1 / 64

Welcome Commercial Real Estate Negotiations Session 1

Welcome Commercial Real Estate Negotiations Session 1. If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I'd spend six sharpening my axe. -- Abraham Lincoln. Day One. Joseph Larkin, ASC, CCIM, MCR, SIOR Denver, CO Senior Instructor CCIM Faculty – CI 103 Instructor of the Year

rdelgado
Download Presentation

Welcome Commercial Real Estate Negotiations Session 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome Commercial Real Estate NegotiationsSession 1 If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I'd spend six sharpening my axe. -- Abraham Lincoln Day One

  2. Joseph Larkin, ASC, CCIM, MCR, SIOR Denver, CO Senior Instructor CCIM Faculty – CI 103 Instructor of the Year Over 35 years of commercial real experience

  3. Overview for this Workshop

  4. Simple Negotiation Exercise • Pull out a business card. • Meet someone new. • Introduce yourself. • Exchange Business Cards. • Where are they from?

  5. First Assignment: Find out which of you traveled farther to attend this workshop. If  you’ve  traveled  farther  than  your  partner,  give  him/her  $1.  (If  you  don’t  have currency, give a credit card, license, or any item of value.) If  you’re  the  unfortunate  traveler,  negotiate  with your partnerto  get  your money (or item of value) back.

  6. Simple Negotiation Exercise What Worked? What Did Not Work? Why?

  7. Questions • What is the purpose of negotiations? • What does it mean to succeed in negotiations? How do you measure success? • How do you prepare for negotiations? • When do you walkaway from negotiations? • What are the characteristics of a good negotiator?

  8. Great Negotiators Great Negotiators areActive Listeners Probing Synthesizing Bridging Reflective Listening

  9. Great Negotiators Great Negotiators UnderstandPersonality Styles

  10. Great Negotiators Thinking Styles

  11. The more you sweat in training, the less you bleed in battle.– Motto of U.S. Navy Seals Negotiation Overview Module 1

  12. Negotiations Overview Our Session 1 Negotiations Overview

  13. Overview Group Discussion: Question: • Is there Win-Win Negotiations in the Commercial Real Estate Industry? • Explain Your Answer.

  14. Overview Zero Sum Game • Game Theory Approach • Interests are Based on the Negotiation outcomes is finite • The pie is a definite size and the goal is to get the biggest piece • You need to process every potential outcome using “What-if” scenarios

  15. Overview Prisoner's Dilemma • A Pair of criminals are put in separate rooms • Each are told the other is cutting a deal to get a shorter sentence • Everyone acts in the own best interests • Each person lacks information

  16. Overview Distributive Bargaining • a/k/a “Competition” and is adversarial • Emphasizes positional “bargaining” • Uses “tricks” to defeat • Debate requires parties to defend position until the other gives up, compromises, or deal fails • Typically one time deals

  17. Overview Distributive Bargaining • Car salesman approach • Hard on the problem and hard on the people • It does has a place and may be part of interested based bargaining • High Low Game • John Nash

  18. Overview Integrated Bargaining • Cooperative Mode or Collaboration • Client focused and Needs based • Leads to most effective substantive outcomes • Successful at developing long term relationships • Requires deep thinking to be a successful negotiator

  19. Overview Integrated Bargaining • Win-win or Interest Based • Hard on the problem soft on the people • Outcomes are better than the Zero-Sum Game • All parties can enrich each other • Focus on the interests not the position and reconcile them with creative options

  20. Overview Position Verse Interest • Interests are the why you established the position • A position is determined by the sum of the interests and is established by that party that puts forward the position • We must be done by 7:30 today!

