How to win a negotiation, with former FBI hostage chief Chris Voss

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  • Опубліковано 2 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 501

  • @free22
    @free22 Рік тому +3451

    I remember years ago I had to attend meetings with the department heads of a company. The department heads were highly educated engineers and scientists but it was the HR manager who guided those discussions. She simply had higher emotional intelligence levels than everyone else in the room. The others didn’t even realize that she was guiding the conversations. I was often in awe of her because if she had wanted to do so, she could have completely controlled that company. Since then, I have noticed the same thing in other meetings. The person who understood human psychology the best was often the one actually in charge.

    • @saramarzoli9647
      @saramarzoli9647 Рік тому +86

      That sounds so fascinating to look at. I still have to witness it, and would like to become more like that myself. In a world were each one of us is focused on what's going on inside our head, and have to guess what others are thinking, the person who knows, leads

    • @rushmatic
      @rushmatic Рік тому +82

      It’s true, HR directors, managers, etc. are the most conniving and disingenuous people you will meet 😅

    • @free22
      @free22 Рік тому +48

      @@rushmaticHR works for the company. At all times. That’s all you need to know when it comes to HR.

    • @free22
      @free22 Рік тому +15

      @@kknn523 Watch the video again. Nobody claimed that negotiations were all the same.

    • @lemao7010
      @lemao7010 Рік тому +4

      Nice, now tell us a story with unicorns and rainbows

  • @deborahbreeden4394
    @deborahbreeden4394 Рік тому +1206

    As a Small Claims Mediator, I saw a lot of agreements.
    I found that my role was to assist the people in hearing each other effectively.
    Once people perceive that they are understood, the dispute resolves quickly.

    • @joshuab2437
      @joshuab2437 Рік тому +4

      We need this between Russia and USA (Putin & Biden).

    • @maryrosekent8223
      @maryrosekent8223 Рік тому

      @@joshuab2437: Not going to happen because Putin can’t be trusted to honor his agreements.

    • @stachowi
      @stachowi Рік тому +23

      @@joshuab2437 you're assuming they want peace....

    • @stachowi
      @stachowi Рік тому +7

      How to Win Friends and Influence People

    • @deborahbreeden4394
      @deborahbreeden4394 Рік тому +3

      @stachowi funny how I never made that assumption for any of the hundreds of mediations I conducted.
      I found that everyone wants their own idea of "fair" or "justice."
      Some folks only want to "win."

  • @JerkFrags
    @JerkFrags 8 місяців тому +36

    I had a similar experience when I missed a flight. I was just getting to the counter at the gate when the plane was pulling away. I told the lady at the counter that I understand that it's completely my fault and that I understand that there will be fees with changing the ticket, or even paying for an entirely new ticket and I asked if there were other flights for where I was going to. She asked why I was late and I said something like "I planned poorly and thought I would have more time than I did." I remember she had a bit of a pleasant look on her face, it was probably nice hearing someone admit fault instead of blaming anything else. She switched my flight, I only had to wait about two hours and I was on the next flight, without having to pay any charges! I didn't realize I was kind of using a similar technique as his, but I was still being nice and she certainely helped me out a lot!

  • @TheBrawlmastah
    @TheBrawlmastah Рік тому +221

    Losing 5 dollars stings at least twice as much as gaining 5 dollars. Well said sir.

    • @SolaceEasy
      @SolaceEasy 10 місяців тому +1

      He said 7x. $35.

  • @TorchySmurf
    @TorchySmurf Рік тому +421

    I work in Customer Service and it's funny when angry customers say, "I'm not getting off the phone until I get what I want!" You basically become the hostage and your own negotiator at that point. Staying calm and genuinely trying to remain helpful is quite an interesting challenge when someone is threatening you. I see it as a win if I keep my head in the game and try to help them. Yes, Losing feels worse than winning feels good.

    • @Oberon4278
      @Oberon4278 11 місяців тому +6

      I always laughed (to myself) when someone said that because I already knew that 1. they almost certainly will not get what they're demanding, and 2. they are going to hang up happy anyway. Because what they REALLY want is someone to hear their complaints and be sympathetic. With a caller like that all you have to do is listen to their complaints and agree that they should not have been treated that way.
      Then you tell them what you're allowed to do, which is not going to be what they demanded up front, and they'll be happy with it because you treated them well.

