Book contents
- Reviews
- Give Yourself a Nudge
- Give Yourself a Nudge
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Nudge Yourself to Make Better Decisions
- 2 Your Decisions and Your Life
- 3 Making Value-Focused Decisions
- 4 Defining Your Decision
- 5 Identifying Your Values
- 6 Creating Alternatives
- 7 Identifying Decision Opportunities
- 8 Obtaining Authorization to Select Alternatives Controlled by Others
- 9 Becoming a Value-Focused Decision-Maker
- 10 Enhancing the Quality of Your Life
- 11 Useful Perspectives on Decision-Making
- Appendix Evaluating Alternatives and Making a Decision
- Notes
- Index
8 - Obtaining Authorization to Select Alternatives Controlled by Others
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2020
- Reviews
- Give Yourself a Nudge
- Give Yourself a Nudge
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Nudge Yourself to Make Better Decisions
- 2 Your Decisions and Your Life
- 3 Making Value-Focused Decisions
- 4 Defining Your Decision
- 5 Identifying Your Values
- 6 Creating Alternatives
- 7 Identifying Decision Opportunities
- 8 Obtaining Authorization to Select Alternatives Controlled by Others
- 9 Becoming a Value-Focused Decision-Maker
- 10 Enhancing the Quality of Your Life
- 11 Useful Perspectives on Decision-Making
- Appendix Evaluating Alternatives and Making a Decision
- Notes
- Index
Summary
There are important decisions for which you do not have the authority to implement some alternatives that have great appeal to you. Someone else, who I refer to as the authorized decision-maker, controls whether the alternative that you prefer can be implemented. There is an effective way to remove such restrictions. You need to create a specific alternative that includes both the general features of your desired alternative and additional features to make that specific alternative attractive to the authorized decision-maker. You design it to be sufficiently attractive for it to be an alternative that cannot be refused by the authorized decision-maker. Knowing some values of the authorized decision-maker with respect to the decision at hand is a key to create desirable alternatives for him or her. Various procedures to do this are discussed. Value-focused negotiations indicate how knowing your negotiating partner’s values allows you to create win-win alternatives that better achieve their and your objectives. The procedure to generate post-agreement improvements to negotiations is also discussed.
Keywords
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- Give Yourself a NudgeHelping Smart People Make Smarter Personal and Business Decisions, pp. 141 - 164Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020