Getting Back to the Table, Joshua N. Weiss
Getting Back to the Table, Joshua N. Weiss
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Getting Back to the Table
5 Steps to Reviving Stalled Negotiations

Author: Joshua N. Weiss

Narrator: Mitch Crawford

Unabridged: 4 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 02/11/2025


Synopsis

The cofounder of Harvard's Global Negotiation Initiative and a renowned global guru in negotiations, presents a dynamic strategy for overcoming stalled or failed negotiations that empowers individuals to return to the table with increased strength and resilience, carefully learning from the challenges they encountered.

When negotiations fail it can be hard to start over. Some people give up, others forget and move on, but the truly successful negotiator learns. Celebrated negotiation thought-leader and advisor to the UN Mediation Unit, Joshua N. Weiss, introduces an evidence-based model for when negotiations stall or fail.

Getting Back to the Table explores the reality of failure in negotiation. It lays out the types of failure that can happen, how to cope with it when it does, and how we can be resilient in the face of it. Using Weiss's easy-to-use framework, listeners can successfully get back to the negotiation table. Failing in negotiations is inevitable, but learning and growing from failure is not.

About Joshua N. Weiss

Joshua N. Weiss is the cofounder of the Global Negotiation Initiative at Harvard University. He received his PhD from the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University in 2002. Weiss has published extensively on negotiation and is an internationally recognized speaker and trainer on negotiation at the organizational, corporate, government, and international levels.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Kevin on March 31, 2025

Great Book on Negotiation, Especially When Things Go Wrong Getting Back to the Table is an excellent book to help us reassess our strengths and weaknesses to become a better negotiator. It is easy to blame external forces or events for a negotiation gone astray. Often, however, the fault lies within......more