  21. Overview

  22. Overview Sample Interest Chart

  23. Overview Real Estate Negotiations Today • Are more complex – Team Negotiations • Take Longer to Conclude • Non-monetary issues which are hard to measure but add value • Availability of information • Involve many stakeholders – Chart the stakeholders

  24. Principles & Practices Which One do You Use? Distributive Integrative

  25. Negotiators A Great Negotiator . . . • - Understands Distributive and Integrated bargaining • Develop a “Stakeholders Chart” for each negotiations • Evaluates everyone involved in the transaction

  26. “A negotiator should observe everything. You must be part Sherlock Holmes, part Sigmund Freud.” -- Victor Kiam Four Basics Key Concepts on Negotiations Module 2

  27. Your Starting Point Our Session 2 “Your Stating Point”

  28. Your Starting Point How to prepare for negotiations A good negotiator develops a strategy and a system for successful negotiations and implements that system!

  29. Strategy BATNA • The Best Alternative to a negotiated agreement – the preferred course in the absence of a deal • The minimum threshold for a negotiated deal • How flexible a party is willing to be, and what trade-offs it is willing to make • Sometimes not the most obvious

  30. Strategy Reservation Price • Also referred to as the walk-away is the least favorable point at which one will accept a deal • Derived from your BATNA but, not necessarily the BATNA • Used in trading up in a location

  31. Strategy ZOPA • Zone of Possible agreement • A range of a deal that satisfies both parties • The set of agreements that can potentially satisfy both parties

  32. Strategy Value Creations • Value creation through trades • Improving your position by trading values at their disposal • Trading value is parties lose little but gain greatly

  33. Great Negotiators A Great Negotiator . . . • Prepares ahead of time • Improve position by improving BATNA, ID other side’s BATNA and Weakening the other side’s BATNA • Focuses on Value Creation

  34. “Diplomacy is the art of letting someone else have your way.” -- Sir David Frost The Negotiation ProcessNine Steps to a Deal Module 3

  35. “Place a higher priority on discovering what a win looks like for the other person.” - Harvey Robbins Table Tactics Module 4

  36. Table Tactics Tactics Getting the other side to the table Making a Good Start Anchoring Tactics for Distributive Bargaining

  37. Table Tactics 1. Other side to the Table • Getting the other side to the negotiations table • The other party must have something desirable and……. • One’s own objective will not be met without giving something in return • Offer incentives • Not interested in the status quo

  38. Table Tactics 2. Making a Good Start • Opening conversations • Setting the ground rules • Establish how and when you will communicate • Agree to disagree • It’s a small world

  39. Table Tactics 3. Anchoring • A basic mistake is making the first offer without completing the research • Anchoring is psychological • If you have a great deal of information anchoring can be an advantage

  40. Table Tactics 4. Tactics for Distributive • Tactics for distributive bargaining greediness, ambition, satisficing and compromise. • Set a range of best target and walkaway target • Draft a package that cushions your favorite topics.

  41. Great Negotiators A Great Negotiator . . . Understands the other side’s interests and wants to induce negotiations Makes a good start Knows when to anchor first Understands the tactics for distributive negotiations

  42. “In business, you don’t get what you deserve, you get what you negotiate.” - Chester L. Karass Tactics Module 5

  43. Tactics Tactics Tactics can be used throughput the negotiations process. Be aware there are counters to all tactics that can be used against you!

  44. Tactics Flinch • Jump • Act Quickly • “Is that US dollars?”

  45. Tactics Deadlines and Timelines • Pressure • Are you really at the bottom line? • Possible change expectation level • Most are imposed on you by yourself • Use it 5% of the time • Most don’t use this tactics enough

  46. Tactics Car Salesperson • I’ll be right back • If it wasn’t we are closing the month out today – we are going to do some crazy things today • AKA the Elevator

  47. Tactics Neutralize the Authority • What is the process to approval this transaction? • Bring the manager out – do you have the authority to sell this car

  48. Tactics Big Pot – at the end • Used at the end of the negotiations • We are almost there but I need free rent, TI and parking!

  49. Tactics Smoke-Out • You led me to believe we are done! • I can do all of that. If there was one thing to make you whole

  50. Tactics Bogy – I love you! • Trade emotion for economics • Trade love and emotion for economics • Shifting the bad guy “I don’t have enough money to close”

More Related