Mutual gains bargaining
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mutual gains bargaining (MGB) is an approach to collective bargaining intended to reach win-win outcomes for the negotiating parties.
Instead of the traditional adversarial (win-lose) approach (aka positional bargaining), the mutual gains approach is quite similar to Principled Negotiation (first described by Roger Fisher in his book Getting to YES), where the goal is to reach a sustainable (i.e., lasting) agreement that both parties (or all parties in a multi-party negotiation) can live with and support.
Mutual gains bargaining has been used successfully in such areas as labor-management relations and environmental negotiations.
[edit] Some principles of MGB
- Both sides have legitimate interests to be recognized and advanced
- Approach the issues as problems to be solved
- Listening builds trust
- Enlarge the pie
- Seek sustainable alternatives
[edit] See also
- Conflict resolution research
- Lawrence Susskind