    • @NamesMori
      @NamesMori 8 місяців тому

      @@Oberon4278this is definitely how you handle it! You can apple this logic in many fields, which is so helpful once you learn to stay calm when being yelled at

  • @grapeshott
    @grapeshott Рік тому +902

    At the end of the video, the Big Think staff seem to have learnt a great deal from the professor.

  • @Ffgshhhjkjdhsjjks
    @Ffgshhhjkjdhsjjks Рік тому +98

    From this video I understand that:
    It is important for the relationship to listen carefully, express your thoughts clearly and find mutually beneficial solutions. It is also important to focus on partnerships and maintain constructive dialogue.

  • @BhadManKAZMO
    @BhadManKAZMO Рік тому +213

    A Well informed and very intelligent professor. As someone who has to deal with about 50 customers almost daily with cell phone problems, (in person) Big Think videos has helped me over the years improve my emotional intelligence, they are spot on. I now see my clients as a learning opportunity to genuinely identify and understand their emotions on a daily basis and as the professor mentioned, act on that understanding. In this day and age, our lives is on our cell phones, thus people get really angry. My business has significantly grown, become a lot easier and more enjoyable. If only I can get my employees to be that resilient. Lol

  • @declup
    @declup Рік тому +427

    Loss aversion isn't ridiculous; it makes perfect sense actually. The thing is, gaining and losing aren't symmetrical. You can gain and gain and gain, at least theoretically, and even so, you never win the game of life. However, you can only lose so much until you hit the number 0, at which point, you've washed out of the game of life entirely. E.g., right now, you have just enough money for a meal -- say, $5. You gain a dollar, you have $6. You lose a dollar, however, you no longer can afford a meal. The +/- directions aren't balanced in other words.

    • @FernandoVazquez-ro1nw
      @FernandoVazquez-ro1nw Рік тому +19

      Brilliant.

    • @LaurieMB
      @LaurieMB Рік тому +15

      Good perspective - makes total sense explained like that.

    • @ncedwards1234
      @ncedwards1234 11 місяців тому +1

      Just comes off as defending a bias that's been shown to cause illogical choices for a long time now. i'll even use your example of a $5 meal.
      You have $4. Is a loss and gain equivalent for $1 now?
      Same context, opposite answer as your $6 condition. Why? Because these are two skewed examples.
      The reason this bias is irrational is because it causes people to stick to a status quo when they could have easily guaranteed a small loss and a big gain simultaneously. If someone said "give me $5 now and i'll give you $10 tomorrow," in nearly all circumstances that's a goos deal if true. If you deny the opportunity you may have good judgment though, because odds are anyone that desperate for $5 isn't someone financially trustworthy.
      Risk affords opportunities, but mostly for the rich who can afford to lose before their next win. If your loss sets you up to win, many people will still avoid it, perhaps because the availability bias on imagining a loss vs the less obvious outcome where losses can invest into a win, which happens in more situations than you might initially believe.
      Run the numbers or read a research article if you wanna understand it, but rationality is always context-dependent whereas the loss aversion is constant in most people.

    • @nolans3420
      @nolans3420 11 місяців тому +15

      Gaining 100% doubles your money, losing 100% means you have nothing.

    • @d_registers.h1
      @d_registers.h1 10 місяців тому +2

      5+1-1=5 what are you on

  • @PaulJackino
    @PaulJackino Рік тому +521

    Beautiful and helpful!
    One thought at “If you’re nice to someone it’s amazing what they’ll do for you”
    Yes, be respectful and understanding, but only because it's the way to go - not because you want something from it. Don't be nice for the sake of getting something. Be understanding, patient, respectful, while maintaining the communication (whatever it is you're asserting).

    • @ellengrace4609
      @ellengrace4609 Рік тому +27

      That may be more true in situations that are not life-threatening. Remember, this guy was a hostage negotiator. It would be impossible to hide that he wants something.

    • @Alex-zc9ty
      @Alex-zc9ty Рік тому +7

      Love this comment. Being nice and respectful should be an end, not a means to get what you want. Many people tho, get it wrong

    • @saramarzoli9647
      @saramarzoli9647 Рік тому +6

      @ Ellen Grace: well, you're right, that's a good point, and difficult to wrap my head around. Maybe the point is not hiding what you want, we all know the other wants something. If anything, trying to hide a part of the communication would result in the entirety of it feeling untrue. But by genuinely keeping in mind the well being of other people you can kinda bring the gunman on your side and make them work with you? I don't know, you got me going down the rabbit hole. If you keep the well being of hostages in mind, you'll get through to the gunman, and he'll follow your lead of considering what's best for them too? Sorry for the long rant, that was a good point you made

    • @offchan
      @offchan Рік тому

      Everyone is nice because we ultimately want something. For example, even if you don't want material help, you might want to make friends or just want to feel good from being nice.
      What makes you think that we should not be nice for the sake of getting something?

