Post by Dia Darkwing Stryfe on Oct 30, 2009 23:01:49 GMT -5
SBA - Sactus Bellum Anarchos Negotiators
Negotiator's:
Negotiators have been used for many things throughout history. From talking down a hostage situation, to being the one's able to argue their way with the best of minds. They have the ability to see both sides of nearly any situation and account for what would occur on the winning side. They also have the means of being a smooth talker, being able to speak their way through and try to sway the outcome to better suit their needs.
Negotiating is the act of arranging or settling something by knowledgeably conferring and discussing. Starting a new business association, entering into a contract, buying, selling, merging, downsizing, labor/management matters and trade are just a few of many issues that are negotiated daily. Structured negotiations usually take one of two forms. Parties engage their own negotiators to help with their respective positions, or all parties agree on a neutral negotiator to ensure discussions remain relevant, cordial and timely.
Congregations, communities, customer groups and even families are examples of those who have successfully avoided awkward situations through structured negotiations.
The Negotiators follows the strictest possible code of ethics and confidentiality. Everything said in mediation is completely confidential and will not be revealed to anyone outside the mediation sessions. Facts and data obtained in mediation sessions will be destroyed at the end of mediation. The Negotiators will not testify in court on behalf of one party or the other and will, in fact, aggressively resist any subpoena to appear.
The Negotiators will not reveal its client list under any circumstances - not even as references to market its own services. The Negotiators will not publish or otherwise disclose testimonials or letters of reference.
In order to uphold unquestionable standards of integrity, The Negotiators reserves the right to decline new clients, or to refuse specific assignments from existing clients for reasons pertaining to potential conflicts of interest. In such cases we will be happy to refer you to our list of other excellent mediators, in whom we have the utmost confidence.
To protect its clients, mediators, facilitators, negotiators, writers and administrative support, The Negotiators does not publicly disclose names of permanent or contractual staff or their assignments. Client information is not shared among staff unless more than one person is working on the same assignment. Contact between The Negotiators and a client is always personal, privileged and confidential.
The Negotiators will not publicly confirm any involvement with its clients. The Negotiators engages only the best mediators, facilitators, negotiators and writers in their fields. The Negotiators does not "subcontract" to unproven or unknown talent to meet unexpected peak periods.
What they handle:
Mediations
Hostages PoWs and Captives Captured
Alliances
Treaties
Declarations of Wars
Negotiator's:
Negotiators have been used for many things throughout history. From talking down a hostage situation, to being the one's able to argue their way with the best of minds. They have the ability to see both sides of nearly any situation and account for what would occur on the winning side. They also have the means of being a smooth talker, being able to speak their way through and try to sway the outcome to better suit their needs.
Negotiating is the act of arranging or settling something by knowledgeably conferring and discussing. Starting a new business association, entering into a contract, buying, selling, merging, downsizing, labor/management matters and trade are just a few of many issues that are negotiated daily. Structured negotiations usually take one of two forms. Parties engage their own negotiators to help with their respective positions, or all parties agree on a neutral negotiator to ensure discussions remain relevant, cordial and timely.
Congregations, communities, customer groups and even families are examples of those who have successfully avoided awkward situations through structured negotiations.
The Negotiators follows the strictest possible code of ethics and confidentiality. Everything said in mediation is completely confidential and will not be revealed to anyone outside the mediation sessions. Facts and data obtained in mediation sessions will be destroyed at the end of mediation. The Negotiators will not testify in court on behalf of one party or the other and will, in fact, aggressively resist any subpoena to appear.
The Negotiators will not reveal its client list under any circumstances - not even as references to market its own services. The Negotiators will not publish or otherwise disclose testimonials or letters of reference.
In order to uphold unquestionable standards of integrity, The Negotiators reserves the right to decline new clients, or to refuse specific assignments from existing clients for reasons pertaining to potential conflicts of interest. In such cases we will be happy to refer you to our list of other excellent mediators, in whom we have the utmost confidence.
To protect its clients, mediators, facilitators, negotiators, writers and administrative support, The Negotiators does not publicly disclose names of permanent or contractual staff or their assignments. Client information is not shared among staff unless more than one person is working on the same assignment. Contact between The Negotiators and a client is always personal, privileged and confidential.
The Negotiators will not publicly confirm any involvement with its clients. The Negotiators engages only the best mediators, facilitators, negotiators and writers in their fields. The Negotiators does not "subcontract" to unproven or unknown talent to meet unexpected peak periods.
What they handle:
Mediations
Hostages PoWs and Captives Captured
Alliances
Treaties
Declarations of Wars