BATNA (Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement) Value Estimator

Estimate the net present value of your best alternative option outside of a negotiation. Compare it against any proposed deal to determine your walk-away threshold.

Fill in the fields above and click Calculate.

Formula

Step 1 — Net Alternative Value:
Net Value = Gross Alternative Value − Costs to Pursue Alternative

Step 2 — Probability-Weighted Expected Value:
Expected Value = Net Value × (Probability of Success / 100)

Step 3 — Present Value (monthly discounting):
PV = Expected Value / (1 + rannual/12)t
where t = months to realise the alternative.

Step 4 — Risk-Adjusted BATNA Value:
BATNA Value = PV × (1 − Risk Adjustment / 100)

Walk-Away Rule: Reject any negotiated deal offering less than the BATNA Value.

Assumptions & References

  • BATNA concept introduced by Fisher & Ury in Getting to Yes (1981, Harvard Negotiation Project).
  • All monetary values are in the same currency and nominal terms.
  • Discounting uses monthly compounding: (1 + r/12)^t, consistent with standard time-value-of-money practice.
  • Probability of success is a subjective estimate; use historical data or expert judgment where available.
  • Risk Adjustment (0–50%) captures residual uncertainty not already reflected in the probability estimate (e.g., execution risk, market volatility).
  • Costs should include all direct and indirect costs: legal, transition, opportunity, and search costs.
  • The BATNA Value represents the minimum acceptable value of a negotiated agreement — any deal above this threshold creates positive surplus over the alternative.
  • This tool does not account for non-monetary factors (relationships, reputation, strategic value) which may shift the effective walk-away point.
  • Reference: Lax, D.A. & Sebenius, J.K. (1986). The Manager as Negotiator. Free Press.

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