Be Nice to People Who Drive You Crazy

If you find yourself in a contentious negotiation where you’re both digging into your positions and you’re pretty sure everything the other side says is either stupid, crazy or both: I have one, simple piece of advice to help turn things around and get you what you need.

Make friends with that stupid, crazy person sitting across from you.

You don’t have to make them your new BFF, more like a talk-to-them-on-the-bus friend. It will help you considerably if you can see them as someone you like.

By Gerry Balding via Flickr.com

By Gerry Balding via Flickr.com

Why in the heck would you be friendly to someone you’re in conflict with? Because how you feel about someone can color how you evaluate their actions and ideas.

Yes, even you, Reader who just said you can fairly consider the opinion of someone you don’t like because you’re not biased. Even you.

Cognitive dissonance, the tendency to reconcile conflicting pieces of information, means that we tend to place a higher value on the actions and ideas of people we like and a lower value on the actions and ideas of people we don’t like. Even if those actions and ideas are identical.

Did your friend just stick his foot in his mouth? Well, everyone says silly things sometimes and at least he means well.

Did that guy you think is a jerk just say something stupid? He’s such an insensitive ass! What an inconsiderate and rude person!

So why is it helpful to trick your brain out of this tendency when you’re negotiating?

By Justice Beitzel via Flickr.com

By Justice Beitzel via Flickr.com

Because if  you’re convinced the person you’re negotiating with is a big stupidhead who is probably lying to get her way, you might miss out on a deal that fulfills your interests and gives you exactly what you need.

You’ll miss out on that deal because cognitive dissonance will tell you anything that this big stupidhead comes up with has to be awful, no matter how good the deal might sound, because they’re awful.

A quick caveat: this does not mean you should automatically trust people who have genuinely mistreated you in the past.  But if you can only see the other person as a no-good sonuva and they haven’t actually harmed you or yours, chances are you will benefit from softening your view of them.

What can you do?

Use “we” when talking about the negotiation.
“Ben, the way I see it, we’ve got a shared problem. You want X and I want Y and we can’t do both of those things without significantly changing Z. Do you have any ideas of what we might be able to do instead?”

“Us” versus “them” language can encourage dissonance and give you a false sense of the conflict. By using “we” or “us” to refer to both sides of the negotiation you remind yourself, and them, that you’re both in this together.

Ask for a small favor unrelated to the negotiation.
There is a famous story about Ben Franklin asking to borrow a book from a man who had been a real jerk to him in the Pennsylvania legislature. Franklin returned the book with a note thanking the gentleman for the loan and saying how helpful the book had been. When next they met in the legislature, the gentleman, who’d not said a kind word to Franklin before, went out of his way to say hello and inquire after Franklin’s well-being.

It turns out that when we do nice things for people we tend to feel positively toward them. Because we wouldn’t be doing them a favor if they weren’t a good person, right?

Asking a small, low-cost favor, like the loan of a book or a recommendation for a restaurant, can help the other side see you in a better light and may improve how they treat you in the negotiation. You’ll also benefit, because who asks favors from people they don’t like?

Pretend they’re someone you actually like.
Cognitive dissonance works both ways, so if you’re having a hard time seeing the other person as at all reasonable, pretend they’re someone you do like and evaluate their actions and ideas through that lens.

If your best friend were acting this way, what would you do? How would you react?

This simple exercise can help you get an unbiased (or at least more well-rounded) perspective on what’s happening and  give you insight as to what you can do to move things along.

By N.Calzas via Flickr.com

By N.Calzas via Flickr.com

It’s normal to get frustrated with someone you’re having a conflict with, but if you get to the point where you just can’t believe what’s coming out of their mouth, do yourself a favor and start treating them like a pal.

Categories: Dealing with People

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7 responses to “Be Nice to People Who Drive You Crazy”

  1. James Babb says:

    Thanks Katie, you’ve given me new hope for dealing with my very own Major Stupidhead! Instead of seeing him as totally unreasonable (based on past experience), I will try seeing him as someone I can still work with, although maybe on a different level. We shall see…

    • Katie Lane says:

      Best of luck, James! Even when you’re doing what you know to be the right thing, it can be hard. I hope the slightly different perspective helps you get beyond his unreasonableness and toward something more productive.

  2. M!ke says:

    Great post, Katie.
    I’d add something that I picked up from “Everything’s An Offer:” when you show the other person that you’re interested in what they have to say, if you acknowledge their interests as valid, even if you don’t agree what those interests, they’re more likely to open up to your interests. Even though they may disagree.
    Ultimately, we all want to feel heard.

    • Katie Lane says:

      Thanks, Mike! You’re right; we all want to be heard and the validation of being heard can do wonders for our mood and approach to a situation. Which, ultimately, can help us find a solution to the negotiation so we can move on to the stuff we really want to do.

  3. Wendy Ice says:

    More great advice. On a similar note, back when I did competitive debate, my coach advised me to “fight fire with water”. The more nasty the other side became, the more pleasant I became. It was very effective, and turned distressing situations into a kind of game. It inevitably made my opponent feel self-conscious about their nastiness (very few people really want to be the bad guy). Judges naturally sided with me (the more likable party) and I sometimes ended up being friendly with the competition after the round.

    Your strategy also encourages more objectivity. It’s impossible to be objective when you’re viewing someone as a villain.

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