Essentially, this is a book about negotiating written by a former hostage negotiator. How is this relevant for software development, you might ask? Well, it is relevant. How many meetings do you attend per week? Probably a lot. You always want to get something out of every meeting (I’m fond of saying that a meeting without a goal is a social gathering). In many cases, what you want might not be what others want to give you. Thus, negotiation ensues.
If you’re constantly negotiating, so you might as well pretend to know what you’re doing, right? Getting to yes was the canonical book about the topic. The big difference is that this one is very explicit about the fact that people don’t usually behave rationally, which rings very accurate.
The magic recipe
There is no magic recipe that will instantly transform every situation in your favor, as you might expect. There are, however, things that you need to do in every negotiation to tilt the odds in your favor.
It starts with listening. Who knew? But really, listening is vital. Not just paying attention to the words coming out of your counterparty. Being empathetic towards them. Empathy is hard. Understanding their concerns. It sounds so easy, yet you often feel that people don’t truly listen in meetings or listen having already decided what they’re going to hear in advance.
Your tone and posture impact how you’re perceived. Chris Voss recommends using a downward inflection when talking. This one is particularly difficult for non-native speakers. Mirroring is another tool to create rapport. I’ve always heard that consultants are most effective when they plant ideas so that your clients believe they thought of it. That’s another one that’s difficult in practice.
The folly of yes
The book touches on a topic that is very dear to me: The dangers of abusing yes. I’ve seen countless times that people will agree to everything to avoid being perceived as negative or unconstructive. Not only can it be an empty agreement, but it can hide real issues in the name of fake consensus.
Getting to a price
The last part is about getting numbers, be it while buying a car or getting a raise. I’m not sure if this is more culture-specific than other parts. For instance, in Germany, I’ve seen that mentioning extreme ranges tend to kill the whole conversation instead of working as an anchor.
Negotiation in a remote world
What if you are not face to face anymore? I’m sure there’re many adjustments to make to account for that. Sadly this book was written before the lockdown times, so it assumes physical presence. There is a book waiting to be written for remote setups, I’m sure.
Verdict
I liked the book quite a lot. I want to try some of the things mentioned here in my crucial conversations. Sometimes it kind of sounds a bit too self-convinced for my taste, but I think it’s worth a read. I’m giving it ⭐⭐⭐⭐ stars.
Top comments (3)
I read this some years back! My key takeaways were somewhat similar:
I've been saying a variation of the "saying yes is easier than saying no" for years before I read this one. I felt vindicated xD
I also enjoyed the interview he had with Kevin Rose. It made some of the concepts a bit clearer
stitcher.com/podcast/kevin-rose/th...