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How do I become a better negotiator? I'm talking about things such as salary, benefits, etc., but also about smaller things like choice of project or working conditions.

I feel like I negotiate poorly in part because I would like to keep good ties with the people I work with (or might work with in the future, in case I'm applying for a new job). Is being nice and negotiating well necessary contradictory?

To the people who will inevitably believe this question doesn't belong here: for what it's worth, Stack Overflow is largely a community of developers. Most of us hold jobs in software engineering, and many of us are being paid less than we deserve. I believe this question will be directly relevant to the community.

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Voting to close. SO Is not Your Local Recruiter or Salary Negotiator. We're programmers. – George Stocker Feb 27 at 16:45
Definetly not programming related, plenty of good advice on the web, e.g. businessballs.com/payrise.htm, and lots more where that came from – Binary Worrier Feb 27 at 16:45
Funny, Joel and Jeff talked about this exact subject in their last podcast... – Charles Conway Feb 27 at 16:55
They talk about a lot of business related things that have nothing to do with programming. They talked about antihistamines too. The podcast is for them to have protracted discussion about topics they are interested in. It is not a programming Q&A podcast. – EBGreen Feb 27 at 17:00
That's harsh, people. @Gortok: stackoverflow.com/questions/252309 stackoverflow.com/questions/417579 stackoverflow.com/questions/594210 stackoverflow.com/questions/96501 . That last question is in the top 30 ever. – A. Rex Feb 27 at 17:01
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closed as not programming related by Binary Worrier, George Stocker, Noah Goodrich, Rich B, Sam Hasler Feb 27 at 16:47

6 Answers

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Be more prepared. The more information you have about a) what your employer/co-worker/manager wants and b) what you can bring to the table the better. Know what you want (be specific, do not beat around the bush or give subtle hints), and know what your employer wants, and know what the industry wants.

Know your wants/needs, what do you expect to get out of this negotiation? Set goals for your negotiation, and have facts on hand to justify your goal (i.e. I want to get paid more.) How much more? Why? Answers to this lie in a) your skills, b) employer's desired skills, c) industries' desired skills, d) employer's ability to pay your for desired skills, and e) industries' ability to pay you for desired skills.

You need to have all the facts before going into a negotiation, if you don't you will not succeed in attaining your goals. Not only this, but if you go into a negotiation unprepared, the other side will associate this with future tasks. They may not directly state it, but think about it - if someone came up to you and said "I want $50 from you", and you ask why, and they say "because I just want it", you're going to say no (unless they're wielding a knife or gun... then negotiation is out the window at that point anyway!), and you're also going to associate untrustworthiness to the person, at least subconsciously.

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I think the best advice I remember hearing about negotiation is to "always be ready to walk away."

If you have something they need, they will be willing to pay for it.

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As true as that is, quitting over small stuff isn't feasible. – Tom Ritter Feb 27 at 16:46
but having a contingency plan is. :-) – Jweede Feb 27 at 17:06
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The two main points are:

  • As Jweede says, look for a real, viable exit plan before negotiating with one party.
  • Don't just ask; explain why what you are asking for is in their interest. Use data to back you up. Talk buisnesss (ex: ROI) not "just because".
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Read : Getting To Yes

In a nutshell Getting to Yes emphasizes what both parties agree on and minimizes the differences. Once you and the other party agree upon your common goals, coming a beneficial agreement on where you differ is relatively easy.

Being nice gets you nowhere. Having a strong opinion and expressing it will gain you loads more respect than "being nice."

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Jokingly, watch The Big O.

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Roger Smith really wasn't that good at Negotiating... but he did talk an awful lot about it. – Jweede Feb 27 at 20:11
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Herb Cohen's books are really good.

Downvoted -- really? Have you never read one of his books? They truly alter the way you view negotiations. Being willing to walk away is just a small subset of this and a good post would be essentially copying the text of any of his books.

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It's lame when you get downvoted without a comment. I don't know how people expect you too improve. – Charles Conway Feb 27 at 16:53
Perhaps they don't want revenge downvotes? It's CW, it's not like it hurts the OP. – George Stocker Feb 27 at 16:55
Not worried about points but it would be nice to know what someone has about the books... – Austin Salonen Feb 27 at 17:09
I didn't downvote, but your initial answer was simply "Herb Cohen's books are really good. " While that may or may not be true, it has very little to do with the question that is asked. If you had have stated that then gone on to put in the informamtion that is in your edit it would have been better – EBGreen Feb 27 at 17:18

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