Negotiation Failure - Case Of Daimler-Chrysler
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Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal
Abstract
Negotiations are inevitable in business and in every facet of life. Often parties to a
negotiation come to the negotiating table with wrong assumptions, unrealistic
expectations, and what academics label as blinded awareness and focus failure because
they fail to realise the import of information which is made available and which can
lead to negotiation success. Lack of listening properly and being magnanimous at the
negotiation table causes negotiation failure. Negotiators often engage in stereotyping,
resort to heightened emotions, and provocation of adversaries through bullying, arm
twisting and logrolling and horse trading tactics. Often negotiators fail to take
cognizance of contextual and extenuating circumstances because they seek selfish and
parochial interests in a winner-take all, zero-sum scenario where they assume they are
dealing with a fixed pie situation, and their axiomatic positions cannot be
compromised. This essay on negotiation failure regarding the Daimler-Chrysler merger
failure draws parallels from history and geo-politics, citing the Cold War era standoff,
Shuttle diplomacy regarding the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties (SALT), the Oil-for
food UN-Iraqi deal, and the Israeli-Palestinian imbroglio as typical negotiations some of
which were successes and others failures. The author of this essay makes the
assumption that negotiation is not a one-off process but a continuous work in progress
of establishing long term rapport, good will, and building bridges of friendship and
investment in long term binding bonds of mutual coexistence.
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RESEARCH PAPERS AND JOURNAL ARTICLES
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