Something You Should Know - Scams You Might Easily Fall For & Mastering The Art of Deal-Making
Episode Date: December 26, 2024You might think that a good way to get closer to someone is to do them a favor. Yes, that might work – but there is another technique that is even more effective and takes less effort. This episode ...starts with an easy way to bond you with someone you want to get to know better. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-initiative/201605/the-power-merely-requesting-favor Scams and identity theft are a constant threat– and the scammers keep getting better and better. So, it is critical to understand what the latest scams are and how to protect yourself. Steve Weisman is an attorney who has been following the scammers and understands them very well. His website www.scamicide.com is highly regarded as one the best sites for information about scams. Steve is the author of a book called 50 Ways to Protect Your Identity in a Digital Age (https://amzn.to/3sonvav). Since it is very likely that you will be the target of a scammer, if you haven’t already been, you need to hear Steve’s advice. You probably have an idea in your head about how a negotiation is supposed to go. What you are about to hear will challenge that idea. Barry Nalebuff, is an entrepreneur and professor at Yale School of Management, and author of the book, Split the Pie: A Radical New Way to Negotiate (https://amzn.to/3pvOoYi). As you listen to our discussion you will get a new perspective on how to approach any future negotiation. Have you heard of the Baker/baker paradox is? It has to do with remembering peoples’ names - which most of us aren’t particularly good at. Listen and you will hear a simple way to help you remember anyone’s name the next time you see them. Source: Joshua Foer author of Moonwalking With Einstein (https://amzn.to/3psUGrC). PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! INDEED:  Get a $75 SPONSORED JOB CREDIT to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING  Support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast.  Terms & conditions apply. AURA: Save on the perfect gift by visiting https://AuraFrames.com to get $35-off Aura’s best-selling Carver Mat frames by using promo code SOMETHING at checkout! SHOPIFY:  Sign up for a $1 per-month trial period at https://Shopify.com/sysk . Go to SHOPIFY.com/sysk to grow your business – no matter what stage you’re in! MINT MOBILE: Cut your wireless bill to $15 a month at https://MintMobile.com/something! $45 upfront payment required (equivalent to $15/mo.).  New customers on first 3 month plan only. Additional taxes, fees, & restrictions apply. HERS: Hers is changing women's healthcare by providing access to GLP-1 weekly injections with the same active ingredient as Ozempic and Wegovy, as well as oral medication kits. Start your free online visit today at https://forhers.com/sysk DELL: It's your last chance to snag Dell Technologies’ lowest prices of the year before the holidays! If you've been waiting for an AI-ready PC, this is their biggest sale of the year! Shop now at https://Dell.com/deals PROGRESSIVE: The Name Your Price tool from Progressive can help you save on car insurance! You just tell Progressive what you want to pay and get options within your budget. Try it today at https://Progressive.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know, if you want to get to know someone better there's a simple technique that works really well. Then protecting yourself
from the constant threat of scams and identity theft. Identity theft is high
tech, low tech, and no tech. It isn't just coming through your computer.
It is going through your trash. This is anything they can do to get the information they will do.
Also, a simple way that will help you remember names a lot better.
And a look at some common negotiating techniques that don't work, like starting with a low ball offer.
The problem with doing that
is that you make yourself untrustworthy.
If I'm selling something that's worth $1,000
and you offer me 200 for it,
are you trying to take advantage of me?
Do not know what this item is worth?
What kind of person are you?
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Dine-in only until 11 a.m. Something you should know
Fascinating Intel the world's top experts and practical advice you can use in your life today
Something you should know with Mike Carruthers
Hey there, welcome to something you should know
Have you ever been taken by a scam artist? I have
been taken by a scam artist? I have. And fortunately it hasn't happened very often and it wasn't very much money, but I don't think I know too many people who haven't fallen victim
to some scam sometime somewhere. Which is why I think you're going to find the conversation
with Steve Wiseman coming up in just a moment really interesting. First up today, you probably
think that one of the best ways to get closer to someone you would like to be
closer to is to do something nice for them. Do them a favor, make some nice
gesture. Well, it turns out that you're better off asking them to do you a
favor. A study in the Journal of Human Relations revealed that when someone gives you their
time or advice or does a small favor for you, a connection is made, and it's a more powerful
connection than if you were to do them a favor instead.
