The American Reporter
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
  • Login
  • World
  • National
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • National
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
No Result
View All Result
The American Reporter
No Result
View All Result

How to Deal with Fight, Flight, or Compromise in Negotiations

Kyle Matthews by Kyle Matthews
November 27, 2024
in Business
Reading Time: 8 mins read
How to Deal with Fight, Flight, or Compromise in Negotiations

Negotiation is a process business leaders cannot avoid. It’s central to transactions ranging from simple product sales to mergers and acquisitions and everything in between. 

More importantly, negotiation is part of the ongoing dialogue every leader has with his or her team. The exchanges leaders have as they seek to motivate and direct their employees are often a form of negotiation.

RELATED POSTS

Tec-Do Integrates Seedance 2.0 into Navos to Empower Global Video Marketing

Why Davis Householder Believes Deal Structure Matters More Than Headline Price

Yet, business leaders typically approach negotiation with the wrong mindset. They misunderstand the essence of true negotiation, which results in false expectations and, in many cases, less-than-optimal results.

“If you believe negotiation requires compromise from both sides of the table, you’re consistent with what most believe to be true,” says Jim Camp, author of “Lead From No” and Co-owner of Camp Negotiations. “Phrases like ‘win-win,’ ‘give and take,’ ‘collective bargaining,’ and ‘protecting the relationship’ are what typically come to mind when people think of ‘negotiation.’ Unfortunately, seeing it from that angle puts negotiation on the wrong track from the start.”

Camp is a retired Major General in the United States Air Force who served for many years as the Commander of the Ohio Air National Guard and National Guard Assistant to the Commander of the US Transportation Command. He was personally responsible for negotiating the largest pay increase in history for thousands of Air National Guard Instructor Pilots. In the corporate world, Camp helped build Camp Negotiations as a coach and contributor to the book, “No: The Only System of Negotiation You Need For Work and Home.”

The contrarian mindset Camp promotes is anchored in the actual definition of negotiation, which stipulates all parties involved must have the right to veto as they seek to bring about an agreement.

“When the efforts to build agreements or the right to veto are removed, the event taking place is no longer a negotiation,” Camp explains. “In both cases, the faux-negotiation typically leads to problems like financial loss, careers in jeopardy, or outright violence.”

When negotiators seek the “win-win” or “collective bargaining” approach Camp warns of, they typically trigger one of three unproductive results: fight, flight, or compromise.

True negotiation offers freedom

South African politician and anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela was a master negotiator who famously said, “Only free men can negotiate; prisoners cannot enter into contracts.” Without the sense of freedom found in the right to veto, those engaged in negotiations can feel like they are being backed into a corner. When that occurs, it is only natural to push back with an instinctual “fight” response.

“Freedom and the right to veto are inseparable, and to deny one is to deny the other,” Camp warns. “In the absence of the right to veto, conflicts and fights often take the place of negotiations.”

Fights often erupt in negotiations because of the emotional component they involve. On the front end of a negotiation, a wide variety of emotions — fear, excitement, frustration, nervousness — can crowd out logical thinking. Once a participant utters “no,” however, thinking can shift from emotions to intellect.

“When people are negotiating, they tend to fear making a bad decision,” Camp explains. “Once a decision is made, the transition to logic and intellect begins. Only then can they justify a decision. Giving participants the right to veto shifts the negotiation to a more neutral state.”

True negotiation builds agreements

“Flight” is the second response that often results from misguided negotiations. It occurs when one party exercises its right to veto without even attempting to build an agreement.

“Flight is a refusal to engage,” Camp says. “It is most often seen in parties that feel they have no ‘leverage’ or ‘power’ in the process. They either assume the other side won’t accept their proposal, or they don’t feel empowered or confident enough to deliver a ‘no.’”

Avoiding the flight response requires understanding how negotiations can move to and through a “no” to build an agreement, though achieving this can sometimes require some coaxing. Responding to a “no” with a request for an explanation can provide the understanding needed to re-engage and continue building toward an agreement.

“Strong agreements depend on transparency,” Camp shares. “The decisions you’re after can be unreliable if you can’t see the motivations behind them.”

True negotiation doesn’t require compromise

Many people enter a negotiation assuming a compromise is a necessary part of success, but the truth is that the best solution for both parties may not require compromise. Starting with that as the goal creates false expectations.

