Winning a battle but losing the war: On the drawbacks of using the anchoring tactic in distributive negotiations

Journal Title: Judgment and Decision Making - Year 2014, Vol 9, Issue 6

Abstract

In two experiments, we explored the possible drawbacks of applying the anchoring tactic in a negotiation context. In Study 1, buyers who used the anchoring tactic made higher profits, but their counterparts thought their own results were worse than expected and thus were less willing to engage in future negotiations with them. Study 2 showed that using the anchoring tactic in a market decreased accumulated profits by increasing the rate of impasses and prolonging the negotiations. The implications of these findings are discussed.

Authors and Affiliations

Yossi Maaravi, Asya Pazy and Yoav Ganzach

Keywords

Related Articles

Rebate subsidies, matching subsidies and isolation effects

In a series of recent experiments (Davis, Millner and Reilly, 2005, Eckel and Grossman, 2003, 2005a-c, 2006), matching subsidies generate significantly higher charity receipts than do theoretically equivalent rebate sub...

Effects of ignorance and information on judgments and decisions

We compared Turkish and English students’ soccer forecasting for English soccer matches. Although the Turkish students knew very little about English soccer, they selected teams on the basis of familiarity with the team...

The Maximization Inventory

We present the Maximization Inventory, which consists of three separate scales: decision difficulty, alternative search, and satisficing. We show that the items of the Maximization Inventory have much better psychometric...

Using metacognitive cues to infer others’ thinking

Three studies tested whether people use cues about the way other people think—for example, whether others respond fast vs. slow—to infer what responses other people might give to reasoning problems. People who solve reas...

A simple remedy for overprecision in judgment

Overprecision is the most robust type of overconfidence. We present a new method that significantly reduces this bias and offers insight into its underlying cause. In three experiments, overprecision was significantly re...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP678150
  • DOI -
  • Views 104
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Yossi Maaravi, Asya Pazy and Yoav Ganzach (2014). Winning a battle but losing the war: On the drawbacks of using the anchoring tactic in distributive negotiations. Judgment and Decision Making, 9(6), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-678150