I'm sure you know from your own experience that it feels good to do someone a favor.
So when you ask them to do a favor for you, you're making them feel good.
And then it also opens the door for a return of the favor, in the form of lunch or a cup
of coffee.
And presto, you've got the opportunity to get to know each other a little better and
to get a little closer.
And that is something you should know.
I think it would be hard to find someone who has never been scammed or never had their
identity stolen or their credit card compromised in some way or been taken for a ride by some
scammer out there. Scams are everywhere.
A lot of them are online, but they're not all online.
And most all of them are designed
to separate you from your money.
And I know a lot of people believe they're too smart,
too sophisticated to fall for a scam.
But as you're about to hear,
some very smart, sophisticated people have been victims
right along with the rest of us.
One of the leading authorities on scams and identity theft is attorney Steve Wiseman.
He also wrote a book a few years ago called 50 Ways to Protect Your Identity in a Digital
Age.
Hey Steve, welcome to something you should know.
It's great to be with you.
So I'm kind of curious how you got interested
in scams and identity theft and these kinds of crimes
in the first place.
I'm a lawyer and also a college professor
at Bentley University where I teach white collar crime.
Actually before I taught at Bentley University,
I taught at a number of other colleges
with ever setting foot on the campuses.
I used to teach in their prison education programs
in the Massachusetts State prisons.
And it was there, I met a number of scam artists
and con men and criminals, always found it fascinating.
And then unfortunately had a personal experience
about 20 years ago,
where I was a victim of identity theft.
And this was, I think really around the time
that identity theft was taking off as a crime.
It is now the biggest consumer crime.
So I just find it very, very interesting and timely.
I have a sense and I'd like you to comment on this
if you agree or disagree,
that there's this kind of general perception
amongst a lot of people that scams are for idiots,
that I'm too smart to be scammed.
And if you're dumb enough to read
and give money to the Nigerian prince
because he sent you an email. Well,
you know, that's your problem, but I'm way too smart. Well, you know, there's two things about
that. First of all, no one is too smart to be scammed. All you have to do is look at Bernie
Madoff and the many intelligent people that wound up being victims of his scam.
And he actually was kind of of that mind that
if you're too smart, you wouldn't be scammed.
He actually blamed his victims at one point.
He said, if anyone looked into what I said I was doing,
they would know it's impossible.
But when you mentioned about the Nigerian email scam,
brought a smile to my face because lately the Nigerian email scam, brought a smile to my face because lately,
the Nigerian email scam is still with us and they are
absolutely even more ridiculous than ever.
At first, I was thinking,
why would they do that?
The thing is, they want to get the most vulnerable,
the most greedy, and people who will fall for it.
They don't want to spend time with someone who will be asking a lot of questions
But the the short answer to your question is anyone who can anyone can get scammed and the person that thinks they're too smart for it
They're gonna be the next victim. Okay, so because this is such a big problem and can come at you from lots of different directions
Where do we start? What should we be, what should I be on the lookout for?
One of the things is the internet of things.
Anything that you have that is connected to the internet
and that is a vulnerability for you.
So, you know, if you have a smart TV in your home,
if you haven't protected that
and changed the default password,
an identity thief can hack into your Internet of Thing device, and there were more than 1.5
billion attacks last year on these. Get to your computer. From your computer, they get to your
online bank account. There are other times where, again, the identity theft, they trick you into providing information.
I was speaking with some victims and a TV crew about a victim of a scam.
They went online.
They found what looked like a legitimate site.
It appeared to have all of the good credentials, but they
didn't check it out. The bottom line is they sent their money to a scammer. We really have
to do our homework in these scams. The SEC, which is interesting, actually did a phony
website called for a non-existent cryptocurrency called Howiecoin.
It looked good, had all of the endorsements of celebrities and everything to make it appear good.
If people clicked through and it got to the part where they were going to send their money,
there's a big announcement on your screen telling you that you would have been scammed,
that this is a scam. Different scams lure you in, they all take advantage of fear and greed. I want
to go back to what you said a few minutes ago about scammers getting into
my computer through my smart TV. Can you go into a little more detail about that?
Because I hadn't heard of that before, so I'd like to know how that works. They're going to attack your router.
Remember, your router is the gateway to all of the tech equipment you have in your house.
So they'd have to be parked outside then?
I mean, they'd have to be close by.
Oh no, no, they don't even, they don't.