    • @ncedwards1234
      @ncedwards1234 11 місяців тому +1

      If your goals are pure, you share them simply, and you make it clear that you understand the other person's goals, then it's pretty easy to see how that fosters cooperation's emergence from two interacting agents. Whole > sum of parts. Basis of society, multicellularity, and seemingly a lot of microscopic physical processes as well. Apes together strong.

  • @asikbanget5041
    @asikbanget5041 7 місяців тому +5

    Emotional intelligence, accurate body language (including show of respect and empathy when required), clear pronunciation, clear goal that benefits both parties, all together give a perception that you can be trusted

  • @FestaNoYoutubiu
    @FestaNoYoutubiu Рік тому +40

    This video should be entitled "the zen of negotiation". As much as a negotion tips video, this is a roadmap to maturity and human understanding. Thank you!

  • @CorinthianIvory
    @CorinthianIvory Рік тому +44

    I just read your book "Never Split the Difference." It's potentially life changing. I'll keep coming back to it every year

  • @BarrettCharlebois
    @BarrettCharlebois Рік тому +72

    Chris Voss was great as a guest today, I remember reading his book right before covid hit. Can we see more of him please?

    • @saramarzoli9647
      @saramarzoli9647 Рік тому

      I'm looking it up cause I'd love to read something of his. Any suggestions?

    • @anthonywijninga8106
      @anthonywijninga8106 Рік тому +2

      @@saramarzoli9647 Never split the difference

  • @fppiroozian6372
    @fppiroozian6372 Рік тому +28

    If you are nice with people it’s amazing what they do for you!!
    Biggest overlooked lesson in business

  • @andr3carlos
    @andr3carlos Рік тому +42

    Chris Voss' Never Split the Difference is a must-read for sure! Big Think always with the best content.

  • @DiegoMarceloPereyraMarrero
    @DiegoMarceloPereyraMarrero Рік тому +179

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🧠 Emotional intelligence is crucial in negotiations, understanding human emotions and motivations.
    01:01 💰 Successful negotiations rely on emotional intelligence, not just logic or compromise.
    02:06 🤝 Understanding the other party's perspective and passions is essential for effective negotiation.
    03:16 ⚖️ Fear of loss often drives decision-making more than potential gains in negotiations.
    03:48 👂 Tactically empathetic negotiation involves addressing fears and diffusing fear-based thinking.
    04:18 🏷️ Labeling negative dynamics can diminish their impact and facilitate communication.
    04:55 🔊 Advanced listening techniques reveal underlying emotions and perspectives in conversations.
    06:25 😊 Being nice and recognizing positive aspects of interactions can lead to better outcomes in negotiations.
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @zuhaibkhan3694
    @zuhaibkhan3694 Рік тому +6

    I have read Never Split The Difference and it is astounding the principles I have learnt. Chris is amazing.

  • @pinokodayo
    @pinokodayo Рік тому +20

    His book Never Split the Difference is such a wonderful text. I’ve listened to the audiobook version a few times and it’s helped a ton

  • @christians131
    @christians131 Рік тому +45

    I remember incorporating some his teachings from the book towards selling my truck awhile back and I ended up getting my asking price while leaving the buyer with a feeling of satisfaction over a good deal as well
    I love how he emphasizes the importance of listening. It’s a truest valuable skill set

    • @jesusacosta6815
      @jesusacosta6815 11 місяців тому

      Hello I hope you don't mind telling the name of the book, please.

    • @christians131
      @christians131 11 місяців тому

      @@jesusacosta6815 Never Split the Difference

  • @nargizazhumabek
    @nargizazhumabek Рік тому +13

    I truly agree with the speaker about the ideas of saying nice things to people when you are negotiating! It works, thanks a lot!

