Abstract

This study focuses on the intersection of power and gender in negotiations, which is seldom challenged in previous research. In an experiment with 72 negotiators, we consider issue authority as a proxy of power in negotiations and investigate how different power allocations affect the negotiation success. We learn that an increase in issue authority for one of the two parties does not necessarily lead to an increase in success. Especially, female negotiators rely on their negotiation power, rather than systematically improving mutual utilities. This article contributes to Emerson’s power-dependence theory, social role theory, role congruity theory, and gender role conflict theory by combining analyzing the impact of gender differences and power on the success. This study attempts to close the gap in the literature by focusing on the prospective function of gender role orientation in explaining gender differences in negotiation. The theoretical contribution is that females are not per se inferior in negotiations, but their performance decreases in scenarios of power asymmetries. On the contrary, unbalanced power decreases the likelihood of success. Negotiators cannot rely on a power advantage to increase their success.

Highlights

  • At the end of each year, negotiations between retailers and manufacturers set the course for the year

  • This research directly addresses the gap outlined by Schaerer et al [8], that the behavior in low power situations calls for more scholarly research

  • We present a comprehensive study about the shift of negotiation power in the context of an annual negotiation task and analyze the force of gender in three different power allocations

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Summary

Introduction

At the end of each year, negotiations between retailers and manufacturers set the course for the year They fix the conditions of their further cooperation and negotiate prices, advertising subsidy, shelf space, retroactive payments, sales promotion and the listing of new products [1,2]. We present a comprehensive study about the shift of negotiation power in the context of an annual negotiation task and analyze the force of gender in three different power allocations (balanced, high, low). Being high in power implies controlling relatively more resources, while being low in power implies having relatively less control over valued resources [8] It is a structural variable, a property of social relationships, and a psychological property of the individual [23]. Galinsky et al [23] suggest that power-induced action enhances the overall wealth that the powerful have already attained

Gender Differences
Negotiation Procedures
Data Collection
The Force of Power and Gender Differences on Negotiation Success
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions and Summary
Full Text
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