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Testimonial Joseph and Sandy Todd

Hello Scott,

Thank you so much for leading us to Mr. Colvin. We have spoken to him a few times in great length. He gave us a lot of suggestions. As for now, we are waiting on my next Dr.'s appointment which is next Thursday to see what the Dr. suggests. The PT I've been seeing thinks I need surgery. Before we heard back from you we met with two different attorney's and I was not happy at all with either one. One wanted us to sign immediately and the second one, we had a "conference call" with him in his office and we just left.

The one thing Joe and I have noticed about Florida, you can always tell the 'Northerner's" from the people down south. Mr. Colvin was so helpful, not pushy and he really suggested we wait until my next appointment and then call him if we wanted his help or more suggestions. One of the problems I may run into is "if" I have the surgery and of course it would be expensive it could use up all of the man's insurance {which is 100,000} and Joe and I have no personal health insurance to back up on so between the medical bills and the attorney fees we could exceed the amount of coverage and I would not get anything for compensation and also be out money for the surgery. But, on the other hand, being 43 years old I'm not sure how long I can work with my shoulder and neck this way, considering I will probably work forever.....

Again Scott, Thank you for your help and leading us to him, he seems like an excellent attorney. I will keep in touch.

Sandy Todd

 

 

Secrets of being a successful negotiator - Be nice

Plan first

Wednesday, December 2, 2009 7:00 am

By: J Scott Barratt
you'll never feel like you were over paid. The deals you make will feel satisfying because they fall within the parameters of your plan.

If negotiations reach an impasse or turn negative...

Use the "pondering" move. If you feel that you are about to blurt out words that you will regret, put your finger up to your mouth. To anyone else, it just looks like you are thinking. Follow that action with some deep breaths. Then switch the tape in your head from an insecure voice to one that is pumping positive mantras, such as, "you can handle this. You are not going to take it personally."

Ask, "What would you do if you were on my side of the table?" Getting the other party to see things through your eyes can help lift them out of an entrenched position. Hint: If the other party responds, "I'd take the deal I'm offering," probe further. Ask, "How do you think
that would benefit me?"

Change environments. Sometimes moving to a different location or discussion point can break negative momentum and create a new atmosphere for the negotiations.

Example: Once we were working out the details of a deal at the office of good tenant for a strip center. The offer was for a lease that that would have a fixed term of 5 years with rent near the average property in that area. We wanted a ten-year lease with a rent that was the highest in the area for our location. The tenant and I were deadlocked so I moved the negotiations from their offices to our social club. The congenial environment allowed each side to share their real needs and paved the way for a compromise that includes higher rent per square foot and added guarantees that protected the leasor's position within the overall center and granted additional options in the future acceptable to both parties.

Everyone won. The leasors got immediate reductions and additional long term security.
The owner got an "A" tenant for his center that attracted other tenants to his center.

Best way to finish up after the deal is made...

Lay the groundwork for a continuing relationship. Compliment the other party; on their negotiating skills that helped led to a fair deal for both of you. This type of negotiation has given PPS a continuing source of referrals from those clients we have worked with over the years.

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