  • @arjunsuresh5872
    @arjunsuresh5872 6 місяців тому +2

    So recently a gym owner of the gym I go to ran into losses and I asked for a refund. I applied trick three here and he said hey, I'll give you half your refund but if you want to come to the new place, it's free for half the time of your actual membership. All I said literally was thanks for taking out your time to help me. Although I won't be continuing and will effectively be losing, it is a good lesson for me I mean loss stung me but it's ok. Money will come and go but goodwill one stays will remain.

  • @zabintasrik4488
    @zabintasrik4488 Рік тому +10

    Takeaways, be nice, appreciate them for being there to negotiate in the first place, listen to what they want out of the deal and then try to come up with a good way to present your offers.

  • @RachAptVideos
    @RachAptVideos Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @maryrosekent8223
    @maryrosekent8223 Рік тому +3

    But even more importantly, be nice to people because kindness is its own reward.

  • @anvi.a8976
    @anvi.a8976 11 місяців тому +26

    Bro wins every argument against his wife

  • @michaelambrus3051
    @michaelambrus3051 Рік тому +38

    I love this dude, I have 3 hard copies of his book and read it like 5 times. My main take away is that people is not the problem, it’s the unresolved issue, if you can pinpoint that, have empathy and understanding, you come out on top. I work in business and use his Black Swan method daily. I say as I usually say to my friends: If you only could read one book in your life, this is the one.

    • @satriawira9463
      @satriawira9463 Рік тому +1

      Which book should i read?

    • @drewteves8326
      @drewteves8326 Рік тому

      ​@satriawira9463 It's called "Never Split The Difference." My boss recommended it to me. I'm still in the middle of reading it.

  • @abhishalsharma1628
    @abhishalsharma1628 Рік тому +65

    Today's learning basically is
    Give your empathy/
    Don't persuade them/
    Be with them/ Be theirs
    If you get successful at letting them understand that s/he won, you won
    Here, s/he winning means they won your empathy
    So, in summary it's a win win game

  • @eltonhendrix4170
    @eltonhendrix4170 Рік тому +3

    Of everyone I meet in life, 50% fear loss, and the other 50% hope to gain. Such as life, now you know.

  • @B.KaiyrEng
    @B.KaiyrEng Рік тому +5

    A well-delivered speech, like the one in the video, always does the job in difficult negotiations!!! GOOD JOB MAN

  • @Olothur
    @Olothur Рік тому +17

    What a brilliant negotiator! I learned nothing, yet feel smarter. He even hinted that he appreciates my wasted time!

    • @kasugasawa839
      @kasugasawa839 Рік тому

      said the smooth brain individual

    • @Olothur
      @Olothur Рік тому +4

      @@kasugasawa839 smooth brain individuals think that he said something new and awe-inspiring, while he just spilled a few obvious but sweet nothings.

    • @kasugasawa839
      @kasugasawa839 Рік тому +1

      @@Olothur if you fail to gain something from his statements, i think you need to read more books or journals, because i can immediately linked every point to some of my reading materials

    • @Olothur
      @Olothur Рік тому

      @@kasugasawa839 I gained nothing because all this 'revelations' were obvious for anyone who goes outside at least twice a week. If you needed a book to substitute for touching grass, well, you did your homework badly, calling someone a smooth brain while being oblivious for your own stupidity.

    • @dd11111
      @dd11111 11 місяців тому

      @@kasugasawa839 Great negotiating there dude!

  • @AwwSweet
    @AwwSweet Рік тому +6

    Lex Fridman has long podcast with Chris Voss. I learned a lot, while listening. Great talk.

    • @TickleMeTimbers
      @TickleMeTimbers Рік тому

      Lex Fridman is the pseudointellectual savior of uneducated people. He is a fraud and has no ties to MIT.

  • @SoWhatM8
    @SoWhatM8 8 місяців тому

    An important part of negotiating is making the person feel like you’re on their level and understand them from their point of view

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 Рік тому +100

    Twice in public I've helped calm people down. Once n a senior center, once in a park -- both times "things" were going off the rails. I go over and agree with them -- louder and more adjectives. Spend about 20 seconds doing that and half their anger vanishes because they know "somebody gets it".
    Then one time I talked with the woman a little more; she was really angry her daughter had cut her long hair before her wedding. Turns out Mom and daughter had had a bedtime routine forever, Mom combing out her daughter's hair. By then the woman was calm enough I felt I should leave as I'm not a trained therapist but I would guess that for for both Mom and daughter cutting the hair off was a way of saying "good bye" to the past. That was in the Sr. Center.
    In the park the woman was with family and after I had intruded (I know that's how her family saw it) and the woman had calmed enough to talk to her family I just said something like "I wish everything good for you." I walked away. I don't know what the core problem was, I just saw this older lady becoming hysterical and I wanted to help her get off that self defeating "high".
    Oh, I'm 70, a retired school librarian and teacher. I read about this technique somewhere, I don't remember where. Used it with kids too sometimes although it was never so intense.