This can be done at a distance. As a matter of fact, the FBI issued a warning about hacking into routers by Russian cyber
criminal gangs.
And the problem there is a lot of people don't change the default password on their router.
And those router passwords are available online.
Criminals halfway around the world can hack into it.
You see, I would bet that most people, or at least a lot of people,
don't even know that their router has a password or that their smart TV
has a password, let alone would they know how to change it?
I mean, there are other issues there with our smart TVs.
And interestingly enough, the prices of our smart TVs are less than what we would actually pay for it,
if those televisions were not subsidized by companies that are
taking information that we agree,
we don't realize we agree,
to be gathered by our smart TV that is watching,
not only what we're watching on TV,
but the TV can pick up and be connected through your router
to all of the other devices in your home.
And so the privacy that you give up,
unless you know enough, and most of us don't,
and they make it difficult too.
I mean, even children's toys,
they come with a default password.
And if people don't change those passwords,
that's the Trojan horse that can lead the hackers
to your computer, to your bank account.
So a lot of these scams are under the radar.
It isn't a matter of appealing to your stupidity
or your greed or whatever.
You wouldn't even know what happened. Absolutely. I mean, it's all of the above.
The Jamaican lottery is still a major one that appeals to our greed. And there are gangs in
Jamaica that have gathered telephone numbers of generally older Americans
and they call them, they tell them that they've won
a lottery that they never even entered.
And it's tough to win a lottery.
It's really tough to, yeah.
And so they have to pay fees or taxes.
And that thing is huge.
Now that depends on greed, but there are plenty of times,
particularly with cybersecurity, that we're not necessarily
taking the steps and we don't realize where we are vulnerable.
Of course, even if you … I'm one of these guys, even paranoid have enemies.
Being in the business, I'm particularly paranoid. I was particularly angry in 2017 with the major data breach at Equifax, where 147 million
of us, and us, I include me in there, had our personal information stolen. Despite the fact
that I'm taking care to protect my personal information, the companies didn't. With Equifax,
what made it worse is Steve Jobs once said,
if you're not paying for a product, you are the product.
And with Equifax and the other credit reporting agencies,
they make their money from selling our personal information.
And so the idea of protecting our information wasn't as high
on their priority list as it should have been.
We're talking about scams and identity theft
and how to protect yourself.
And I'm talking with attorney Steve Wiseman,
whose website is scamicide.com. Express. Shop online for super prices and super savings. Try it today and get up to $75 in PC
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So Steve, I wanna talk about medical identity theft
because I'm not sure people even understand
that that's a thing and you say it could actually be fatal.
So explain how that works.
Interpol once indicated there were only
about 100 cyber criminal geniuses,
but their business model now is they will create
the malware, the botnets to distribute it, provide tech support, and they will sell and lease what
they've created on the dark web to less sophisticated criminals. So they will be able to get all of our
information. So your credit card, if it comes with other personal information about you,
will go for about $45 online on the dark web. But your medical insurance will go for much more.
And that's because they are able to turn that into medical, they can get medical equipment,
they can get, sell the use of the insurance. And here's the thing that makes no sense whatsoever.
You become a victim of medical identity theft.
Somebody has accessed your medical insurance.
You find out, you report that,
and you attempt to get this false information
removed from your medical records.
Well, that would violate the privacy
of the medical identity thief.
And so all you can do is have a notation on there Well, that would violate the privacy of the medical identity thief.
And so all you can do is have a notation on there that this information is disputed.
But quite frankly, you could have information on your medical report that could contain
a false blood type or a medicine to which you are allergic to
and these things could be potentially fatal.
So medical identity theft is a huge, huge problem.
And unfortunately, the healthcare industry
has been very, very lax in protecting data
including medical insurance records.
Wait, what?
That's preposterous that-
Isn't it?
That an identity thief could put information
in your medical records and they protect his privacy.
Yep, the HIPAA privacy law is protective.
It makes, I mean, when I first found that out,
I kept looking for, I must have had bad information.
But nope, that's it.
That's our government at work.
And even you, I mean, somebody who's pretty sharp
about this, you said you've been the victim
of identity theft.
I've been scammed.
And I mean, I don't know too many people
who have not had some rub up against this, whether they thwarted it
or not, that have been scammed.
Years ago there was a cartoon called Pogo and Pogo had a saying, we have met the enemy
and he is us.
