8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Rohini Delhi NCR
South carolina annual women lawyers meeting
1. South Carolina Women Lawyers Negotiation Training October 22, 2010 Victoria Pynchon, J.D., LL.M ADR Services, Inc. , Century City, California and She Negotiates Consulting and Training on the Web
2. wake up! The Northridge earthquake occurred on January 17, 1994 at 4:31 AM Pacific Standard Time in Reseda, a neighborhood in the city of Los Angeles, California, lasting for about 45 seconds. The earthquake had a "strong" moment magnitude of 6.7, but the ground acceleration was one of the highest ever instrumentally recorded in an urban area in North America.
10. Could we talk about this later? I appreciate it but it was not what I was expecting We must not be on the same page I’m entitled to the full $10K bonus this year
34. ANCHORING When we set our value in the market we set our own future value; we set our women colleague’s value and we set the value for our children and children’s children Image credit istockphoto.com 2010
57. Negotiate from Strength You are as strong as you believe yourself to be L is for Lawyer copyright 2010 Reason Press
58.
59. how can we reach a mutually beneficial and durable agreement? By ascertaining their interests, preferences, priorities, needs, desires, constraints, strengths, and weaknesses, as well as our own
60. Z is for Zen Master copyright 2010 Reason Press Collaborative Problem Solving
79. K is for Kin copyright 2010 Reason Press You can have it all Just not at the same time
Hinweis der Redaktion
We negotiate for what we need in the face of the needs of others. We DISTRIBUTE the world’s resources in a way we believe to be fair. As lawyers, we call this JUSTICE.
We negotiate in an attempt to establish our values as those that govern the world we live in.
To accomplish that, we negotiate for power whether it’s the power to guide the So. Carolina Women Lawyers’ Association; to influence the curriculum our local school system adopts to teach our children; or, to control the behavior of others in the workplace, on the playground, in our neighborhoods and throughout the world.
We negotiate to preserve our liberty to be ourselves so long as it does not impinge upon the liberty of another
We negotiate to create and define the communities in which we live
We negotiate to have unfettered freedom in certain areas of our lives
We negotiate to achieve our full potential and for the esteem of the community
We negotiate for the opportunity to express ourselves creatively
And we negotiate for money
Every time we teach our negotiation course, we ask our women questions about their attitudes toward, experiences of, and preferences for the outcome of negotiation. On a 1 to 10 scale, the most consistently similar answer we get both before and after the month-long course is that women value relationships over money and that, at a minimum, they want their bargaining partner to get as good a deal as possible while at the same time the negotiator gets as good a deal as she can for herself.
When asked what we believe we deserve to be paid for our work, we undervalue ourselves by between 3 and 30% The wage gap is one-third
When we are asked to work until we believe we’re entitled to the $X we’re told we’ll be paid, we work 22 percent longer and 10% faster than men
Differences between contending and problem solving in the evolution of human history
Three levels of agreement
When preparing to negotiate a settlement, we generally think in terms of distributing the risk of loss among the parties.