  • @Stephen_Jabs
    @Stephen_Jabs Рік тому +5

    This is not only important in hostage scenes, but also in our workplace...

  • @test40323
    @test40323 Рік тому +39

    The lost art of listening. How often we failed to put ourselves in another's shoes jumping to conclusion and judgement? Often times people just want to be heard.

    • @kirtil5177
      @kirtil5177 Рік тому +4

      ironically wanting to be heard is also a reason most people dont put themselves in another's shoes and only want to be heard, not to hear others out

  • @greatestever8169
    @greatestever8169 Місяць тому

    Very well written and said! You can tell this guy understands what he knows clearly 😊❤

  • @sophenjoroge
    @sophenjoroge Місяць тому

    Great summary!
    👉 Negotiation is not about logic, it's about emotional intelligence and making decisions based on what you care about - Try to understand where your counterpart is coming from and negotiate based on the things that are driving them.
    👉 The reasons you WILL NOT make a deal are more important than the reasons you WILL make a deal. Fear of losing drives decision making more (Losing 5$ feels like you've lost 10$ or even more) - Get your counterpart out of fear based thinking by labeling the fear, e.g. "it seems like.., it sounds like..., it looks like..." to diminish it.
    👉 Negotiate with Empathy - Listen actively and inbetween the lines for what your counterpart cares about and what they are against at the same time. This will enable you guide the discussion.
    👉 Practise your negotiation skills with every one you interact with to become better at it.

  • @guvisart
    @guvisart Рік тому +11

    Negotiating with aggressive people is not worth it. But if a person is adequate, then you can first listen to them and be empathetic towards them. Do not spoil your mentality and mood. It will be right to resolve the negotiations by compromise or concessions.

    • @balzhan_zhenis
      @balzhan_zhenis Рік тому +1

      I agree with you

    • @5Texas5
      @5Texas5 Рік тому

      I agree. Most of the time the aggression is not even attached to the negotiation. Its stems from something previous. They came like that and will probably leave like that, (aggressively)

  • @craigmerkey8518
    @craigmerkey8518 Рік тому +2

    As a behavior specialist. a common starting point is key. My share.... I was having mad mega issues with a credit card.... ( a premier well known card) like 3 months of issues while my partner was in south America working. I don't know how many times I called customer service, emailed, and wrote two letters. I was on hold for over an hour multiple times. The issue was always allegedly fixed but it was never resolved. Finally one day my case was escalated to an executive who fixed their issue in about 30 seconds. She said wow, looking over these notes I would be pissed by now. I learned as a behavior specialist getting mad rarely solves a problem.

  • @kzrlgo
    @kzrlgo 11 місяців тому

    The fact the film crew found that last story so amazing says everything about people's mentality these days.

  • @luxushauseragency
    @luxushauseragency Рік тому +2

    Great video. Lots of critical points. Listener's Judo is very real.

  • @Novastar.SaberCombat
    @Novastar.SaberCombat Рік тому +15

    Balance is key. If you're too nice, people take advantage. If you're wretched and caustic, you'll be stonewalled. Reflection is important.
    🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨

  • @SayakBoral
    @SayakBoral 2 місяці тому

    If you're nice to people, it's amazing what they'll do for you. Word.

  • @thatguyfromtheplace5681
    @thatguyfromtheplace5681 11 місяців тому +47

    Tip #1: drop their IP address in the chat

    • @JuanFernando-fo3wx
      @JuanFernando-fo3wx 7 місяців тому +2

      you're not funny

    • @shhhout
      @shhhout 6 місяців тому +5

      Dont worry about loser, above my comment. You are extremely funny, keep up

    • @SAkanaTM
      @SAkanaTM 24 дні тому +1

      The above at my comment is right, don't mind the haters keep it up brother

  • @sristijain6230
    @sristijain6230 14 днів тому

    Being understood is more important than getting what they want. Wow!

