation planning document prior to each negotiation exercise. These documents are worth 20% of your grade. You or your team (if you are negotiating in a team) should bring 2 copies of your planning document to each exercise so that you can give one copy to me and use the other as a reference during your negotiation. Together, the planning documents will help you structure your negotiation experience. The planning documents will enable you to fully understand the nature of the particular negotiation exercise and plan strategies that will maximize your outcomes.
Before every negotiation (both in class and in the real world) you should construct a planning document. The purpose of the planning document is threefold:
- It will help you prepare systematically for negotiations.
- Some weeks you will have a partner on your own side of the table with whom you will develop and implement your negotiation strategy. Having completed a planning document will expedite your strategy session with your partner.
- It will help you transfer the negotiation skills you learn in class to negotiations you will do outside of class.
Preparation is a vital part of the negotiation process. Time spent in preparation should focus on assessing your interests and goals and those of your opponent. The more complete the information you have about yourself and your opponent, the more control you can assume over your own actions and reactions during the negotiation process. When you don’t have information, especially about your opponent, GUESS. One way of beginning the negotiation process is to ask questions to try to fill in gaps in the information you have, or to test the assumptions you made in your guesses.
The Planning Document Forms at the end of this syllabus are provided as examples. The first is a list form that asks for information about both yourself and your opponent. The second and third are in a chart form and allow at-a-glance comparisons of the parties’ information. Feel free to choose the format that is most comfortable for you or to modify the existing forms in any way that helps you to prepare for your negotiations. As the course progresses and new concepts are added, you may wish to change the format of your planning document. Just make sure that you do not leave out any of the basic concepts in doing so.
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