Skip to content
LMDSI
  • Home
  • Media Library
    • Videos
      • Discipline Series
      • Labor-Management Relations Series
      • Collective Bargaining Series
      • Absenteeism Series
      • Labor Arbitration Series
    • Books
  • About LMDSI
    • Recognized Experts
    • Video One
    • M. David Keefe
    • Peter D. Keefe
  • Contact

313-316: Closing the Deal


J. Richard Dempsey, S.J.
J. Richard Dempsey, S.J., Arbitrator, Prof. of Industrial Relations, Univ. of Detroit
Harold Bondy
Harold Bondy, Coordinator, Teamsters Joint Council 43
William Louwers
William Louwers, Dir. of Employee Relations, Blue Cross, Blue Shield of Michigan
Howard Coughlin
Howard Coughlin, former Pres., Office and Professional Employees Intl. Union, former Executive Committee Chairman of the American Arbitration Association
M. David Keefe
M. David Keefe, Labor Arbitrator, Founder of LMDSI
Program 313: Squeezing the Sponge Dry Highlights: Remaining unsettled “must demands” determine whether settlement can occur at the eleventh hour. Everything not included in the agreement is excluded. Check the list of all remaining open issues which can serve as quid pro quo for settlement. Raise pioneering ideas to test the other side’s reaction. Program 314: Closing the Deal Highlights: Eleventh Hour Considerations: Leave the table so that you can re-evaluate your position and gauge maximum retreats. Return to the table and use every skill of persuasion. Closing the deal at the eleventh hour requires special tactics. Impose a news blackout; Scale-down committees so they will work efficiently; Introduce a mediator; and Propose off-the-record trial balloons. Program 315: Writing the Language Highlights: Punctuation can critically affect the meaning of language; every word let in further determines the mutual rights of the Parties. Adjectives, adverbs and qualifying phrases modify nouns and verbs. Guideposts: Do not propose in the exact terms you want it drafted in. Do not draft the final language after ratification. Try to draft the final language just after tentative agreement. The author of the language will have ambiguities resolved against him/her; consider the other side write the language. Program 316: Summary Evaluations on Collective Bargaining Highlights: Collective Bargaining is a form of bartering, which occurs under the necessity to reach agreement. Never show weakness. The negotiator must be the sole spokesman. Be prepared; work for the best, be prepared for the worst. Don’t retain language that is meaningless. Know what you want; know what you can give up. Don’t be shocked by “sky-high” initial proposals. Listen to the other side. Think on your feet. No matter how favorable the agreement, how it is written is critical.
Format

Four lectures.

Length

52 Minutes

Presenters

Harold Bondy, Coordinator, Teamsters Joint Council 43
William Louwers, Dir. of Employee Relations, Blue Cross, Blue Shield of Michigan
Howard Coughlin, former Pres., Office and Professional Employees Intl. Union, former Executive Committee Chairman of the American Arbitration Association
M. David Keefe, Labor Arbitrator, Founder LMDSI

310-312: Traps and Pitfalls
401-1: Live Symposium on Absenteeism

LMDSI Media Library

Videos:
  • Discipline Series
  • Labor Arbitration Series
  • Collective Bargaining Series
  • Absenteeism Series
  • Labor-Management Relations Series
Books:
  • How to Successfully Conduct Labor Relations
  • Attendance at Work Controls
  • How to Make the Contract Work on a Steward-Foreman Level
  • Due Process & Procedure
  • How to Achieve Competitive Unit Cost of Manufacturing Through Productivity

Home

  • About LMDSI
    • Recognized Experts
    • Video One
    • M. David Keefe
    • Peter D. Keefe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact

Videos

  • Discipline Series
  • Labor Arbitration Series
  • Collective Bargaining Series
  • Absenteeism Series
  • Labor-Management Relations Series

Books

  • How to Successfully Conduct Labor Relations
  • How to Make the Contract Work on a Steward-Foreman Level
  • How to Achieve Competitive Unit Cost of Manufacturing Through Productivity
  • Attendance at Work Controls
  • Due Process & Procedure in Disciplinary Cases
 
Copyright 1978-2024 LMDSI
Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress