How, when and why do negotiators use reference points? A qualitative interview study with negotiation practitioners

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors


Purpose

Human decision-making is strongly influenced by the reference points (RPs) people choose. Despite their relevance and ubiquity in negotiations, RPs have received little attention on a conceptual level. To broaden the conceptual knowledge on RPs in negotiations, this paper aims to conduct a qualitative study with experienced negotiation practitioners.
Design/methodology/approach

To identify relevant RPs in negotiations, 58 key informants from various negotiation contexts (i.e. business negotiations, labor–union negotiations and political negotiations) were interviewed. Based on 609 items (i.e. specifications of RPs) from 61 reported negotiation cases, this paper provides a comprehensive typology of RPs in negotiations.
Findings

This paper finds four deviations from and extensions of the literature: first, negotiators apply a (much) greater variety of RPs than is represented in research. Second, this paper identifies four different origins of RPs (i.e. the negotiators themselves, the negotiators’ organizations, the parties’ collaboration and the environment). Third, RPs are more dynamic than previously assumed in empirical research, because negotiators frequently change their RP in negotiations. And fourth, this paper extends the knowledge about the psychological functions of RPs in negotiations: The informants in this study used RPs not only to evaluate their own performance, but also to justify outcomes within their organizations and monitor the implementation of agreements.
Originality/value

The insights of this inductive study suggest a change in the current understanding of RPs in research, as RPs prove to be a multifaceted and dynamic construct that fulfills various psychological functions. With the current research, this paper aims to narrow a critical theoretical gap by broadening the conceptual understanding of RPs, a central element of various theoretical approaches in negotiation research. Thereby, this paper also contributes to further specifying a general theory of negotiation.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftInternational Journal of Conflict Management
Jahrgang36
Ausgabenummer3
Seiten (von - bis)481-513
Anzahl der Seiten33
ISSN1044-4068
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 28.04.2025

Bibliographische Notiz

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Michel Mann, Marco Warsitzka, Roman Trötschel and Joachim Hüffmeier.

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Making the most out of timeseries symptom data
  2. Distributable Modular Software Framework for Manufacturing Systems
  3. Are Acute Effects of Foam-Rolling Attributed to Dynamic Warm Up Effects? A Comparative Study
  4. Modernizing persistence–bioaccumulation–toxicity (PBT) assessment with high throughput animal-free methods
  5. On the computation of the warping function and the torsional properties of thin-walled crosssections of prismatic beams
  6. A Graphic Language for Business Application Systems to Improve Communication Concerning Requirements Specification with the User
  7. On Software, or the Persistence of Visual Knowledge.
  8. CHANGING RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES FOR REDUCING INSOMNIA SEVERITY? RESULTS FROM A SERIAL MEDIATION ANALYSIS ON THE IMPACT OF RECREATIONAL BEHAVIOR AS A MECHANISM OF CHANGE IN DIGITAL INTERVENTIONS FOR INSOMNIA
  9. A geometric approach for the model parameter estimation in a permanent magnet synchronous motor
  10. Time Use Research and Time Use Data
  11. Petri net based EMIS-mappers for flexible manufacturing systems
  12. Contested Promises
  13. Recruitment practices in small and medium size enterprises.
  14. The Use of Anti-Windup Techniques in Didactic Level Systems
  15. Data quality assessment framework for critical raw materials. The case of cobalt
  16. Using Multi-Label Classification for Improved Question Answering
  17. Using a Seminorm for Wavelet Denoising of sEMG Signals for Monitoring during Rehabilitation with Embedded Orthosis System
  18. Managing (in) times of uncertainty
  19. Model-Based Optimization of Spiral Coils for Improving Wireless Power Transfer
  20. Is There a Way Back or Can the Internet Remember its Own History?
  21. Indicators for relational values of nature’s contributions to good quality of life
  22. Cyclooxygenase-2-expression in the outer root sheath of anagen but not telogen hair follicles of the mouse skin
  23. Insights into adoption of farming practices through multiple lenses
  24. Sustainability Science with Ozzy Osbourne, Julia Roberts and Ai Weiwei
  25. Linking trait similarity to interspecific spatial associations in a moist tropical forest
  26. RAWSim-O: A Simulation Framework for Robotic Mobile Fulfillment Systems
  27. Comprehension of climate change and environmental attitudes across the lifespan
  28. Closed-Loop Supply Chain Management - Eine Simulationsstudie
  29. Determination of the antifungal agent posaconazole in human serum by HPLC with parallel column-switching technique
  30. The relationship between acculturation strategies and depressive and anxiety disorders in Turkish migrants in the Netherlands
  31. Design and evaluation of learning processes in an international sustainability oriented study programme. In search of a new educational quality and assessment method
  32. Knowledge acquisition and development in sustainability-oriented small and medium-sized enterprises
  33. Modernisierung und Partizipation
  34. An Analysis of Methane Mitigation as a Response to Climate Change
  35. Timing, fragmentation of work and income inequality
  36. The reception of trust in different legal systems: some lessons for Vietnam; a comparative study
  37. It's Not What You Know, It's How You Use It
  38. Destinationaler Wandel
  39. Dadadatadada: From Dada to Data and Back Again
  40. FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS AND STRATEGIES FOR ATTRACTING YOUNG WOMEN TO ENGINEERING IN TIMES OF DIGITAL AND GLOBAL TRANSFORMATION
  41. Combined experimental–numerical study on residual stresses induced by a single impact as elementary process of mechanical peening
  42. Addendum to L. Lauwers and L. Van Liedekerke, “Ultraproducts and aggregation"
  43. Plant functional trait response to environmental drivers across European temperate forest understorey communities
  44. BBS futur 2.0