  • @michaelgabrielcube233
    @michaelgabrielcube233 Місяць тому

    This is why being kind can be a powerful tactic
    I mean every negotiator is
    "You get what you give"

  • @BergerJakob2803
    @BergerJakob2803 8 місяців тому +1

    Love the confidence in his voice

  • @islandnowhere4703
    @islandnowhere4703 Рік тому +16

    Making cut-throat negotiations sound like therapy sessions...
    I guess that's how you put yourself in a position of power (therapist), defuse your own fear of loss and set the negotiation frame.
    Brilliant

    • @saramarzoli9647
      @saramarzoli9647 Рік тому

      Defuse your own fear of loss. That's very interesting to keep in mind

    • @Aruna1991
      @Aruna1991 Рік тому

      Cut throat negotiation?

  • @vandolmatzis8146
    @vandolmatzis8146 Рік тому

    His tone is calm and soothing.

  • @CalvinHikes
    @CalvinHikes Рік тому +1

    From his book I learned basically, be a good listener.

  • @terranceharris9779
    @terranceharris9779 8 місяців тому +1

    “Being understood is more important than getting what they want” 😮‍💨

    • @maribethcondrillon1079
      @maribethcondrillon1079 8 місяців тому

      you know I've always told myself that I'd rather marry someone older than me and at least he'll love me for the rest of my life

  • @callmejusttsar
    @callmejusttsar 2 місяці тому

    This man made a movie of his speech 👏

  • @monsieurmanagercasual9388
    @monsieurmanagercasual9388 Рік тому +1

    People (other negotiators) study these methods, but then when they hear it used on them, they still can't resist!!!

  • @moldirserikbayeva4963
    @moldirserikbayeva4963 Рік тому +3

    I really liked this well informative video, it explained a lot of necessaries information. Thanks a million✨

  • @Chrosam
    @Chrosam Рік тому +1

    Not me watching an FBI agent talk about hostage negotiations to prepare for asking my boss for a promotion

  • @dylanhawley3658
    @dylanhawley3658 11 місяців тому +1

    This guy wrote a book called Never Split the Difference. It's a life-altering read, truly changed my relationships professionally and personally. If you actually take your time reading the book and applying it's principles, you'll never truly "fight" with anyone again. Conflicts simply become problems to surpass together, not arguments that lead nowhere.

    • @mememyself4793
      @mememyself4793 2 місяці тому

      Is it that good, the book ? I want to read it because I want to start a business. what's your take as someone who read the book, do you think it is worth the time, will it help entrepreneurs ? or just some NLP or empty talk like almost 80% of self help books.
      thanks

    • @dylanhawley3658
      @dylanhawley3658 2 місяці тому

      @@mememyself4793 I've found that with self-help books, you get what you put into it. It's not going to change your life immediately after reading it. It's not going to help you unless you take the time to apply what it has to say.
      Will this book help you in starting a business? Sure, especially if your business necessitates putting yourself into uncomfortable social positions. However, it focuses mainly on negotiation, which is just a soft skill. It doesn't go into tactics and strategies for growing your business.

  • @natrajanramkrishna6346
    @natrajanramkrishna6346 2 місяці тому

    One of the greatest videos I have seen

  • @War.Auction
    @War.Auction 5 місяців тому

    It’s a point who is with you, when you learn. So they don’t 0:30 make decisions for you. 0:41

  • @ObsidianGrp
    @ObsidianGrp 11 місяців тому

    Your book, "Never Split The Difference.." is a must read! Thought-provoking indeed!

    • @mememyself4793
      @mememyself4793 2 місяці тому

      Is it that good, the book ? I want to read it because I want to start a business. what's your take as someone who read the book, do you think it is worth the time, will it help entrepreneurs ? or just some NLP or empty talk like almost 80% of self help books.
      thanks

    • @mememyself4793
      @mememyself4793 2 місяці тому

      Is it that good, the book ? I want to read it because I want to start a business. what's your take as someone who read the book, do you think it is worth the time, will it help entrepreneurs ? or just some NLP or empty talk like almost 80% of self help books.
      thanks

  • @jobond3317
    @jobond3317 Рік тому +1

    I work with elderly dementia people and negotiating with them is a huge challenge. Logic reasoning generally does not work. Then add in a language barrier it's tough but can be rewarding if you get a smile a laugh some positive reaction.

  • @NiktheGreek7
    @NiktheGreek7 9 місяців тому +1

    “If you’re nice to someone it’s amazing what they’ll do for you” There's a saying/proverb about this, "You can catch more bees with honey than with vinegar."

