Book:
Done
Deal
Author:
Michael
Benoliel
Available:
www.amazon.com
Reviewer:
Victor
Karamagi
Negotiation
is part
and
parcel
of our
daily
life.
Even the
smallest
of
discussions
is
negotiation.
This is
what Dr.
Michael
Benoliel’s
Done
Deal is
all
about:
getting
to grips
with the
art of
negotiation,
how to
become a
master
negotiator.
From the
onset,
Done
Deal
sets
about to
prove
that
basic
strategies
for any
successful
negotiation
are the
same.
From the
business
world,
through
politics,
law,
sports
to
diplomacy
and war,
Benoliel
offers
insightful
analysis
of the
key
negotiation
strategies
as used
by whom
he calls
top 25
of
today’s
top
“Master
Negotiators”.
Where
for
example,
did
Turner
Broadcasting
Services
owner
Ted
Turner
go wrong
in his
bid to
acquire
MGM/AU
way far
above
its
value,
despite
some
glaring
indicators
that the
film
giant
was not
a good
partner
in plan
to
survive
the
broadcasting
industry?
On the
other
hand,
how did
famous
American
sports
agent
Jeff
Moorad
add
millions
of
dollars
to a
player’s
salary?
Done
Deal has
all the
answers.
Had
Turner,
unlike
Moorad
violated
the rule
of 5 Ps:
Prior
Preparation
Prevents
Poor
Performance?
Benoliel
blends
negotiation
theory
and
practice
through
use of
accounts
from the
successes
and
failures
of the
Master
Negotiators.
And whom
will you
find
among
these
master
negotiators?
Shimon
Peres,
the
chief
negotiator
in the
Israeli-Palestinian
talks,
former
US
senator
Bill
Bradley,
Former
US
Presidential
candidate
Robert
Dole,
Labour
Unionist
Richard
Trumka,
former
Palestinian
negotiator
Sa’eb
Ekarat
and
businessman
Hassan
Bassajjabalaba.
Every
field is
represented.
It is
this
‘mixture’
that
makes
Benoliel’s
Done
Deal
“come
alive”.
Founder
of the
Center
for
Negotiation,
a
consulting
and
training
organization
that
deals in
conflict
resolution
and
negotiation,
the
author
easily
attempts
to prove
that
that
every
decision
in life
is about
negotiation.
He
details
each of
the ‘
top ten
skills’
paramount
in
whatever
negotiation,
taking
the
reader
to the
depths
of how
the
Master
Negotiators
applied
each,
either
consciously
or
otherwise.
Would
you for
instance
take off
time to
think
about
the
interests
of the
person,
group or
company
you are
negotiating
with?
Inexperienced
negotiators
will not
care. He
quotes
Former
US
Secretary
of State
James
Blake
that:
“Many
negotiators
are
self-centered.
They are
so
preoccupied
with
what
they
need and
want,
they pay
less
attention
to what
the
other
side
wants
and
needs.”
But
master
negotiators
will
seek to
know the
position,
interests,
behavior
and
personality
of their
counterpart,
what the
author
terms
“negotiating
from
both
sides of
the
table.”
At the
start of
every
chapter,
he
tickles
the
reader’s
thinking
by use
of
quotations
from
eminent
personalities,
making
you not
just
read,
but
think as
you
devour
the
pages.
He
highlights
the main
pointers
at the
end of
every
chapter,
thereby
making
the
thinking
even
easier.
In all
negotiations,
each
side
looks to
come out
the
winner
thereby
insisting
on
trying
to make
the
other
side the
loser.
Such a
no-compromise
negotiation
will
collapse,
so how
do you
bring
out a
win-win
situation?
Benoliel
brings
this to
light
quoting
Shimon
Peres, a
man who
has been
involved
in
various
Middle
East
negotiations.
“If you
want to
win, go
to war.
Negotiations
are
about
finding
an
accommodation
that
both
sides
can live
with.”
If the
preceding
chapters
do not
get you
to
getting
the best
out of a
negotiation,
the very
last
chapter
should
get you
there.
“Become
a Master
Negotiator”
gives
you the
answer.
How do
you
build
relationships,
master
the
substance
and
manage
the
process?
With
well-crafted
principles
of
master
negotiation,
the last
chapter
does the
trick.
Done
Deal is
a
plainly
written,
elaborate
text.
However,
it is
not for
the
flip-through
reader.
Rather,
it is
for the
critical
reader;
further
underlining
Benoliel’s
argument
that the
art of
negotiation
is a
field
management
trainers
ought to
look
into.
Nevertheless
Benoliel
makes a
case why
every
professional,
from
businessmen
to
managers
and
politicians
should
take
time off
to turn
the
pages of
this
brilliantly
written
book.
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