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Smart Parenting During and After Divorce: How to Negotiate with a Reasonable Co-Parent (page 3)

By Peter J. Favaro, Ph.D.
McGraw-Hill Professional
Updated on May 7, 2010

Know What You Can Give

Never come to the negotiation table empty-handed. Be prepared to talk about what you are willing to give. People often make the mistake of going to a negotiation with no expectations and no idea of what is being negotiated. Their attitude is "I'll see what they are asking for and take it from there." This is an extremely poor strategy because it does not account for what would happen if both sides came into the negotiation with that mindset. Usually, this strategy results from laziness or from the belief that maybe the other side will ask for far less than you would have offered.

Don't Expect to Get Everything You Want

Never come into a negotiation expecting to get everything you want. This is a mistake that people make often when they are negotiating custody and visitation. One party decides they are offering "a great deal" or "the best deal" up front and assumes that "the deal will not get any better, so let's just agree and end this thing." Even if what is being offered is a good deal, the person considering it might not perceive it that way, but rather as evidence that one is trying to control or strong-arm the negotiations. There is something to be gained from the process of giveand-take that occurs on the way to a conclusion: you and your co-parent both feel as though you have participated in the bargaining.

Prioritize What You Want

Prioritize what you are bargaining for in terms of things you must have, prefer to have, and wish to have but could live without. It is helpful if you can deduce, decipher, or elicit those things from the other bargaining party as well. If you prioritize what you are bargaining for in this way, you can set goals for where you would like to be at the end of your negotiation. For instance, for some people a successful negotiation ends when they get 75 percent of everything they must have, 50 percent of what they prefer to have, and 30 percent of what they wish to have but could live without.

Prioritizing into these categories can provide a helpful image of what people are striving for and what the negotiation satisfies. They also form a common language for you and your lawyer to gauge your success or satisfaction at the end of a negotiation.

Do Not Ask for "One More Thing" at the Eleventh Hour

If you prioritize what you want ahead of time, you will not come up with "one more thing" just before the deal is closed. Just one more thing can kill all of the progress you have worked so hard for.

Turn the Small Yes into a Big Yes

Putting someone in an agreeable frame of mind sometimes requires negotiating small points with skill. Sometimes it is necessary to show people that saying "yes" will not kill or weaken them. Start with small points and work your way up when negotiations stall early in the process. Follow every yes with a question of what you might be able to offer in return.

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