All too often when it comes to being scammed and when it comes to becoming victims of identity
theft we may be our own worst enemies. For instance,
we put too much personal information up on social media.
So the grandparents scam, which is still going on.
And that's where the grandparent gets a call in the middle of the night.
The grandchild is having problems wherever they are.
They've been arrested or there's been a medical emergency.
They gather the scammers, gather that information through social media.
I used to like the Big Bang Theory, the show.
And Sheldon's used to call his his grandmother me ma.
And so they could the bad guys could know from checking out your social media.
You call your grandmother me ma.
And so they get a call me ma. it's me, I'm in trouble.
I need some money.
Get it to me fast.
Yeah. Well, it's understandable somebody in that situation
might panic and send money.
And in fact, I think, wasn't there just some woman,
I think she used to be a police dispatcher who got scammed
or that they attempted to scam her and they showed
up at her door to get the money and the police were there and tackled them in the front yard.
Yes, I saw the videos of that. It was terrific. But, you know, and along with individuals,
you know, they why did the Willie Sutton, a famous bank robber was once asked, why did
he rob banks? And he said, because that's where the money is. So major, major scams are perpetrated against companies and government agencies.
We've seen that with ransomware and other.
But one of the biggest, as far as companies goes, is called the business email compromise.
And what happens is the bad guys get into the computers of a company. They find out when a particular CEO or CFO
is going to be away or on vacation or something.
And then they send an email that appears to come from them
asking to wire money to a particular company
that they're doing business with.
Of course, there is no company
that they're doing business with.
It's going to the scammers.
But they now have this deep fake technology, which can be used for videos as well as audio.
There was a German company in which they had a subsidiary in Britain.
The criminals were able to get the voice of the CEO of the company from some YouTube videos.
And they were able to take that to do a phone call
that sounded exactly like the CEO.
There's a easy technique called spoofing
where you can fool your caller ID
so you can make it look like it's coming from wherever.
And the scammers picked up a quick $200,000.
Oh, what about, you know, there are these services people can buy
that are supposed to protect your identity.
Are they worth it?
Do they do a job?
Is it at least a minimal level of protection?
Or is it really good or what?
When I describe these identity theft protection services,
I say this kind of like you're crossing the street
and you get hit by a bus and
someone rushes out to tell you, hey, you just got hit by a bus. That's what these services do. They
don't protect you from becoming a victim of identity theft. They alert you sooner that you
have become a victim. So it's helpful. You can do these things for yourself. I think some of them are priced so
that they may be worth it. But frankly, the best place to find a helping hand is at the end of your
own arm. And the one thing that absolutely none of these identity theft protection services do,
which is the absolute best thing for protecting yourself is putting a credit freeze on your
credit reports. And now since 2018, you can do it for your children and children, according
to a Carnegie Mellon study are 51 times more likely to become targeted for identity theft
than adults. This can protect you so that even if someone gets your personal information,
they're not going to be able to open accounts in your name, which is a big way that people get whacked. So a credit freeze,
easy to do. If you're going to apply for credit, you can go online and lift it so that the creditor,
at least a car recently, and they had to check it out, can check my credit report and then put it
back on automatically. So best single thing you can check my credit report, and then put it back on automatically.
So best single thing you can do is freeze your credit and freeze your children's credit.
Isn't it true that a lot of identity theft still happens by people going through your
trash?
Absolutely.
And, you know, this is one of my mottos is things aren't as bad as you think they're
far worse.
So what if you have a shredder and you shred the documents before you put them out?
And in Arizona in particular, there were identity thieves who hired methamphetamine addicts
who would stay up all night piecing together single shredded, just vertical shredded documents.
And so if you're going to shred, which is a great idea, make sure you get a cross shredder.
And I don't put my trash out until the morning, you know, until I hear the trucks coming because just for fear that somebody could go through that at two o'clock in the morning and take their time and and and maybe find something I didn't shred or yeah quite frankly I don't think that's an
unreasonable fear identity theft is high-tech low-tech and no-tech it isn't
just coming through your computer it is going through your trash this is
anything they can do to get the information they will do. You had mentioned IRS, how do those scams work?
