Source Code
Negotiation
Tactical empathy-based negotiation framework from FBI hostage negotiator Chris Voss.
Core Mindset
- People want to be understood - Satisfy their need to feel safe and in control through active listening
- Listen to discover, not to argue - Treat assumptions as hypotheses; let them reveal surprises
- Focus on needs, not positions - Tangible demands mask emotional needs (respect, security, autonomy)
- Never split the difference - No deal is better than a bad deal; avoid lukewarm compromises
- "No" is the starting point - "No" means "not yet" or "not this way"; it makes people feel safe
- Aim for "That's right" - Better than "yes"; signals genuine rapport and understanding
- Stay calm and positive - Emotions are contagious; slow pace enables clear thinking
- Unconditional positive regard - Respect them as a person regardless of disagreement
Quick Reference: Key Techniques
| Technique | What to do | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Mirroring | Repeat last 1-3 words with upward inflection | "Doesn't make sense?" |
| Labeling | Name their emotion: "It seems like..." | "It sounds like you're frustrated with the timeline" |
| Calibrated Questions | Ask "How...?" or "What...?" to shape conversation | "How am I supposed to do that?" |
| Accusation Audit | Preemptively list negatives they might think | "You probably think I'm being greedy..." |
| Late-Night DJ Voice | Slow, calm, downward inflection for key moments | Deep, reassuring tone |
| Tactical Silence | Pause 4+ seconds after statements | Let them fill the void |
| Trigger "That's Right" | Summarize their position until they affirm | "So what you're saying is..." |
For detailed technique breakdowns with psychological triggers and examples, see references/techniques.md.
Negotiation Workflow
Phase 1: Preparation
- Research the counterpart (background, pressures, constraints)
- Define your goal and BATNA (Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement)
- Prepare an Accusation Audit - list every negative they might think about you
- Draft 3-5 Calibrated Questions to uncover their needs
- Identify potential Black Swans (hidden information that could change everything)
Phase 2: Opening
- Use friendly, positive tonality as default
- Start with Tactical Empathy - demonstrate you understand their situation
- Deliver your Accusation Audit early to defuse objections
- Encourage them to say "No" - it makes them feel safe and in control
Phase 3: Information Gathering
- Mirror key phrases to encourage elaboration
- Label emotions as they emerge ("It seems like...")
- Ask Calibrated Questions ("What's the biggest challenge here?")
- Listen for pronouns: "I/me" suggests less authority; "we/they" suggests decision-maker
- Watch for Black Swans - anomalies that reveal hidden constraints
Phase 4: Bargaining
For monetary negotiations, use the Ackerman Method:
- Set your target price (what you actually want)
- Open at 65% of target
- Raise in decreasing increments: 85% โ 95% โ 100%
- Use precise, non-round numbers on final offer ($10,230 not $10,000)
- Include a non-monetary bonus with final offer ("...and I'll include X")
Phase 5: Closing
- Get "That's Right" before proposing solutions
- Apply Rule of Three - confirm agreement 3 times in 3 different ways
- Follow every "yes" with "How...?" to ensure implementation
- If they go silent, ask: "Have you given up on this?"
Handling Common Situations
They say "That's not fair":
- Stop immediately: "I want to be fair. Have I done something unfair? Let's discuss it."
They anchor with an extreme number:
- Don't counter immediately; use calibrated questions: "How did you arrive at that figure?"
They stop responding:
- Send: "Have you given up on [the project]?" - triggers "No" response
They seem irrational:
- Diagnose: Are they (1) ill-informed, (2) constrained, or (3) hiding something?
- Use calibrated questions to uncover which
Counterpart Styles
Adapt your approach based on their style:
| Style | Signs | Adapt by... |
|---|---|---|
| Analyst | Methodical, data-driven, hates surprises | Use facts, be patient, don't rush |
| Accommodator | Friendly, relationship-focused, avoids conflict | Build rapport, but pin down specifics |
| Assertive | Direct, time-conscious, wants to win | Be efficient, stand firm, acknowledge their points |
Voice and Delivery
- Default voice: Positive, warm, light-hearted (with a smile)
- Critical moments: Late-Night DJ Voice - slow, calm, downward inflection
- After key statements: Pause 4+ seconds
- Watch their nonverbals: 7% words, 38% tone, 55% body language
Resources
- techniques.md - Complete technique breakdowns with examples and psychological triggers