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Aprende Position Versus Need | Why Most Difficult Conversations Go Wrong
Communication Skills for Difficult Conversations

Position Versus Need

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The single most useful concept from negotiation research: the difference between position and need.

  • A position is what someone says they want;
  • A need is why they actually want it.

They are almost never the same thing.

The Orange

Two siblings fighting over an orange.

  • Position 1: "I want the orange."
  • Position 2: "No, I want the orange."

Looks like irreconcilable conflict.

Real needs underneath:

  • Sibling 1 wanted the juice for a recipe;
  • Sibling 2 wanted the peel for baking.

Compatible needs. Different positions. If they'd asked why instead of arguing what — both would have won completely.

Adult Conflicts Work The Same Way

At home. You and your partner fight about whether to visit your parents this weekend.

  • Position 1: "We have to go."
  • Position 2: "We can't."

Real needs underneath: one wants connection with family. The other wants rest. Compatible. Different weekend. Or different setup. Same fight, different planet.

At work. Your coworker wants a different project structure than you.

  • Position 1: "We need structure A."
  • Position 2: "We need structure B."

Real needs underneath: they need credit for their work. You need predictable timelines. Both can be solved without giving up on either.

The Magic Question

When someone takes a position you can't agree with, don't argue the position. Ask why.

"Help me understand what's important here for you."

This is the most useful question in difficult conversations. It moves both of you from positions, where you're stuck, to needs, where there's usually a way through.

This isn't soft. It's realistic. Two people locked at positions never get anywhere. Two people who understand each other's actual needs almost always find something workable.

The shift from arguing what to asking why is the difference between conversations that explode and conversations that resolve.

1. What is the key difference between a 'position' and a 'need' in a difficult conversation?

2. According to the 'Magic Question' section, what is the best way to move a difficult conversation from positions to needs?

question mark

What is the key difference between a 'position' and a 'need' in a difficult conversation?

Selecciona la respuesta correcta

question mark

According to the 'Magic Question' section, what is the best way to move a difficult conversation from positions to needs?

Selecciona la respuesta correcta

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