You know, they're twofold. One of them is imposter scams and this is, according to the Federal Trade
Commission, the biggest level of scams that we've had in the last year. And this is where you get a telephone call, a text message, or an email
that is coming from some, maybe it's the FBI, maybe it's social security, and lately it's from
the IRS. That spoofing where the scammer very easily can trick your caller ID to make it look
like it's coming from the IRS. They tell you that, here's the thing that bothers me,
the fact that the IRS has had to put on its website,
we don't ask for or take gift cards,
but criminals posing as the IRS will do it.
So under a wide variety of pretext,
they'll ask you for gift cards, credit cards,
some kind of payment that you do over the phone.
The other thing is income tax identity theft, which is a multi-billion dollar problem.
Someone gets your social security number, files electronically a tax return using your
number and a counterfeit W-2, they get a big refund. If you file after them, your return will be held up.
And right now, the IRS is taking about close to 300 days to process claims for your legitimate
refund. So income tax identity theft, people say, well, you know, they're not getting me,
they're getting the government's money, but you're not getting your refund
for pretty much close to a year.
Does the IRS take payments over the phone?
I thought they did not.
They did not.
And as a matter of fact, I'm glad you mentioned that.
You know, people say, how do I know
if it's the IRS calling me?
How do I know if it's the IRS sending me an email
or a text message?
And the real easy way to know it is
the IRS never initiates contact
in any of those three manners.
The only way they initiate contact is through snail mail.
So if you get a phone call, an email,
or a text message indicating it's from the IRS,
you know it's a scam.
Well, there is obviously a lot to know if you want to protect yourself.
And if you do want to know more, you can check out Steve's website, scamaside.com.
There's a lot on that website you'll find helpful.
The name of the book he wrote is 50 Ways to Protect Your Identity in a Digital Age by attorney Steve Wiseman.
And there are links in the show notes to both of those resources I just mentioned.
Thanks for coming on and sharing all this, Steve.
Appreciate it.
Terrific.
Great talking with you.
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Negotiation is one of those things.
We don't talk about it a lot on this podcast,
because I think people's impression is that
negotiation is a very businessy topic,
or it means we're going to talk about how to negotiate the price of a car, that kind of thing.
But the fact is we all negotiate all the time every day.
And there is a very different approach to negotiation that I have found fascinating.
It comes from a guy named Barry Nailbuff.
Barry is an entrepreneur and professor at Yale School of Management and he's the author of a new book called Split the Pie,
A Radical New Way to Negotiate. And I really think you're going to enjoy what he has to say and his approach to this topic because it is different
than what you've heard about negotiation before. Hi Barry, welcome. Thanks for being here.
Thanks for inviting me. So start off by explaining how your approach to negotiating is different and
what it is people
sometimes miss about what you think a negotiation is. Sure,
most people, it's strange to say, don't appreciate what it is they're really negotiating over.
They think it's over some total amount as opposed to what would be lost if the two parties don't reach a deal. That is, they don't understand the actual negotiation pie and therefore the arguments
they make are really not over the right numbers, which leads people to be confused about power and fairness and negotiations end up going
south. So explain the pie because I think of a negotiation as I want this you want
that I don't see it as a pie to split so explain that. The pie is how much value
is created by an agreement compared to what the parties would get
if they end up working on their own or doing something with other folks.
So let's get specific with a real example that would explain what you just said.
I made a rookie error. I filed for a trademark and didn't realize that trademarks are public the moment you
file for them.
As a result, some troll, and I'll call him Edward because that's his name, ended up buying
the URL, the domain name associated with my trademark.
And he offered to sell it back to me for $2,500. Now, Edward doesn't care about fairness.
He's a jerk.
He's, from him, it's a zero-sum mindset.
It's like, how much money can he get?
And I pointed out to Edward
that there's an organization called ICANN,
which is the domain registry,
and for $1,300, they have a dispute resolution process, and what
Edward had done is called registration in bad faith.
And so I was guaranteed to get that domain name back if I paid ICANN $1,300.
So Edward, look, I'm going to get the domain name either because we reach an agreement
or because I go to ICANN. So the only question from my perspective
is do I pay them $1,300 or do I pay you something? And there's no way I'm paying you $2,500
when I can get it for $1,300 from ICANN. And sure enough, he comes right down to $1,100.
But from my perspective now, $1,100 is better than ICANN, but I'm only up $200 and he's up $1,100.
