Douglas Stone is a Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School and
a founder of Triad Consulting Group (www.triadconsultinggroup.com).
He has worked with a wide range of organizations, corporations, and
non-profits, and lectured at Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Pixar.
Stone has worked with journalists, educators, doctors, diplomats,
and political leaders in South Africa, Kashmir, and the Middle
East, and in Geneva with the World Health Organization and UN-AIDS.
He has trained senior political appointees at the White House and
leaders at the U.S. Departments of Justice and State, and the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. His articles have appeared in many
publications including the New York Times, the Harvard Business
Review, and Real Simple. He is a graduate of Harvard Law School,
where for many years he served as Associate Director of the Harvard
Negotiation Project. He is coauthor along with Sheila Heen of
Thanks for the Feedback: The Science and Art of Receiving Feedback
Well (Even When It Is Off Base, Unfair, Poorly Delivered, and
Frankly, You’re Not in the Mood) (Viking, 2014). He can be reached
at dstone@post.harvard.edu.
Bruce Patton is Cofounder and Distinguished Fellow of the
Harvard Negotiation Project (HNP) and a founder and partner
emeritus of Vantage Partners, LLC (www.vantagepartners.com), where
his clients included many of the world’s largest corporations.
Working with Roger Fisher, Patton pioneered the teaching of
negotiation at Harvard Law School, where he has taught since 1981.
In the public arena he helped to structure the resolution of the
1980 U.S.-Iranian hostage conflict (working at the behest of both
governments); worked with Nobel Prize winner Oscar Arias to make
his Central American Peace Plan self-implementing; worked with all
parties in South Africa to structure and train mediators for the
constitutional process that ended apartheid; and works today to
build a strong, functional, and representative Congress and a
resilient America as part of the Rebuild Congress Initiative
(sponsored by HNP and Issue One). A graduate of Harvard College and
Harvard Law School, Patton is coauthor with Roger Fisher and
William Ury of the perennially bestselling Getting to YES:
Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In (Penguin, 1981, 1991,
2011). He can be reached at bpatton@post.harvard.edu.
Sheila Heen is the Thaddeus R. Beal Professor of Practice at
Harvard Law School, a Deputy Director of the Harvard Negotiation
Project, and a founder of Triad Consulting Group
(triadconsultinggroup.com). Heen often works with executive teams
to engage conflict productively, repair working relationships, and
implement change in complex organizations. She has consulted to the
New England Organ Bank, the Singapore Supreme Court, Greek and
Turkish Cypriots, the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation in Barrow,
Alaska, and theologians struggling with disagreement over the
nature of truth and God. Heen has published articles in The New
York Times and the Harvard Business Review and appeared on Oprah,
CNBC's Power Lunch, NPR, the Tim Ferris Show, and Shane Parrish's
The Knowledge Project. She is coauthor along with Douglas Stone of
the New York Times bestseller Thanks for the Feedback. A graduate
of Harvard Law School, she is schooled in negotiation daily by her
three children. She can be reached at sheen@law.harvard.edu.
“Does this book deliver on its promise of an effective way through
sticky situations, whether ‘with your babysitter or your biggest
client’? It does.”
—The New York Times
“These talented communicators blend a daunting array of disciplines
into highly readable and practical advice.”
—Booklist
“I’m on my third reading. Half the pages are dog-eared. This is a
mind-bogglingly powerful book. For life.”
—Tom Peters
“A user-friendly guide to mastering the talks we dread . . . a
keeper.”
—Fast Company
“Emotional intelligence applied to life’s toughest moments.”
—Daniel Goleman, bestselling author of Working with Emotional
Intelligence
“The only people who shouldn’t read Difficult Conversations are
those who never work with people, anywhere.”
—Peter M. Senge, bestselling author of The Fifth Discipline
“How do you confront your ex-spouse who’s late picking up the kids?
How do you tell a client their project took longer than expected
and the bill is twice as high? How do you say ‘I’m sorry’? Start by
picking up Difficult Conversations.”
—Citizen
“Difficult Conversations will be appreciated by readers who wish to
improve oral communication in all aspects of their daily
lives.”
—Library Journal
“Stone, Patton, and Heen illustrate their points with anecdotes,
scripted conversations and familiar examples in a clear,
easy-to-browse format.”
—Publishers Weekly
“The central insights of Difficult Conversations so resonate with
common sense that it is easy to overlook just how remarkable of a
book it is . . . a must-read.”
—Harvard Negotiation Law Review
“Examples more clear-headed and advice more precise than we’ve seen
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—Dallas Morning News
“Stone, Patton, and Heen have written an extremely clear and
unpretentious exposition of how to develop effective communication
skills and a guide to achieving openness and constructive outcomes
in dialogue . . . this book is, and probably for some time to come
will be definitive.”
—Southern Communication Journal
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