Negotiating with Kids

My sister’s favorite class at business school was a negotiation course taught by a guy named Stuart Diamond. She said one of the lessons she gleaned from his class was never to give up on a negotiation. There’s always a creative way to solve a thorny problem.

When my sister learned Diamond had written up his popular class into a book, she sent me a copy. Thanks Heather! The book is called Getting More: How to Negotiate to Achieve Your Goals in the Real World.  The 12 Invisible Strategies That Change Everything You Thought You Knew About Negotiation.

This book has a chapter devoted to kids and parents, which fits his general model for negotiation into the seemingly constant dealmaking we parents engage in with our progeny. But I recommend perusing the entire book because there are gems throughout that might otherwise be missed.

As the parent of an adolescent, here’s the nugget I found most valuable: include intangibles and items of unequal value into your negotiations. Diamond even recommends that you are honest and transparent with your child about doing this.

He writes, “All parties value things differently and often unequally. Once you find out what they are, you can trade them. In the process you will get what you consider valuable things for yourself. In exchange, you can give up things that have relatively little value to you.”

At about this point in my initial reading, I desperately needed an example. Never fear, Diamond’s book offers an abundance of real-life examples, with actual names of people and places included! We psychotherapists think this is particularly cool because we always have to change names and identifying information when writing up our work.

“Debbie Simoncini-Rosenfeld, vice president of an insurance company, was trying to deal with her eight year-old daughter, Jessica, ‘screaming and yelling’ to stay up later than her 8:30 bedtime. Her daughter wanted to read later at night. So Debbie traded her daughter a 9:30 bedtime in exchange for no bare-belly shirts at school and no riding her bike in the street. Debbie valued her daughter’s decorum and safety more than a later bedtime; her daughter valued a later bedtime more than decorum and safety.” Both parties were quite satisfied with this deal in the end.

Reading this passage was a breath of fresh air for me! I haven’t battled over this particular issue at my house, but it is so similar to many of our ongoing “negotiations.” The Debbie and Jessica scenario reminded me to think imaginatively about solutions, and that both people can win in a negotiation. In fact the goal is for both parties to come away feeling they got something.

Diamond encourages parents to teach their older children about these negotiation strategies because, when two people think innovatively about intangibles that might be traded, a solution is generated more quickly.

He also reminds readers to stand in the shoes of the other person at the beginning of each negotiation. Try to suss out the “picture in the other person’s head” in order to better understand what they truly want (which may not be exactly what they are requesting).

This suggestion is, of course, completely obvious when read here in black and white. But do you do it regularly?

I like to think I do, but truthfully I’ve got maybe a 50% rate of other person’s shoe wearing.  Maybe that’s why they call it standing in someone else’s shoes. The image captures the full sense of this act, which for adults at least, isn’t something wholly appealing. “I’ll wear my own shoes thanks.” Kids, on the other hand, literally do this all the time from about ages 1 to 5.

Diamond also recommends that we parents regularly play “role reversal” with our kids. When parents and children play out a problem scenario with reversed roles, it allows each to better understand the other’s position. Plus kids love playing the parent!

I wish I had a tidy little scenario of how we’ve used these negotiation techniques at my house, but at the moment I don’t. I only finished the book yesterday.

The closest I can come is our family chore-assigning meetings. At these times, I remind the kids that we each have a chore which for whatever (usually somewhat irrational) reason, we can’t stand. Then I tell them that they don’t have to pick that one as their job, because chances are someone else isn’t as annoyed by it. This technique has been a useful way to add some choice into chore selection, and seems to help the kids feel less put-upon. Otherwise, in our family, doing chores is a “non-negotiable item.”

Here’s one final highlight. Diamond discusses the importance of brainstorming ideas during negotiating, saying that “even an ill-formed idea can spark a great idea in someone else.” He writes that a British study in 2006 titled “Why Bad Ideas Are a Good Idea” found empirical evidence that bad ideas prompt creative processes which then produce good ideas. From here the authors went on to suggest, “Bad is the new good.”

I love that quote. I think I will use it in my family next time I come out with a really bad idea, one I should have kept inside my head to stew a bit longer. But it’s all okay because, bad is the new good. Such a freeing concept!

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3 Responses to Negotiating with Kids

  1. Sherry says:

    Although I can appreciate the idea of these negotiations, something makes me uneasy…it’s the part about trading something not valuable to oneself for something of value to another person. This could be a manipulative and disrespectful way to approach children/people in general. the approach doesn’t have to be manipulative, but there certainly is potential for that.

    • I think I see your point. So, the goal is for both people to walk away from the negotiation feeling like they got something, but perhaps the child could be subject to being manipulated into thinking they got something good when in the end they didn’t. This suggests using this type of dealmaking with older kids who can understand the process better and are clearer about their needs, I suppose.

      When I read the book, I didn’t have this reaction to the way these strategies were presented, but I’ll have to think more about this.

  2. Ethan says:

    It’s totally about trading things of less value to you. Always. The money in your pocket is less valuable on a hot day than an ice cream cone in your hand. That’s why you trade it.

    And business is all about ADDing value: I buy a pack of gum for $1 and sell single sticks at the school dance for a quarter each: my forethought and the convenience I provide is the value I add to the gum, and other kids see that as better than a quarter in their pocket.

    I love the idea of trading intangibles. And adults so often value different things than kids.

    And lest we forget, time is the least tangible thing of all, and we regularly trade that for money, depending on which one is more valuable (and more abundant) at any one time.

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