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Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

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Peter Spence SPANS www.spans.com.au 05/16/22 05/16/22 1 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013 Building Procurement Capability and Success through Effective, Systemic Approaches to Negotiation
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Page 1: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Peter SpenceSPANS www.spans.com.au

04/08/2304/08/23 11

Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Building Procurement Capability and Success through Effective,

Systemic Approaches to Negotiation

Page 2: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Negotiation is an essential skill for all Procurement Professionals who expect to lead negotiations with suppliers required by the organisation

Investment in professional development appears low despite the high risks and costs to an organisation of having untrained professionals undertake significant and complex negotiations

If you expect or are expected to lead negotiations and negotiation teams, particularly across boundaries and functions, knowledge and experience in more contemporary negotiation theories and practice will put you at a distinct advantage

OTJ learning and following the lead of others may not cut it – you may only become proficient at doing the wrong thing

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Page 3: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

So how do or would you know if your Negotiation capability is fit for purpose?

Firstly, it may help to challenge the perception of what negotiation is or should be – answers to the following questions may help.

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How do you measure negotiating success as an individual and organisation?

Does your procurement or supply group follow a standard negotiation theory or approach? What is it?

Page 4: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

If not, how do you validate, support and evaluate the level of competency in the approach you are taking?

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Has your organisation invested in developing negotiation as a core competency within your procurement and/or supply group?

Do you have incentive systems and support structures that reward group as well as individual negotiation performance?

Page 5: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 55

How strong is your internal and external procurement and supply relationship networks?

The competency to Negotiate will determine the successful performance of the procurement and supply functions

Page 6: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Price and short term cost reductions/savings appear to be the current main measure of success for mining procurement and supply functions – reflecting downturn demand in the industry and a glut of supply.

Money is the only bottom line There may be other real issues that you need

to address to ensure high quality, innovation, reliable, safe and cost effective supply, strong, stable and secure supply relationships

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 66

What happens when demand picks up and supply is limited?

Or is it?

How well does your negotiation approach serve real issues beyond price?

Page 7: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

You may be tasked with getting the best deal for the organisation while your performance is only measured on short term cost reductions

You may be provided with little authority or mandate to negotiate beyond price yet will need to satisfy various demands from multiple users in the organisation that you are accountable to.

Sound familiar? You can change the situation. Our focus and measures of success define our

negotiation styles and approaches Successful negotiations deliver agreements that

satisfy the interests of each party involved; preserve relationships, are efficient and durable

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Page 8: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

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Interest Based SystemsSound and Strong

Power/Rights based systems Distressed, fragile/weak

Page 9: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Despite the high costs, its seems we are locked into a traditional negotiation approach that is pre-occupied with exerting rights and power more than satisfying interests

Positional or Distributional Bargaining still appears to be the prevalent Negotiation approach within the mining procurement and supply field where competition and adversarial bargaining based upon positional claims (rights and power based) is preferred to collaboration (interest based)

‘Soft skills’ associated with collaboration often seen as a sign of weakness by hard bargainers in the mining industry

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Page 10: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Positional or Distributional bargaining is aligned to an adversarial or competitive ‘sum/lose’ negotiation approach – the more you win the more the other side must lose

Aligned to a scarcity mentality - an assumption that resources are in short supply and fixed drives this hard, competitive bargaining style

More suited to market haggling over single, simple issues

Not equipped to handle the complexity of mining procurement and supply - yet it persists

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why?

Page 11: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Culturally understood Requires little preparation and is easy to use Outcomes are predictable Used to divide scarce resources when

long term or future relationships are not important or unlikely

Suited to simple, single dimension and party issues It is a process we are familiar with as a traditional

form of negotiation.

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Page 12: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Not suited to complex or multiparty negotiations Tendency to focus upon positions rather than

underlying interests of each party Rights and power based adversarial approach that

promotes conflict and undermines long term relationships

Resulting agreements may not be durable Leaves significant money or value behind at the

negotiators table (claiming but not create value) Tendency to negotiate around a single issue (price)

only may compromise other important interests – i.e. quality, safety and relationships

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Page 13: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Some procurement professionals find it difficult to breakfrom the status quo and continue to pick and squeeze the life out of low lying fruit while leaving considerable value behind to waste on the tree.

