The essence of humanity cannot be truly fulfilled without the liberation of the mind....
Monday, 18 April 2016
A former hostage negotiator explains the 4 words you need to use to negotiate with someone in business
Richard Mullender knows a bit about getting his way.
Mullender
spent 30 years in the UK police force and then went on to spend five
years as a hostage negotiator, working in Afghanistan and the Middle
East.
He
has the power of persuasion to talk someone out of jumping off a bridge
or to prevent an armed kidnapper from killing the person they are
holding captive.
Now he runs his own training company, teaching companies about the power of listening.
Mullender
gave a crash course in "life-or-death listening" at Advertising Week
Europe in London on Monday and revealed the four most important words
you need to use if you want to negotiate with someone.
Those words are: "I feel as if ..."
Mullender
explained that the best barristers at London's central criminal court,
the Old Bailey, weren't the ones that asked endless questions. It was
the ones that didn't.
"Don't
change the conversation. It's the dumbest thing you can do. The secret
is in the rambling. It's the rambling I'm interested in," Mullender
said.
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