And so I say there's a $1,300 pie. That's what I can save by doing a deal with you,
and I'm prepared to split it $650, $650. At which point he comes down to $900,
kind of halfway between my $650 and his $1,00. And he's saying that's the lowest
I'll go. I won't move anymore. And my point is I've made you a fair offer. If
you can tell me why we do something different, okay, but you know what you're
proposing is giving you more of the benefit than it is to me and I don't see
why we should do it that way. And so I stuck at 650, he was at 900,
and at the end of the day, I had a principle,
he was arbitrary, and he came and said yes to my 650.
So he didn't care about fairness,
but he recognized that I do.
And therefore, if you wanna do a deal with me,
you have to accept the fair outcome.
See, I would have thought he would have said, okay, well, if you're going to pay them $1,300
to take the domain away from me, give me $1,200 and you can have it right now.
And you would have said, okay.
But you didn't say okay.
I didn't because if I did that, he's up $1,200.
I'm only $100 better than I can. Now fight fire with fire would be I go back to Edward and say I'll give you 100
and then I'm up 1200. But in fact I say look for the same reason that I wouldn't
expect you to accept $200 offer leaving me 1100 ahead you shouldn't expect me to
accept your proposal of 1100 which leaves, which leaves you $1,100
ahead and me only $200 ahead.
It's true that I need you to save this $1,300, but you also need me.
We need each other and that's why we should split it $650, $650.
And you got him.
And he got me.
And we got each other and we saved the $1,300, and I was 650 ahead, and he's 650 ahead.
So yes, he's a jerk.
Yes, he's a troll.
But he also understood the logic of what I was saying,
and he didn't have any countervailing logic.
So my view is principles beat arbitrary.
Well, that's a great example, a great story.
And I like how you appealed to his sense of fairness
with whatever sense of fairness he had by pointing out your sense of fairness,
but not everybody will agree with that. I mean, people come into negotiations
often wanting to get as much as they can possibly get.
And that's kind of the job of negotiation in many ways, to get as much as you can get.
And so you're right.
The reason for a negotiation is to do better than what they would get without an agreement.
And the question is, how do you measure that?
So let me give you a real-world example. My
mother had the opportunity to buy the house that she was renting from the
person who she was renting it from and if she did the transaction with him
there would be no real estate agent involved and therefore they could save a
5% real estate commission which in this case was around $40,000.
So the question is, how much of the $40,000 should my mother get and how much of it should
the seller get?
The seller could say, well, if you buy this kind of house from anybody else, you'd end
up having to pay $800,000.
So I should get the full $40,000 or you can pay $799. And my mother could say in
response, if you sell this house to anybody else, after the Real Estate
Commission, you're only going to get $760. So I'll give you $761 and I'll keep
almost all of the $40,000. My view is that the negotiation here is over
saving the $40,000 real estate commission.
Each of them are equally powerful, equally necessary, and so they should split it 20,000,
20,000.
And so what happened?
He agreed to that at the end of the day.
Essentially, he said, well, it's a hot market, and so therefore, you know, I should be getting
more of it.
And the answer is the hot market is
what determines the price from which we subtract the $20,000,
not how it is that we divide up the $40,000.
So every negotiation has to start somewhere, somehow.
And often, I think people throw out a number.
That's the starting point.
That's where we begin our discussion. Is that a good way to start? Do you think I?
Like even more the idea of starting off with the rules for how we'll negotiate to say to the other side
Can we agree that our objective is to create a large pie together and split it equally and?
Understand is this the person who's going to be a jerk and says no my view is I want to engage in a zero-sum negotiation where I get as much
as possible take advantage of you and the process shrink the pie or are they say yes
great let's figure out how to make a big pie together that we can split and equally benefit
from. Something that often seems to derail negotiations
is emotion, personality, ego, that wanting to win
or feeling the other person is trying to cheat you
and that those emotions get in the way.
It's true that a lot of people find emotions
to be dominant when they're doing a negotiation.
So I'm a little bit like Spock in the sense that I'm trying to bring some logic back into
negotiations.
And if you can combine Spock logic with Captain Kirk's emotional intelligence, you've really
got it made.
So I appreciate that you should be empathetic and curious about what the other side's interests and positions are.
In fact, one of the things I like people to do is to make the other side's arguments for them.
You see, we can't always win on every point, but we can always be understood.
