The Power of Understanding Narrative In Negotiation
TheInquisitor Podcast with Marcus Cauchi - A podcast by Marcus Cauchi, Laughs Last Ltd
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Allan Tsang, one half of Oblinger & Tsang, and co-founder of The Negotiation Tribe, helps sellers negotiate to achieve satisfying outcomes that both sides are happy to live with for the long term. Trained by one of my personal heroes in business, Jim Camp, and mentored by Gary Noesner who transformed the way the FBI negotiate to release hostages, Allan brings enormous experience and wisdom to the negotiation process. "Winning at negotiation is a fallacy. If you win, by default your counterpart loses. Then they'll want to get even", says Allan. A master of incrementally building, rock solid agreements, Allan explains the difference between #story and #narrative, and why understanding the narrative of all parties involved in a negotiation is critical. We delve deep into negotiation psychology to ensure you recognise when you are in a negotiation and when youa re in a psychological game. Contact Allan at linkedin.com/in/allantsang Website: https://oblingertsand.com--If you are the owner or CEO of a technology company and your goal is to grow your business and achieve real, sustainable hypergrowth with highly engaged and highly productive employees and clients who stick with you year after year, let’s schedule time for a brief conversation. To book a 1 to 1 with me or check out my 250+ podcast interviews with some of the best salespeople, sales leaders, sales psychologists, founders and entrepreneurs, trainers, coaches and authors click here - https://linktr.ee/marcuscauchi If you believe sales needs a good kick up the arse and is in dire need to a reset, consider joining our global community #SalesAForceForGood #SAFFG. We hold regular events on LinkedIn, Facebook, Clubhouse to take the toughest challenges and find better ways of doing things. How do we reframe executive culture to enable sales to put the customer at the heart of everything we do? Do we need to rethink what great looks like in sales? How do we stop salespeople doing drive by shootings and inflicting bad selling on customers? Should compensation reflect customer success instead of transactional targets being met? How do we create a culture of sales apprenticeships so new salespeople have a career path they can aspire to?