With No Deal as an option, you can honestly say, âI only want to go for Win/Win. I want to win, and I want you to win. I wouldnât want to get my way and have you not feel good about it, because downstream it would eventually surface and create a withdrawal. On the other hand, I donât think you would feel good if you got your way and I gave in. So letâs work for a Win/Win. Letâs really hammer it out. And if we canât find it, then letâs agree that we wonât make a deal at all. It would be better not to deal than to live with a decision that wasnât right for us both. Then maybe another time we might be able to get together.
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You are the customer of the supplier,â I said. âWhy doesnât the same principle apply?â
âWell, we recently renegotiated our lease agreements with the mall operators and owners,â he said. âWe went in with a Win/Win attitude. We were open, reasonable, conciliatory. But they saw that position as being soft and weak, and they took us to the cleaners.â
âWell, why did you go for Lose/Win?â I asked.
âWe didnât. We went for Win/Win.â
âI thought you said they took you to the cleaners.â
âThey did.â
âIn other words, you lost.â
âThatâs right.â
âAnd they won.â
âThatâs right.â
âSo whatâs that called?â
When he realized that what he had called Win/Win was really Lose/Win, he was shocked. And as we examined the long-term impact of that Lose/Win, the suppressed feelings, the trampled values, the resentment that seethed under the surface of the relationship, we agreed that it was really a loss for both parties in the end. If this man had had a real Win/Win attitude, he would have stayed longer in the communication process, listened to the mall owner more, then expressed his point of view with more courage. He would have continued in the Win/Win spirit until a solution was reached they both felt good about. And that solution, that Third Alternative, would have been synergisticâprobably something neither of them had thought of on his own.
Anything less than Win/Win in an interdependent reality is a poor second best that will have impact in the long-term relationship. The cost of that impact needs to be carefully considered. If you canât reach a true Win/Win, youâre very often better off to go for No Deal. Win/Win or No Deal provides tremendous emotional freedom in the family relationship. If family members canât agree on a video that everyone will enjoy, they can simply decide to do something elseâNo Dealârather than having some enjoy the evening at the expense of others.
The Win/Win or No Deal approach is most realistic at the beginning of a business relationship or enterprise.
Many people think in dichotomies, in either/or terms. They think if youâre nice, youâre not tough. But Win/Win is nice ... and tough. Itâs twice as tough as Win/Lose. To go for Win/Win, you not only have to be nice, you have to be courageous. You not only have to be empathic, you have to be confident. You not only have to be considerate and sensitive, you have to be brave. To do that, to achieve that balance between courage and consideration, is the essence of real maturity and is fundamental to Win/Win. If Iâm high on courage and low on consideration, how will I think? Win/Lose. Iâll be strong and ego bound. Iâll have the courage of my convictions, but I wonât be very considerate of yours. To compensate for my lack of internal maturity and emotional strength, I might borrow strength from my position and power, or from my credentials, my seniority, my affiliations. If Iâm high on consideration and low on courage, Iâll think Lose/Win. Iâll be so considerate of your convictions and desires that I wonât have the courage to express and actualize my own.
But what if that kind of relationship isnât there? What if you have to work out an agreement with someone who hasnât even heard of Win/Win and is deeply scripted in Win/Lose or some other philosophy? Dealing with Win/Lose is the real test of Win/Win. Rarely is Win/Win easily achieved in any circumstance. Deep issues and fundamental differences have to be dealt with. But it is much easier when both parties are aware of and committed to it and where there is a high Emotional Bank Account in the relationship. When youâre dealing with a person who is coming from a paradigm of Win/Lose, the relationship is still the key. The place to focus is on your Circle of Influence. You make deposits into the Emotional Bank Account through genuine courtesy, respect, and appreciation for that person and for the other point of view. You stay longer in the communication process. You listen more, you listen in greater depth. You express yourself with greater courage. You arenât reactive. You go deeper inside yourself for strength of character to be proactive. You keep hammering it out until the other person begins to realize that you genuinely want the resolution to be a real win for both of you. That very process is a tremendous deposit in the Emotional Bank Account. And the stronger you areâthe more genuine your character, the higher your level of proactivity, the more committed you really are to Win/Winâthe more powerful your influence will be with that other person. This is the real test of interpersonal leadership. It goes beyond transactional leadership into transformational leadership, transforming the individuals involved as well as the relationship. Because Win/Win is a principle people can validate in their own lives, you will be able to bring most people to a realization that they will win more of what they want by going for what you both want. But there will be a few who are so deeply embedded in the Win/Lose mentality that they just wonât think Win/Win. So remember that No Deal is always an option. Or you may occasionally choose to go for the low form of Win/Winâcompromise. Itâs important to realize that not all decisions need to be Win/Win, even when the Emotional Bank Account is high. Again, the key is the relationship. If you and I worked together, for example, and you were to come to me and say, âStephen, I know you wonât like this decision. I donât have time to explain it to you, let alone get you involved. Thereâs a good possibility youâll think itâs wrong. But will you support it?â If you had a positive Emotional Bank Account with me, of course Iâd support it. Iâd hope you were right and I was wrong. Iâd work to make your decision work. But if the Emotional Bank Account werenât there, and if I were reactive, I wouldnât really support it. I might say I would to your face, but behind your back I wouldnât be very enthusiastic. I wouldnât make the investment necessary to make it succeed. âIt didnât work,â Iâd say. âSo what do you want me to do now?â If I were overreactive, I might even torpedo your decision and do what I could to make sure others did too. Or I might become âmaliciously obedientâ and do exactly and only what you tell me to do, accepting no responsibility for results.