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Monday, November 26, 2012

Negotiation - Summary of Presenations & Their Relation to Gaming.

        Let's face it – we use it everyday, for little things, for big things, at home, at work while playing, while not playing – negotiation is a foundation of the human experience. Whether it's in a game, or in a business transaction, it is undoubtedly one of those skills that's fundamental to how we approach interactions. Ironically, while we're playing our favorite RTS, or taking a run through a shooter, or even saving the planet in RPGs, negotiation is one of those elements that presents itself constantly, even if it's unintentional, and becomes apart of our experience. Some of the more common that we see, three specifically, are positional bargaining, separating the people from the problem, and best alternatives to a negotiated problem – or BATNA. In order to learn more, let's go over three videos that fundamentally peruse these techniques. 

 
        The video from Emory School of Law on Advanced Negotiation (which can be found HERE), is an amazing – and beware, long – introspective on effective means of negotiation, particularly as it pertains to elements of positional bargaining. In the realm of video games, maybe we'll instantly think of that brutish shop keep, or those moments where we had issues with convincing an NPC to join the cause. Often these kinds of choice mechanisms fall under the purview of "Game Theory", something brought up throughout the Emory presentation. When we think of the aforementioned game scenarios mentioned, adversarial bargaining or positional bargaining, as it were, are a core mechanism for these experiences, which Emory's Paul Zwier explains as a kind of Zero-Sum element, where it becomes pertinent to determine "settlement points" – or overlaps between each sides' area of commitment in the negotiation – leading bottom lines of each person, and defining needs. Otherwise, you might end up like this cartoon from Stu's Views:

         Much like the Emory video, these needs and their associated settlement points, are major factors also in determining how to separate people from the problem. As William Ury likes to call it , "The Third Side" – something he notes in his video at TED. In his video, The Walk from "No" to "Yes," we go over the mantra of the Third Side – a representation of the central argument of any negotiation. With Ury's "third side", the video encapsulates the correlation of the positions in a negotiation with the desired needs of the people involved. Ury goes on to anecdotal stories and revelations concerning the nature of people, particularly in relation to their social mores and how that context can equate to a personable third side to a conflict or negotiation.
         While it may not be intentional, this kind of element comes up in games, quite often, especially in recent years. Conversation with NPCs in games like Skyrim, or Mass Effect, can determine how people respond to you – sometimes you begin to recognize their needs, wants, as well as things they'll settle for, as a determining factor in how you win them over. The foundation is similar to Ury's presentation, and it's becoming more common in playing, as people desire more choices. 

        Sometimes, choices lead us to avenues we simply have to settle with as an alternative. Like BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement), determining your alternative settling point is as important in gaming theory, for choice patterns and the play experience in events, as the rest of everyday life and work. Negotiation for Entrepreneurs gives a great speech on negotiation, particularly revolving around the aforementioned BATNA, in which getting to know your alternative requires forethought and preparation in its own right. Focusing on how to provide a foundation for that and the contingency of your alternative, the podcast goes over how this determines the "dynamic of the negotiation," starting with writing everything down, and taking notes – being your own secretary, as it were – in order to ensure elements of your negotiation are on track.


         There is, of course, knowing how to swing a negotiation so that, should things not work out, the value of your alternative is improved, rather than diminished. This gets you avoiding contest of wills - one of the topics covered – while also going over how "win-win negotiations" are the only methods to maintain an outcome. How does all this translate to relevance? The answer is simple – by concentrating these elements around your alternative, you set up a method of negotiation that helps to avoid the need to go there, with a contingency that makes your particular alternative look just as good, if not better. From a gaming standpoint, rather than the narrowly focused outcomes of many negotiation-based conflicts, a game could instead improve the efficacy of how a player can deliver specific outcomes in these moments. In other words, methods to externally produce better results (or worsen them), as well as methods to fall back to, in order to hopefully still obtain the initial outcome associated with the negotiation in the first place – an example might be trying to win over an NPC to join your party. 
 
        So, ultimately we've taken a brief review of three powerful videos that give us a solid sense of the three techniques mentioned earlier. What we can take away from this, is that knowing them in a brighter light allows us to better understand the correlation between game interaction and negotiation – and how this form of conflict creation/resolution is a beneficial and useable aspect in game theory, improving the living narrative a player develops in games they play.


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