It is not difficult to identify hard bargaining styles:

◦ Traditionally competitive and opting for rights/power solutions before interests

◦ Presents arguments emotionally and not on merits◦ Seek multiple concessions before reducing demands ◦ Use intimidation to make unreasonable demands◦ Use what you say against you◦ Reluctant to disclose/share information on real

interests

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 1313

Page 14: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

◦ Competitive, hard bargaining tactics are not the answer

◦ Hard bargaining strategies undermine trust and relationships needed for joint problem solving and value creation

◦ A narrow focus on value (success measures) and competition over fixed or limited resources results in missed opportunities for mutual gains and expanding the value proposition

◦ Hard bargaining processes limit communication, disclosure and sharing of important information that is essential for innovation, value maximisation, early risk identification and management

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 1414

Page 15: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

A process dominated by auctions and competitive tender bids that determine the value of goods and services

Little room allotted to negotiations that create the value of goods or services supplied

Competitive tender processes that lock out opportunities and benefits derived from negotiations

Use of the higher cost rights and power solutions (default to contract compliance and performance remedies) that are indicative of stress in the supply relationship management system

Increased conflict over rights and power positions leading to high costs in disruptions, delays, withdrawal of supply and litigation

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Page 16: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Auction bidding (competitive tenders) more suitable for simple procurement projects - more complex projects require a higher level of negotiation involvement

One way transactional processes such as competitive tenders or auctions do not support the two sided, two way processes of negotiation

Pure auction or tender bidding processes can stifle communication between buyer and seller resulting in poor trust, mutual understanding, reliability and commitment

Buyers risk missing out on accessing the sellers/suppliers expertise on improvements to the supply chain function, process and/or shared complementary resources that may deliver further savings or cost benefits

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 1616

Page 17: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Mining Procurement and supply functions seem to struggle to extend their focus beyond cost containment and onto other value creation opportunities

The majority of Negotiation efforts may be attributed to price, yet other areas of value creation are ignored – surety over supply, quality, timing, safety, innovation etc.

Serious money and value may be left at the table To create value beyond cost savings, procurement and

supply leaders need to change their approach toward more contemporary theories and practice of negotiating supply agreements

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 1717

Page 18: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Balancing traditional power and rights approaches with more cooperative negotiation strategies will enhance supply relationships to deliver more strategic value to the organisation.

Shifting our thinking from purely transactional, distributional negotiations to more contemporary mutual gains and collaborative negotiation approaches

Developing Soft skill development in areas such as negotiation and collaboration competencies to deliver stronger value propositions for procurement and supply functions

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 1818

Page 19: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Ensure the procurement and contracting function is flexible enough to enable pricing and conditions to be negotiated if required to manage emerging supply risks – also allows you to search for and negotiate post settlement settlements

There may be strength in leaving contracts incomplete in terms, so that they may be reviewed and renegotiated during the contract lifecycle for mutual benefit

Consider the option of introducing an invitation to negotiate process as a pilot – inviting supplier participation in outlining the procurement scope and framework for negotiations

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 1919

Page 20: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

An invitation to negotiate process provides an opportunity to access information that may improve supply chain processes

Consider conducting negotiations with buyers or suppliers around areas for cooperation beyond traditional contract terms and conditions – cooperation may lead to each party revaluing the criteria and opportunities for negotiation success

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 2020

Page 21: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Part of changing the game is shifting the mindset from thinkingof suppliers/buyers as adversaries to approaching them aspartners in the supply chain. Supply or procurement

relationshipsthat are well developed and strong are more likely to:

Increase access to expert and leading edge knowledge to improve innovation, efficiency and cost benefits

Improve Innovation - sharing and co-creating knowledge Improve trust, commitment and reliability Strengthen performance management through collaborative

development, alignment and commitment to KPIs Produce reliable quality suppliers

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Page 22: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Deliver soft skills that complement and leverage technical skills

Prevent and resolve conflicts more efficiently and cost effectively

Increase the company's Relationship Capital – brand, reputation, scalability of networks etc.

Early identification and coordinated response to potential supply chain failures or threats – risk management

Increase efficiency and safety for not only the supply chain but wider business operations

Promote joint problem solving and more innovative value add solutions

Strengthen the durability of agreements and performance

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Page 23: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Now that we understand the high cost of positional or distributional bargaining what do you intend to do: Surrender, play their game, quite the game or change the game.

Changing the game is the most effective response.

