Redundancy of information in negotiations
a strategic or unintentional communicative technique, in which the amount of information transmitted consciously or unconsciously exceeds the minimum necessary to achieve the current goal. Simply put, it is the provision of more data, details, arguments, or context than is actually required to understand the essence of a proposal or position. This phenomenon has two fundamentally different sides: negative (redundancy of information as a problem) and positive (redundancy of information as a tool of negotiations).
You May Also Like
Prev
Next