And a great way to demonstrate that you understand the other side's perspective is to make their arguments for them
Why would you want to do that? What would be the benefit to you to make the points?
For the other side seems like you're helping the other side
Get what they want
What I'm trying to do is figure out what it is that they want
Because my goal in negotiation is actually to give them
what they want. The reason is, if they get what they want, then I can get what it is
that I want.
And so when people enter into these kind of discussions, negotiations with other people,
what do you think are the things that derail? What do they do wrong? What are the mistakes they make?
That's a long list.
So one classic mistake is that they try and anchor
with a low ball offer or a super high ask,
and they try and soften up the other side.
But the problem with doing that
is that you make yourself untrustworthy.
If I'm selling something that's worth a thousand dollars and you offer me 200 for it,
are you trying to take advantage of me? Do you not know what this item is worth? If I were to say yes to that deal, what kind of person are you? And then you have to come up say from 200 to 600 to 750 to 900 and next thing
You know, you've demonstrated that you are just like Gumby. You're totally flexible that you have no principles in terms of
the way in which you're negotiating and so by starting at a point that's unreasonably far away from
the
appropriate number,
causes all sorts of troubles in negotiation thereafter.
And so how would you do that otherwise?
If someone says, well, make me an offer here.
I'm selling this $1,000 thing, but without mentioning the number.
I'm selling this thing.
What will you give me?
And you know it's worth $1,000.
Wouldn't you want to try to get it for less?
Absolutely. So I'm not saying you start off with $1,000, wouldn't you want to try to get it for less? Absolutely.
So I'm not saying you start off with $1,000.
But I also don't want you to start off with $200.
I want you to start off with a number that you can justify.
If they ask you how you came up with that number,
a good answer isn't, yeah, I tried
to pick this low number because I read in a book somewhere
that's a good way of softening you up
and that I can anchor you with that number. Instead it's look when I see
prices on eBay for this the price is $847 and I know that you might be able to
find somebody who will perhaps overpay they're really desperate it, but I'm prepared to give you the same
price as I could find it on eBay, would be one way of doing it.
So providing some other possibility, giving them a reference, giving them an argument
and a reason for why you're making the number you're making.
What else do people do wrong?
One thing people tend to do is fight fire with fire, but as Smokey the Bear will tell you,
you want to fight fire with water so that when somebody does something that's escalating,
that is inappropriate, don't respond the same way. Find the way to put out the fire.
way to put out the fire. In one of my negotiations, I once asked for a price that was way too high, and the person on the other side, the buyer, looks at me,
says, great, where do I sign? And then watching my smile grow in my face says,
oh, just kidding. If you really think that's what is needed, I'm
afraid we don't actually, it's not going to work out. And it was the nicest
possible way of letting me know that what I had done was just not really
appropriate, as opposed to coming back and making a lowball offer in response. So that's one example of how not to respond in kind. When somebody
makes an ultimatum, don't make an ultimatum in response. Figure out how to
walk them off the ledge. When somebody acts like a jerk, say, look, here are my
principles. I'm prepared to split the pie with you. I'm not prepared
to do a deal that's unfavorable, that's unfair to me. So if you can give me a
principle in response to show me why my argument's wrong, I'm flexible on that
account. Or somebody will lie to you, and that doesn't mean that you should be
lying in response.
So there's a lot of fight fire with fire,
as opposed to figure out ways to put out the fire.
Do you think it's a good idea
when you're negotiating something with someone else
that you keep the discussion strictly on
what it is you're negotiating
and what the value of this thing you're negotiating and what the value of
this thing is to you and what the value is to them or should you bring in other
things like the reasons why you want this is that relevant to the conversation
or is it better to just you know stick to what you're talking about and don't
elaborate too much so imagine a person is selling
their family business and it's a gas station and the reason they're selling it
is because they want to go on a sailing trip around the world. Should they reveal
that or not? Well you could say it's a frivolous reason and so let's keep it
hidden. Let's just say I'm planning to retire and spend more time with my grandkids. But when it comes down to it there are good
reasons and bad reasons for selling. The buyer knows that you've got a for sale
sign so they're wondering why are you selling? Is it that there's a leak in one
of the storage tanks and the gas station is about to become a super fun cleanup
site? Is the highway exit ramp about to close
so there will be no more cars coming this way?
In fact, the idea that you want to take a trip
around the world is a good reason,
not a bad reason from the buyer's perspective.
