- My negotiation background really started even before I became an
FBI hostage negotiator because I needed to get some training. And that training was really
intense, focused listening on a suicide hotline. Really learning about
emotional intelligence and what drives people, and
then how to navigate that in a way that calms people down, makes people make decisions. - 'Gunmen burst into
the Chase Manhattan Bank in Park Slope this morning. And ever since negotiators
have been trying to get them to give up.' - 'Hostage negotiators
used a bullhorn to try and talk to the gunman.' - 'Billy, we're on the same page.' - 'What persuaded the gunman finally to come out? - I think it was excellent
hostage negotiating.' - People in intense situations aren't changing their patterns. They're still working in the same way that they would under less
intense circumstances; they're still making the same decisions. So if you take hostage negotiation skills, which are navigating human emotions, and you put them in the middle of business and personal negotiations, you've actually got a
great way to work your way through business negotiations, and personal and everyday
life negotiations. If you think that successful
negotiations are successful because of logic or arguments
or reason or compromise, you're losing money- you're leaving millions
of dollars on the table. And over the course of a lifetime, that could be true for everybody. Tactically, emotional
intelligent negotiation is the way you make great deals, and the way you have great
long-term relationships. And sometimes they miss
that and they think that the problem is a
person across the table. And that's why, oftentimes,
that people think of it as conflict and actually
treat it as conflict. Negotiation is really about what people are making decisions based on what they care about,
what's your passions? Every decision you make, you make based on what you care about, which
I'm afraid that by definition, that makes decision-making
an emotional process. First of all, understanding where the other side's coming from
and especially emotionally, and then being able to
feed it back to them in a way that they signal to
you that you've got it right. Understand and demonstrate
that understanding. There are a lot of negotiators that really will give in on a deal because being understood is more important than getting what they want. So once we completely understand where somebody's coming from,
then with tactical empathy, we get a much better feel
for exactly how they feel about things, how that drives them- and then how we can
interact with the things that are driving them. The reasons you won't
make a deal are typically more important than the
reasons you will make a deal. There's Nobel Prize-winning
behavioral economics theory that says that people
will put a value of losses on at least twice what
an equivalent gain is. So losing $5 stings at least
twice as much as gaining $5. Losing $5 feels like
losing $10 or even $35- it's just a ridiculous skewing
in our brains over loss. So knowing that fear of
loss is probably going to drive someone's decision-making
more than anything else, tactically, I want to diffuse those fears. I want to get them out of
that fear-based thinking, and I want to get them
really in a more rational, open frame of mind as quickly as I can, which is why, tactically and empathy, I wanna address their fears first. Well, labeling is the best way
to practice tactical empathy: In its strictest form, it's
just saying, or writing, "it seems like, it sounds
like, it looks like," putting a label on the dynamic. And science is showing us now,
that if we label a negative, it diminishes it. I'll actually say to
somebody ahead of time, "Look, this is gonna sound really harsh, and there's a really good chance that when I get done
saying what I'm gonna say, you're not gonna like me at all." And then I'll say what I have to say, and they'll say, "Wow,
that wasn't that bad." So I know I can take a
very preemptive approach to negative thinking because
I know what a barrier it is to decision-making in business. The type of listening-I
practice it as I teach it- is really kind of beyond
active listening all by itself. We even sort of refer to it
sometimes as 'listeners judo' because we're listening very
carefully for certain things. We're listening for different aspects of what people care about,
and what they're against at the same time. People will reveal the
negatives, very much, either between the lines, a
little bit of the adjectives, and in also in every positive
there's a flip side negative; every negative, there's
a flip side positive. If I make it a point of talking
about how I'm for integrity, then if you're making
it a point to state that then you've been betrayed in the past, that's been a problem for you in the past. There's a yin and yang to everything. And as soon as you realize that, that there's a negative to every positive and a positive to every negative, and you're listening for
it, you can kind of pick out how you want to guide a discussion knowing that those are the things
that you're looking for. I remember one time I was on the phone with a customer service airlines person, and that's gotta be a tough job because those people get yelled
at all day long every day. Nobody calls customer service
unless they're unhappy. And this woman was one of those women that she clearly she'd been yelled at 50 times during the day, and she was not interested
in staying on the phone with me a moment longer than she had to. And I remember when I was off the phone and she had me on hold, I remember saying, "You know, I guarantee you this
woman right now is thinking, she's saying to her colleagues, 'You know, this guy's lucky I'm talking to him on a phone at all!'" So I was thinking about
the negative of that, and then I was about the flip side. Well in her view, if she
thinks I'm lucky to be talking to her on the phone, then the flip side of that is
she's actually being generous in her mind and her world. She came back on the
phone and I said to her, "You know what? I really appreciate how
generous you've been with your time." And I could tell immediately
her frame of mind changed. She put me back on hold for about a minute and a half after that. And when she came back on the phone, she'd given me a full refund on my ticket. Most people, if you're nice to them, can help you by doing a little bit if you give them a chance. If you're just nice to people, it's amazing what they'll do for you. - That's awesome.
- That was great story. - Thank you.
- Thank you for awesomeness. - Get smarter, faster with videos from the
world's biggest thinkers. And to learn even more from
the world's biggest thinkers, Get Big Think+ for your business.