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Business Negotiation
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Business negotiation is the structured process by which parties in a commercial context reach mutually acceptable agreements on terms, contracts, partnerships, or conflicts. It appears across business school curricula in courses on organizational behavior, international business, management, and business communication. The topic carries academic weight because it sits at the intersection of strategy, psychology, ethics, and culture, requiring students to analyze not just tactics but the broader conditions that shape how and why parties reach—or fail to reach—agreement. Its complexity deepens considerably when national borders are involved, since cultural norms, communication styles, and ethical expectations can vary dramatically across markets.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a range of approaches. Several take a cross-cultural angle, examining how national cultural differences affect negotiation styles and outcomes, including how corporations adapt their behavior when entering international markets. Others focus on ethical dimensions, particularly the dilemmas that surface when companies negotiate across different legal and moral frameworks. Case-based analysis is also well represented, with papers using specific corporate contexts—such as United Airlines—to ground abstract negotiation principles in real organizational situations. Some papers work through textbook frameworks chapter by chapter, applying theoretical models directly to practical scenarios.

A strong essay on business negotiation should stake a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply summarizing negotiation stages. Evidence drawn from corporate case studies, cultural frameworks, or documented ethical dilemmas tends to carry more analytical weight than general observations. One common pitfall is treating negotiation as a purely rational, linear process; strong papers account for cultural variability, power imbalances, and ethical constraints that complicate any straightforward model.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Negotiating Over the Past Two
Over the past two decades, technology and business have seen very radical changes. Globalization has become an accepted and even desirable phenomenon for businesses. Global communication has become a hundredfold…
Paper Doctorate
Changing Corporate Behaviour to Respond
Sales Training to engage the Mexican/German market
Essay Doctorate
Practice Btt and Chou Contractual Agreement Btt
BTT (Big Time Toymaker) and Chou are two individual entities that casually agreed on an oral contract to exchange a business product. Chou provided a new game strategy to BTT, a business entity that manufactures, and distributes games. BTT agreed to obtain the new game and distribute to the expected clientele. In return, Chou was to receive 25000 dollars. However, this agreement was done casually. There was no witness at the time of agreement. In addition, the two parties did not sign any official document except to the exchange of a fax from BTT. The result of this negotiation was not concluded. BTT stopped communicating with Chou after receiving a draft for the new game strategy.
Essay Doctorate
Ethical considerations in international market entry strategies across US, European, and Asian markets
"One aspect of culture is that it is difficult to define universally." (Pitta). Culture represents values and patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting in identifiable groups. It represents how people of certain…
Paper Undergraduate
Cross-Cultural Negotiation in the Contemporary
Objective of this paper is to explore the cross-cultural difference between American and Japanese in negotiation. The paper discusses problems that American and Japanese business leaders face during negotiation. Dissimilarities between American and Japanese cultures make American and Japanese business leaders to face a daunting challenge in reaching a timely mutual agreement in negotiation. The paper recommends that both parties should study the culture of other party before entering in the negotiation.
Research Paper Undergraduate
United Airlines: operations and business overview
This paper discusses a multinational venture to invest in a foreign global market. The paper discusses the corporation and the strategies is has maintained in providing air travel services to its clients. The paper presents the challenges and opportunities facing the corporation. In the paper a discussion of the strategy to be used in the target market is made giving suggestion for ensuring success.
Paper Doctorate
Separation of creation and distribution phases in negotiation: advantages and disadvantages
This essay consists of responses to the following three questions about negotiations based on three sample cases provided: 1. Why might a negotiator want to separate the value creation and distribution phases when negotiating? What advantages and disadvantages does this approach offer, whether psychologically or in other strategic ways? Give an example from at least one negotiation you've carried out in the course. 2. What are some innovative ways of creating value in negotiation? And, why is "bundling" issues, rather than taking them up one by one, often important? Choose one of our negotiation exercises, and explain how you would approach a similar situation in the future the same way or differently, based on the concepts in your answer and how the negotiation went. We want you to offer a brief negotiation analysis, and extrapolate from that to derive lessons for your future practice. 3. In your opinion, what is a fair approach to distributing value? What is an efficient approach, and why does efficiency not ensure fairness? Use an example from negotiations you've carried out in the course.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cross-Cultural Communications Cross-Cultural Business Negotiations:
Cross-Cultural Business Negotiations: A Chapter-by-Chapter Review
Paper Undergraduate
Negotiation principles and practices
Wal-Mart - Procter and Gamble Negotiation