And so yes, go ahead and let them know
why it is you are selling the station.
What about though, if I'm selling something?
I just did this not long ago.
I had a piece of equipment that was no use to me, no value to me.
It was a piece of recording equipment that is no, it's obsolete.
Nobody wants it.
Except collectors.
Collectors collect this type of equipment.
Consequently, it has value to them.
It has virtually no value to me other than I know it's worth something to a collector.
But I don't want to tell that person it's worthless to me.
I want them to pay me what it's worth to them.
That's true. So that's a great case.
That's like I said, when the seller values it less
than the buyer does, there's a pie.
And that's the time to do the transaction.
So you valued it near zero,
the buyer values it at $1,000, great.
Now it turns out that there are lots of buyers,
and one values it at 800, one values it at 900, and one values it
at 1,000, then you want to sell it to the thousand dollar person and I think the right price there is
more like 950 because your alternative is I can sell it to the 900 dollar person and so that's
really my fallback. The reason I'm selling it to you is to beat the 900. I can't beat 900 without you.
You can't get this value, this extra value, without me.
And so we have an extra 100 to split.
And that's why I think it should be 50-50.
What else do people maybe miss?
Because it often seems that people,
when they talk about negotiation, what they're talking about
or what they're thinking about
is money, that it's all about the money.
But as you just said a moment ago,
you like to think there's more than just money.
So what else are people missing by thinking this is just
dollars?
They miss the opportunity to have creative solutions come
into play.
So if I go back to my couple selling the gas station,
turns out that when they come back from their trip,
they don't have a job.
And as a result, they needed a big reserve fund
to help tide them over until they find work.
But the person buying the station
thinks they're great managers
and they're always short on good managers.
So it would be delighted to have them come back
and work at the station, as a station manager,
upon their return.
So offer them a job.
And now the person really wants to sell the station to you
rather than to sell it to somebody else.
So figure out what the person really wants to sell the station to you rather than to sell it to somebody else. So figure out what the person really wants and give it to them.
Or when you're buying a house, how likely is the closing to happen?
Is the person getting a mortgage?
Is there a mortgage contingency?
Is there an inspection contingency?
What are you going to do with the furniture that's in the house?
Does the buyer want it?
Does the seller want it? Does the seller want it?
Is the closing date, do you want it to be soon or do you want to delay it to help the
person have a little bit of time to move?
So look for things that can create value that are besides money.
Talk about what happens when you're in the position of you don't know as much as the
other guy, that he's
more of an expert on whatever it is you're negotiating and you feel kind of
stupid, how do you work that to your advantage if you can? Well let's let's
try to at least work that not to my disadvantage because I am in the
challenging position. One of the things I like to do there is make what's called a contingent agreement.
So imagine the art dealer comes in and sees this painting
that I inherited from my father and says,
well, all right, I'll give you $1,000 for it.
And I have no idea if this painting is worth
$2,000, $10,000, $100,000.
And the problem is it could cost me $2,000 to get it appraised, which could be more than
this painting is worth.
So what do I do?
I could come back and just say $2,000 or $5,000 and pick some arbitrary number, which could
lose me the deal if it's really only worth $1,000, or
perhaps I'll get $2,000 but the painting is still worth $50,000 and I've missed the big
opportunity.
Instead, I prefer saying things like, here's what I'm prepared to do.
I'll sell it to you for $1,000, but any money you make above $10,000, we split evenly.
So now, if the painting is worth somewhere between
1 and 10, okay fine they can make some money on this. But if this thing is
really a hidden masterpiece, now I've protected myself. So if you don't know
what something is worth, make a deal where you get some share of the upside
if it turns out to be worth a lot. And that way you get a share of the upside, if it turns out to be worth a lot.
And that way you get a piece of the bigger pie.
And it's all about splitting the pie.
It's really a unique way to look at negotiating.
I've never really looked at it this way before.
Barry Nailbuff's been my guest.
He is an entrepreneur and professor
at the Yale School of Management and his book is
called Split the Pie, a radical new way to negotiate.
And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Appreciate you being here.
Thanks Barry.
Have you ever heard of the Baker-Baker paradox?
Basically it's the result of research that says it's much easier to
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I'm Mike Carruthers, thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know.
There is a fascinating and unique podcast I'd like you to check out, as I have.
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