Adopt a more collaborative, mutual gains approach to negotiation

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How do we change the game to drive joint supplier/customer innovation and create value while still achieving substantial cost savings?

Page 24: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Mutual Gains Negotiation is based upon the Principled Negotiation Theories of Fisher, Ury and Patton.

1. Separate people from the problem2. Focus upon interests, not positions3. Invent Options for Mutual Gain4. Use Objective Criteria to set legitimate principles for decision making5. Improve your BATNA

2424Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 25: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Emotions become tied to positions Positions often mask our underlying interests

– fighting over positions causes us to lose sight of what we really want (core strategic intent)

Don’t waste time and money trying to get even or over the other party – instead, focus on getting what you really want

By analysing, identifying and focusing to resolve underlying interests, any resulting agreement will be based more upon merit

Positional bargaining undermines relationships

2525Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 26: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Avoid searching for a single answer and bargaining over a fixed pie - enlarge the pie and increase value

Work with supply partners to generate options without judging them – brainstorm ideas and possible solutions without deciding or committing = innovation and value creation

Search collaboratively for mutual gains – this results in Win/Win outcomes, increases value to the agreed outcome – avoids the win/lose outcomes associated with unilateral gains

2626Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 27: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Search for shared interests Search for different but complementary interests that

build value – concept of integrated diversity Don’t avoid or compete over differences – ask

questions and seek out differences that you can trade across to ‘package agreements’ that meets the interests of and increases value for all parties involved

Identify and offer something that may be of little value to you but of considerable value to the other party – seek the same from your supply partner (i.e. spare warehousing capacity; transport; billing preferences, technology; branding as preferred supplier etc).

2727Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 28: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Without rational, objective standards on which to base your negotiation, the process degenerates into bargaining over positions and not upon the underlying principles or interest of either party

Insist that the outcome reflects some reasonable or fair standard that is independent of the will of either party – i.e. cost modeling based on industry standards to determine fair supply margins; mining industry logistic, safety or quality standards.

Outcomes based upon fair principles tend to be more durable, enforceable and preserve relationships

2828Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 29: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

A BATNA provides you with a guide to what is minimally acceptable as an agreed outcome

Provides a ‘walk away’ surety that you can do better elsewhere without having to accept a poor outcome or concede to pressure from a more powerful negotiator.

The BATNA should set your (value) zone of possible agreement (ZOPA)

A BATNA should improve upon your acceptable ‘bottom line’ to strengthen your negotiation position and improve your negotiation power

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Page 30: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

1. Prepare for Negotiation – Most of the success of negotiation is attributed to preparation

2. Create Value3. Distribute Value4. Follow through – use nearly self enforcing

agreements, monitoring arrangements; agree on mechanisms to deal with surprises; continue to build relationships

(Adapted from source: Lawrence Susskind: Consensus Building Institute)

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Page 31: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

In the end the value that has been created must be distributed

Can lead to an impasse to reaching an agreement Mutual Gains or ‘win/win’ negotiations do not

necessarily translate to equal outcomes, rather the objective is for all parties to gain (win) more

Create value first and then approach value distribution using the mutual gains approach to preserve long term relationships and trust in shaping the final agreement

Use objective criteria that each side supports to divide value

The mutual gains approach balances the tension between creating and claiming value

Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 32: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Avoid intervention by or changes to ‘new’ third parties at the 3rd stage of claiming value – introducing complex process issues not previously discussed or agreed risks undermining the strategic intent of the agreement (i.e. Legal Department developing and formalising contract terms and conditions after scoping and pricing has been negotiated)

This is where agreements can become unstuck, incurring the significant delays and high costs of conflict

Consider a one text arrangement to record consensus over terms and conditions (including risk management ‘contingency bets;) as negotiated from start to finish

Involve all relevant parties in preparing for and conducting negotiation from the outset

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 3232

Page 33: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Individual Barriers to Mutual Gains Negotiation – why

the legacy and cost of distributional bargainingprevails:

Uncertainty of the problem Own fears or assumptions (expectancy theory) that

you are going to be ‘taken’ causing defensiveness, hard bargaining and attracting similar competitive approach from other party (self fulfilling prophecy)

Their hard bargaining style Being under prepared for Negotiation or preparing

in the wrong ways Lack of confidence in your ability to negotiate

3333Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 34: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Disproportionate amount of preparation time on planning for what we want to get out of negotiation

Not enough time spent on what we may end up with if there is no agreement (need to spend more time on analysing and developing your BATNA)

3434Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 35: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Organisational Barriers to Mutual Gains Negotiation:

Negotiators often do not prepare as organisations do not allow them to (insufficient resources, time etc)

The organisation is not familiar with analysing its own BATNA

Lack of internal communication and understanding within the organisation on what the negotiators objectives are

The organisation only rewards hard bargainers

Lack of internal cooperation in advance of the negotiation task

The organisation does not provide negotiators with a clear mandate to negotiate

3535Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 36: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Adopt a collaborative, mutual gains approach and build your competencies and confidence in this approach

Prepare, prepare, prepare – over 80% of successful negotiations are attributed to preparation

Invest in developing Negotiation as an organisational rather than individual capability alone

Conduct a negotiation audit to compare current capability, challenges and opportunities]

Develop Negotiation and Collaboration as core organisational competencies – the following steps drawn from the work of Hallam Movius and Lawrence Susskind in their book ‘Built to Win: Creating a World Class Negotiating Organisation’ provide a useful guide

Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 37: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

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Page 38: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Before negotiating with external parties you may

need to get your own house in order first by:

Negotiating with internal business partners on how you will negotiate – engage internal partners to work as a team toward an agreed strategic intent to create value for the organisation –

Negotiating Negotiation back tables – negotiating with internal people in the organisation to who we may be accountable away from the negotiation table (those not directly involved in negotiations but influential

3838Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 39: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Clarifying roles, responsibilities, authority, mandate (often these may be vague, processes are unclear and decision making rules not agreed to)

If you are directed to seek unreasonable concessions or adopt hard bargaining there is a need for you to renegotiate your negotiation mandate and criteria for success

Engaging key internal partners in the Negotiation process from preparation to completion to ensure cooperation and alignment of decision making

3939Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2013

Page 40: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

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The following example of a ‘mapping negotiations’ kindly provided by Ray Fells, Professor at the Western Australia University illustrates the complexity of negotiations within the company

Page 41: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Consider a simple network analysis exercise to visualise and evaluate both internal and external partner relationships – your ‘negotiation affiliation network’

Network Analysis mapping will also enable you to see who is influencing who in the network

Identify partners you will need in the network and of those, who you have got

Identify network structural holes that you may need to bridge (whether across Departments, Organisations or functions) to secure partner engagement

Identify key influencers or brokers that can connect you to needed partners, resources etc., provide an alternative bridge to bypass network blockages that impede negotiations, or act as allies/intermediaries

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Page 42: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

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Internal and external networks link to form the complete procurement and supply negotiation network

Red labels denote internal; Blue labels external

Connection strength between partners (nodes) denoted by width of links (vertices)

Page 43: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Supply networks are a negotiated order – we have to negotiate connections, roles, responsibilities, resources

Identify and engage connections that may provide alternative solutions to manage potential supply chain disruptions and minimise dependencies

Negotiation networks allow you to build winning coalitions

The strength of your supply network relies upon the negotiation strength within it

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Page 44: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

While you are busy negotiating the deal you should be aware that there may be negotiations going on elsewhere within the network that will impact upon the outcome of your negotiations

It is important to map and get all parties involved in the negotiation process from beginning to end

The deal is not done until performance is delivered Securing the agreement and contract is just the

beginning – performance will still require ongoing negotiations and performance management

Link individual performance criteria to the network negotiation process – giving partners a stake in the process ensures their interests align with the strategic intent of your negotiation

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Page 45: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Business partners who only become involved in the implementation of the agreement during the later stages can still derail a contract and incur significant costs

The power of preparation – time spent preparing for negotiations at the front end adds value and saves considerable costs of renegotiating or seeking remedies for breach of performance during implementation

Investing in Negotiation as a core organisation or group (network) competency will assist to identify and engage all parties in the preparation/planning and implementation process

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Page 46: Negotiation in Procurement - IQPC mining procurement and supply forum

Peter Spence is the Principal of Strategic Planning and Negotiation Services – a consultancy that provides negotiation competency training and development,

coaching and advisory services.

Peter welcomes your inquiries to discuss negotiation training or advisory needs and can be contacted on

MOB 0457 941188 email: [email protected]

website www.spans.com.au

04/08/2304/08/23Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 Copyright © Peter Spence, SPANS 2012 4646


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