Journal Article
Is it advantageous to make the first offer and to do so ambitiously? Although initial studies suggested clear
advantages across cultures and contexts, recent findings have challenged the robustness of this first-mover
advantage. A preregistered meta-analysis of 374 effects from 90 studies (Study 1; N = 16,334) revealed three
beneficial effects of making the first offer: (a) a general first-mover advantage (g = 0.42, m = 80), (b) a positive
correlation between first-offer magnitude and agreement value (r = 0.62, g = 1.56, m = 53), and (c) an
advantage of ambitious (vs. moderate) first offers on agreement value (g = 1.14, m = 187). The meta-analysis
also identified two detrimental outcomes of ambitious first offers: (d) fewer deals (i.e., more impasses; g =
− 0.42, m = 13) and (e) worse subjective value experienced by recipients (g = − 0.40, m = 41). Two preregistered
experiments (Study 2a-2b; N = 2,121) replicated both the beneficial and detrimental meta-analytic effects and
simultaneously tested multiple psychological mechanisms driving these effects. Across the experiments, selective
accessibility drove the effect of first-offer magnitude on counteroffers, while anger drove the effects on impasses
and subjective value. Across both the meta-analysis and the experiments, negotiation complexity moderated both
the beneficial and detrimental effects of first offers; as the number and type of issues (i.e., complexity) increased,
the effects of first offers became smaller, and the mechanisms changed. Overall, the current meta-analysis and
experiments collectively illuminate the direction, size, psychological pathways, and boundaries of first-offer
effects in negotiations
Faculty
Professor of Organisational Behaviour