  • @_..-.._..-.._
    @_..-.._..-.._ Рік тому +1

    *I prefer learning from **_Rich_** Voss!*
    He’sh da besht!

  • @suryaanshslathia1145
    @suryaanshslathia1145 10 місяців тому +1

    His book never split the difference is one of the best book

    • @mememyself4793
      @mememyself4793 2 місяці тому

      Is it that good, the book ? I want to read it because I want to start a business. what's your take as someone who read the book, do you think it is worth the time, will it help entrepreneurs ? or just some NLP or empty talk like almost 80% of self help books.
      thanks.

  • @thomasjames9678
    @thomasjames9678 8 місяців тому

    Honestly, I think the biggest skill people forget to learn is, to know how to listen. This works with anything, job, relationships, meeting new people, negotiating etc. ANY interacting with people. People nowadays don't know how to listen and they aren't in the "now" which is causing them to be unfocused. People want to be listened to, they want to be heard, you don't even have to say much other than to acknowledge you are listening by providing few points here and there to relate to the subject for them to open up to you, and you'd be surprised how easy it is.
    Learn how to listen.

  • @mgbonuzuroland394
    @mgbonuzuroland394 Рік тому +1

    I really enjoyed watching this video.
    Thanks for sharing

  • @dd11111
    @dd11111 11 місяців тому +1

    The term "tactical empathy" is frankly terrifying. But then again, this IS a guide to emotional manipulation.

  • @ericm7564
    @ericm7564 10 місяців тому

    Have just finished reading “Never Split the difference” by Chris Voss. And m never the same person again.

    • @mememyself4793
      @mememyself4793 2 місяці тому

      Is it that good, the book ? I want to read it because I want to start a business. what's your take as someone who read the book, do you think it is worth the time, will it help entrepreneurs ? or just some NLP or empty talk like almost 80% of self help books.
      thanks.

  • @Mperor_Niho
    @Mperor_Niho 6 місяців тому

    The king of negotiation

  • @ARMANDOHERNANDEZ-bp2np
    @ARMANDOHERNANDEZ-bp2np Рік тому +1

    Awesome information. Thank you for sharing

  • @catatonicbug7522
    @catatonicbug7522 Рік тому

    I need a series of lectures from this guy ..

  • @Apebrains
    @Apebrains Рік тому

    Love the Kahneman shoutout there. Dude is a legend.

  • @chris-uc7nc
    @chris-uc7nc 11 місяців тому +1

    The story he shared at the end is so true, I work at a hotel and we get shit for things completely out of my control all the time so my guard is always up when I have to deal with someone but if I can help someone truly depends on how they behave, if youre a dick throughout the interaction I will just pretend there is nothing I can do for you but if its a nice or at the very least polite decent person I’ll go the extra mile to see what I can help you with.

  • @EducationalChannel28349
    @EducationalChannel28349 8 місяців тому +1

    You can get someone to do something using two ways.
    1) You make them want to do it.
    2) You force them to do it.
    From Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and Influence People"

  • @DanhNguyen-ou3ew
    @DanhNguyen-ou3ew Рік тому +1

    Loss aversion theory is actually very accurate. If you do a study on kids that are let’s say 7-12 years old. And you give each of them 5 bucks then you say if you are willing to play a game and roll this dice. If it’s above 2 then you win 5 more bucks, but you lose all your money if it’s not (dice is 1-6). I’m certain the kids would choose to not play the game even though their chances of winning was higher.

  • @lea88pu
    @lea88pu Рік тому +16

    Where does persuasion stop and manipulation start? The two are pretty similar..Maybe the answer is in who is using the skill and how it's being used 🤔

    • @ellengrace4609
      @ellengrace4609 Рік тому +9

      Yes, it’s in intent.

    • @SuperSandwich713
      @SuperSandwich713 Рік тому +2

      Everything is manipulation technically; it’s tricky to draw lines about such

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Рік тому +4

      Communication is about language. If two people don't share the same language, there's no communication. By signaling that you understand, by behaving and speaking in a way they understand, that will put them at ease. Sometimes it's not what you say, but how you say it that gets your message across. That is not manipulation.

    • @RichLuciano1
      @RichLuciano1 Рік тому

      @@BigHenFor he's always says stuff like: there is always a fool and there a sucker.

