The Masterclass: three dynamic and highly interactive days with the leaders in the field will develop your team into complete negotiators. To minimise ‘days off the job’, some clients prefer to run the Masterclass in two long days (8am-8pm).
Comprehensive coverage of the key skills needed to become the complete negotiator
A highly interactive workshop for 8-12 key negotiators from the same company. You will participate in realistic negotiation exercises. Video playback and analysis brings out key learning points and gives you individual feedback.
Our tutors are direct, robust and humorous. There is no ‘torture by PowerPoint’.
The most powerful and practical negotiation skills programme.
We equip your key negotiators with tools and techniques that combine a co-operative approach, to create more value in the deal, with a competitive approach that manages power intelligently to claim as much value as possible for your side of the table.
Our courses are structured around realistic simulations which are videoed for feedback.
Interactive methods and mini-practices give you the confidence to implement the skills in your own job.
A flexible schedule enables focus on the topics that have most impact on your business.
The style of our course tutors is fast, direct and fun.
Flexibility is part of the package. There is no rigid daily timetable. Key concepts and skills are detailed in The Complete Negotiator, the course manual. But the syllabus is covered in a way that reflects participants’ needs and experience and picks up on the learning points that arise out of each simulation or discussion.
We have an extensive suite of negotiation exercises. Examples include:
We select from our ‘library’ the exercises that are most relevant to a client’s needs.
To help them put their learning into action, participants also receive a portable, ring-bound set of laminated reminder cards, The Pocket Negotiator.
Follow-up and reinforcement are available in the form of a one day ‘Booster’ course and/or one-on-one implementation coaching sessions.
Results are measured using our Implementation Checkout questionnaire, which typically demonstrates impressively large financial savings and gains as well as improvements in confidence and professionalism.
Participants leave the Masterclass fully equipped and able to implement their new skills in their day jobs. They achieve career-changing results. Why?
The greatest impact comes when a client company takes responsibility for implementation, rather than relying on the participants or HBNC. Implementation is highest when:
Implementation One-On-One Sessions
This optional package entitles course participants to phone/Zoom/Teams an HBNC tutor.
We recommend that it is used prior to a participant’s first negotiation after the course, to help them put the tools into practice for the first time and start the habit of implementation.
Clients also get the direct benefit of our expert input into that specific negotiation.
Participants might use the session for one or more of the following examples:
Clients can choose either of two pricing models, a bundle or ‘pay per hour’. Download the Briefing pdf below for details.
Booster Day for the group, 6-12 months after the course.
The aims of the Booster are
Most clients prefer to allocate some time to analysing one or more real-world situations that are imminent or recent.
See the Booster Day page, or the HBNC Briefing pdf below, for more detail
We will contact you ASAP
The Monkey is one of the vivid images we use in our training to make a key concept memorable. This image in particular has become a totem for our firm: a toy monkey attends every course, and the BBC made a documentary about us titled The Monkey Man.
A “monkey on your back” is a problem you have – in negotiation terms, that makes you want a deal even on bad terms. E.g. you’re under time pressure / you don’t have any other offers / you think the quality of the other offers is poor.
Monkeys lead most negotiators to underestimate their own relative power and so negotiate too ‘chicken’. And there is a structural reason for this error. – When you look at your own situation you are only too aware of your own monkeys. But the other party may not be aware of these factors.• At the same time, the other guy has problems too – and he isn’t going to tell you about the monkeys on his back as this would only weaken his position. • So you have a distorted view of the power balance. It’s distorted because you have taken account of all your monkeys, but have not allowed for the monkeys he almost certainly has on his back – because you don’t know about those. And the distortion is always in the same direction: it always leads you to underestimate your own power.