Mindful NEGOtiation: Becoming More Aware in the Moment, Conquering Your Ego and Getting Everyone What They Really Want
Mindful NEGOtiation reframes negotiation not as a contest of tactics, but as a practice of awareness. The book begins with a simple yet unsettling premise: most negotiations fail not because of poor strategy, but because the ego speaks before awareness does.
Unlike conventional negotiation books that emphasize leverage, positioning, and persuasion, this work draws attention to the inner dynamics unfolding moment by moment at the table. Negotiation is portrayed as a series of micro-moments where emotions, instincts, and identity quietly shape outcomes. When negotiators fail to notice this, they react defensively, seek validation, or cling to control, often at the expense of long-term value.
At the heart of the book is the idea of mastering the ego. The ego is not treated as an enemy to be eliminated, but as a primitive protective mechanism. When challenged, it rushes to defend status and self-image. In negotiation, this impulse leads people to speak too quickly, concede too soon, or fight for symbolic wins that undermine the larger agreement.
Mindfulness here is not presented as a spiritual abstraction. It is framed as a strategic capability: the ability to recognize emotional triggers as they arise, pause automatic reactions, and respond with intention. With this awareness, negotiators begin to hear what the other side truly wants, not just what they are demanding on the surface.
The book also offers a subtle but powerful redefinition of success. Winning is no longer about forcing concessions, but about reaching outcomes that all parties can accept without resentment or loss of dignity. When the ego quiets down, space emerges for creativity, trust, and solutions that go beyond zero-sum thinking.
Mindful NEGOtiation speaks most directly to experienced leaders, consultants, and senior negotiators who have learned that technique alone is insufficient. It is a book for a more mature stage of negotiation, when the central question shifts from how to win, to how to achieve what truly matters without losing oneself in the process.


