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The Power of a Positive No

How to Say No and Still Get to Yes

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
How to Say No and Still Get to Yes
No is perhaps the most important and certainly the most powerful word in the language. Every day we find ourselves in situations where we need to say No. But as we all know, the wrong No can also destroy what we most value by alienating and angering people. That’s why saying No the right way is crucial. The secret to saying No without destroying relationships lies in the art of the Positive No, a proven technique that anyone can learn.
The Power of a Positive No offers concrete advice and practical examples for saying No in virtually any situation. A Positive No has the power to profoundly transform our lives by enabling us to say Yes to what counts–our own needs, values, and priorities. Understood this way, No is the new Yes. And the Positive No may be the most valuable life skill you’ll ever learn!
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The third in Ury's acclaimed series on negotiation is a powerful text for anyone who deals with interpersonal communication. In truth, everyone can benefit from listening since all of us negotiate day to day. As narrator, Ury imbues his message with authority. His voice and cadence clearly demonstrate some of his power to persuade. The listener can learn almost as much from the way Ury uses his voice as from the lessons themselves. The work can certainly stand alone. You need not have listened to GETTING TO YES or GETTING PAST NO, the other two books in this seriesâ but maybe you should. M.C. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 1, 2007
      Twenty-five years after the publication of the bestselling Getting to Yes
      , Ury addresses the other side of the coin, but his version of "No" is not a simple rejection. "A Positive No begins with Yes and ends with Yes," he says, because it defines the nay-sayer's self-interests and paves the way for a continued relationship. Ury delineates this "Yes! No. Yes?" pattern recursively, so that each step is itself another three-part process. In addition to drawing on his own experiences as a negotiator for conflicts in countries like Chechnya and Venezuela, and the historical examples of activists like Rosa Parks, Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi, he shows how his principles can be used in the home and the workplace. He even throws in a few literary precedents, citing Melville's Bartleby the Scrivener
      , whose repetition of the phrase "I would prefer not to" is cited as a "simple and admirable" method of polite refusal. Some of Ury's advice, like describing how another's actions make you feel rather than attacking the action, may strike the more cynical minded as touchy-feely, but his reminders to consider the other person's perspective while asserting your own position create a clear, unambiguous path to win-win situations.

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  • English

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