Course Outline
Pre-Requisites
- Project Management Fundamentals (PM01) - IT Project Management (PM11) - Applied Project Management (PM08)
Lessons
Whether you are asking for resources, negotiating with a vendor, or dealing with conflicts on the team, being a skilled negotiator makes you a better project manager. In this active, participatory course, you will practice the skills of negotiation and receive one-on-one feedback and coaching tips to improve your performance.You will learn about the types of negotiation and different styles that you can adapt during negotiations. You will learn to determine your individual negotiation style and how to adapt to situations for more successful negotiations. You'll gain an understanding of competitive and collaborative negotiation and learn how to recognize each.
Students pursuing a university-recognized and/or accredited certificate in Canada or continuing education units in the US must attend at least 90% of class time, participate in class exercises and section-knowledge checks, and score at least 70% on an end-of-class, multiple-choice assessment.
What You'll Learn
- How you react to conflict
- Conflict resolution tactics
- Characteristics of key negotiation styles
- How to successfully negotiate
- Role of negotiation in projects
Associate project managers, project managers, IT project managers, project coordinators, project analysts, project leaders, senior project managers, team leaders, product managers, and program managers.
Course Outline
1. Introduction to Negotiation
- What negotiation is
- Negotiation factors
- BATNA
- Negotiation stages
- Competitive negotiations
- Natural tendencies
- Tactics used in negotiations
- Temperament theory and collaboration
- Compromise vs. win-win
- Cultural considerations
- Collaboration
- Two styles of negotiation
- Positions vs. interests
- Conflict resolution
- Power behaviors
- BATNA
- Methodology
- Identify each party's objectives
- Finding common interest
- Strategies to develop trust
- Template for preparing for negotiation
- Situational analysis
- Identify negotiation scenario
- Assess BATNA
- Identify positions and interests
- Develop negotiation strategy
- Two types of conflict
- Value of escalation options
- Conflict resolution tips and techniques
- Pros and cons of negotiating in teams
- Determining roles
- Authority and decision making
- Identifying Natural Competitive Tendencies
- Negotiating in a Competitive Situation vs. a Collaborative Situation
- Complete Thomas-Kilmann Personal Conflict Assessment
- Resolving Conflict in Negotiations
- Using BATNA
- Moving from Positions to Interests
- Leveraging Interests and Common Interests in Negotiation
- Negotiations Among Three or More
Cancellation Policy
We require 16 calendar days notice to reschedule or cancel any registration. Failure to provide the required notification will result in 100% charge of the course. If a student does not attend a scheduled course without prior notification it will result in full forfeiture of the funds and no reschedule will be allowed. Within the required notification period, only student substitutions will be permitted. Reschedules are permitted at anytime with 16 or more calendar days notice. Enrollments must be rescheduled within six months of the cancel date or funds on account will be forfeited.
Training Location
Online Classroom
your office
your city,
your province
your country
I would never take another course that starts at 11AM and goes to 9PM again. The way the course was laid out really took away from the capturing of what was presented as it was 5-6 hours of watching a screen before getting to the actual labs. There has to be a better way to lay out this particular course. In my previous course, the lectures were broken up by labs which worked out fantastic and kept you engaged in the course. There were days when in order to actually complete the labs, would go over the 9PM day end time frame. Was able to get the primary labs done, but if you want to get all the content completed, you cannot complete it in the window of this course, you will need to come back on your own time.