“Compromise is the poison pill predatory negotiators demand,” Camp says. “They label you a bad partner if you refuse to give them what they want, but they seldom offer you something in return for bending to their needs. The better alternative to compromise is discovering together the real pain involved and the solution that can address it.”

Negotiation is an essential and often misunderstood business skill. Approaching it in a way that triggers fight, flight, or compromise rarely delivers the best results. Rather, business leaders should seek to guide negotiations in a way that allows for vetoes, builds agreements, and values solutions over compromise.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Roger Farahmand’s Guide to Managing Mental Health During Life Transitions

Next Post

8 Powerful Financial Tips for Private Equity Firms

Kyle Matthews

Kyle Matthews

The idea of The American Reporter landed this businesswoman to the digital avenue. Kyle brought life to this idea and rendered all that was necessary to create an interactive and attractive platform for the readers. Apart from managing the platform, she also contributes her expertise in business niche.

Related Posts

Tec-Do Integrates Seedance 2.0 into Navos to Empower Global Video Marketing

Tec-Do Integrates Seedance 2.0 into Navos to Empower Global Video Marketing

by Richard Brown
May 30, 2026
0

In today's globalized digital marketing arena, high-conversion short videos have become an indispensable core medium for multinational brands, cross-border e-commerce...

Why Davis Householder Believes Deal Structure Matters More Than Headline Price

Why Davis Householder Believes Deal Structure Matters More Than Headline Price

by Richard Brown
May 27, 2026
0

Maximizing value is a primary goal for Davis Householder, Managing Director of MycoManagement, when working with financial advisory practices to...

ATMInvestors.com Bets Big on America’s Cash Economy With Massive Multi-Million Dollar Acquisition Push

ATMInvestors.com Bets Big on America’s Cash Economy With Massive Multi-Million Dollar Acquisition Push

by Richard Brown
May 27, 2026
0

Even as digital payments dominate headlines and fintech startups race to create cashless futures, one corner of the financial services...

Why Ceramic Balls Are Quietly Replacing Steel in High-Performance Bearings

Why Ceramic Balls Are Quietly Replacing Steel in High-Performance Bearings

by Jennifer Ross
May 26, 2026
0

There's a component inside the machines that keep factories running, aircraft flying, and wind turbines spinning that most engineers never...

Founder of Dovetail Software Responds to Australia’s CGT Overhaul

Founder of Dovetail Software Responds to Australia’s CGT Overhaul

by Jennifer Ross
May 24, 2026
0

An engineer evaluating a startup offer in 2027 will be doing the same mental arithmetic as every engineer before them:...

Next Post
8 Powerful Financial Tips for Private Equity Firms

8 Powerful Financial Tips for Private Equity Firms

Sweepstake Casinos – The Latest iGaming Innovation

Sweepstakes Casino vs. Social Casinos: What's the Main Difference?

Latest News

How Miller Street Dance Academy Turned Philanthropy Into A Core Part of Its Curriculum

How Miller Street Dance Academy Turned Philanthropy Into A Core Part of Its Curriculum

June 2, 2026

Tec-Do Integrates Seedance 2.0 into Navos to Empower Global Video Marketing

May 30, 2026

Holly DeNeve: Why Composure in the Courtroom Can Change a Child’s Future

May 30, 2026

Gregory Serdahl: Leading Mission-Driven Organizations and Meeting the Needs of Underserved Communities

May 30, 2026

Why Davis Householder Believes Deal Structure Matters More Than Headline Price

May 27, 2026

Expert On: Do Methylfolate Supplements Improve Health?

May 27, 2026

OMARA Brings a Modern Approach to Gut Health and Daily Wellness

May 27, 2026

ATMInvestors.com Bets Big on America’s Cash Economy With Massive Multi-Million Dollar Acquisition Push

May 27, 2026

Michael Piri is Rethinking “Good Outcomes” in Immigration and Injury Cases

May 27, 2026

Why Ceramic Balls Are Quietly Replacing Steel in High-Performance Bearings

May 26, 2026

Founder of Dovetail Software Responds to Australia’s CGT Overhaul

May 24, 2026

From Research to Reality: The Rise of Targeted Treatments for Blood Cancers

May 23, 2026
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Use of Cookies

© 2019 - The American Reporter

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Use of Cookies

© 2019 - The American Reporter

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.