  • @schoolneverteach
    @schoolneverteach 3 місяці тому

    All 3 points r valuable and valid.
    If I may add 1 more, it's the simple idea that "tiering the wins and losses".

  • @brianwoods9266
    @brianwoods9266 7 місяців тому

    Good stuff. You made me think deeper about my activity today and how I could improve.

  • @Sjalabais
    @Sjalabais Рік тому +28

    Funny thing about this video is there is no secret FBI voodoo or a skill you haven't heard about.
    Good parents and teachers have told you forever to listen, have empathy, be kind, clear and concise.

    • @edwin77kviews3daysago3
      @edwin77kviews3daysago3 Рік тому +8

      It went over their head because social skill wasn't the thing around children anyways. It's adult stuff

  • @Meridiu5
    @Meridiu5 11 місяців тому

    he's practived a lot. even the tone of his voice is soothing.

  • @bigthink
    @bigthink  Рік тому +5

    Does this match your experience?

  • @BreakingOpinion
    @BreakingOpinion 7 місяців тому

    Reading negotiations, applying but never working until learning in every case we have to eat anger and brings value to customer with low expectations

  • @Robert-vx7jg
    @Robert-vx7jg 4 дні тому

    Be nice and friendly to all.

  • @ryanweaver962
    @ryanweaver962 Рік тому

    There are many different types of negotiations… I can remember folks in business trying to set the “stage or universe” of terms by starting way high. It’s insulting at times, but I also remember when it was obvious they didn’t want an agreement, but rather wanted the fight or the “marketing” which came from that fight. When it gets into life or death or even governance issues on large scales… the layers and connections get to be a lot. The understandability of more platitude centric advertising isn’t ok… more informed stake holders help some.
    Also, negotiating with zealot or dysfunction… those determinations matter. So many things. Hard very hard matters… I have a lot of respect for people who work in these very dire circumstances.

  • @trishasantana1524
    @trishasantana1524 10 днів тому

    I like this guy. Saw his master class.

  • @lamtran-eq5ts
    @lamtran-eq5ts 8 місяців тому +2

    First thing i learn from this guy, is speak clearly, completely, and unilatery

  • @Official.K.K
    @Official.K.K Рік тому +5

    Awesome content

  • @niklasj.6138
    @niklasj.6138 Рік тому +1

    I red his book about negotiating and its really good.

    • @thesanasi
      @thesanasi Рік тому

      His newsletters are also very helpful.

  • @KAiROS_717
    @KAiROS_717 Рік тому +1

    This best to do it. What a man

  • @MichaelChengSanJose
    @MichaelChengSanJose Рік тому +8

    Psychopaths like to combine two of tactics into a mind trick. People are loss averse and like it when others are nice. So, when you start out nice and convince the other side you’re making an effort, it makes the other party hesitant to lose the “good” feeling even if that means giving up something else.

  • @tungochuy
    @tungochuy Рік тому

    Wish that he had a course teaching us how to negotiate

  • @Kiw4765
    @Kiw4765 Рік тому +1

    Emotion that’s it!!! People are emotional creatures who want to be heard

  • @jam120509
    @jam120509 Рік тому +4

    i love this episode. very informative and well presented.

  • @aseemas3491
    @aseemas3491 8 місяців тому

    A much needed video...

  • @abhishalsharma1628
    @abhishalsharma1628 Рік тому +1

    I needed this video

  • @zforcenow
    @zforcenow 8 місяців тому

    That is the key, go in know what you want to leave with, and the things you can control. The rest in Jazz.

  • @jasongutierrez25
    @jasongutierrez25 Рік тому +1

    This should be mandatory monthly training for every member of Congress.

  • @MrFrak0207
    @MrFrak0207 Рік тому +1

    Insanely interesting topic

  • @radiobabylon
    @radiobabylon 8 місяців тому

    much of this dovetails with my own personal experience. human beings are at their core storytellers, going all the way back to the caves. telling stories is how we teach, how we communicate, and most critically how we present ourselves both to the world and to our OWN selves. in a very real way, we ARE the stories we tell, to others, and to ourselves, and we understand the world through those stories. so understanding a person's internal story, their narrative, is the key to achieving a positive negotiation with them... because once you can understand their story and how they tell it to themselves, you can sort of 'write yourself' into that story in a way that best fits their narrative, and in a way that can lead you to achieving the result you are seeking.

  • @zingw
    @zingw Рік тому

    I read his book . It's a great read and I highly recommend it