Michael A. Wheeler has taught negotiation at Harvard Business School in its MBA program, executive courses, and, more recently, its digital learning platform HBX. His work focuses on negotiation pedagogy, improvisation in complex dynamic processes, ethics and moral decisionmaking, and a range of alternative dispute resolution processes. For twenty years he was the Editor in Chief of Negotiation Journal, published by the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School. As a LinkedIn Influencer, he has more than 200,000 followers. As a negotiation advisor, Wheeler has counseled corporate clients, trade organizations, and government agencies on issues in the United States and abroad.
Wheeler has taught at Harvard Business School since 1993—first as a Visiting Professor, and then as a Professor of Management. He was awarded a chair—endowed by the MBA Class of 1952 —which he held until 2013. Since then he has continued his teaching at HBS as a Senior Fellow. He previously served as faculty chair of the school's first-year MBA program, where he taught its required course on negotiation. He has also been a visiting Professor at Harvard Law School, Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Politecnico di Torino, and University of Colorado Law School. One of Wheeler's areas of focus is negotiation pedagogy. In 2005 he delivered the keynote address at an international conference in Paris called "New Trends in Negotiation Teaching: Toward a Trans-Atlantic Network." Wheeler edited the essay collection Teaching Negotiation: Ideas and Innovation. He is currently co-director of the Pedagogy Initiative at the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School, and Senior Advisor for Teaching Innovation at the Consensus Building Institute. His teaching materials are used in business schools and professional programs throughout the United States and other countries. In February 2017, Harvard Business School's HBX distance learning platform launched Wheeler's online course Negotiation Mastery: Unlocking Value in the Real World. Wheeler also created the mobile app Negotiation 360, a self-assessment negotiation/best practices tool.
Editor
Wheeler was the Editor in Chief of Negotiation Journal from 1995 until 2015, when he took Emeritus status.
Publications
Books
Wheeler has written or co-written eleven books on negotiation topics. They include:
Art of Negotiation: How to Improvise Agreement in a Chaotic World
What's Fair: Ethics for Negotiators
Negotiation
Environmental Dispute Resolution
Art of Negotiation
Art of Negotiation: How to Improvise Agreement in a Chaotic World was the subject of interviews in the Washington Post and the Financial Times, and of reviews by Professor Leonard Riskin, World Economic Forum, and Publisher's Weekly, the last of which stated:
offers a clear-headed, creative approach to negotiation that is on a par with the canonical texts, Getting to Yes and You Can Negotiate Anything. Those titles suggest abandoning hardball tactics and turning every interaction into a negotiation. Wheeler, on the other hand, posits that the most important aspect of negotiation is improvisation and constant flexibility, acknowledging that each party goes into a negotiation without truly understanding the other person's position. Often, each party's real needs don't emerge until the negotiations are in progress. Wheeler discusses strategies for managing uncertainty and understanding the true extent to which preferences, needs, and relationships are constantly changing. He steers readers toward making wise decisions about whether or not to pursue a negotiation in the first place, conducting sufficient research, keeping their cool, and closing the deal. Wheeler's lucid, engaging voice is a major asset, and sample scripts help drive home his points.
Articles
Wheeler has written over 30 articles on negotiation and public policy issues for a wide range of academic journals and the popular publications, including:
"Negotiating with Emotion", Harvard Business Review, vol. 91, nos. 1–2 : 96–103.
"Crossing the Threshold: First Impressions in Psychoanalysis and Negotiation", Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies, vol. 5, no. 1 : 81–105.
"Sport Strikes: Let the Games Continue", New York Times,, Section F, 9.
"Trading the Poor: Intermunicipal Housing Negotiation in New Jersey", Harvard Negotiation Law Review, vol. 2 : 1–34.
"Negotiating NIMBYs: Learning from the Failure of the Massachusetts Siting Law," Yale Journal on Regulation, vol. 11, no. 2 : 241–291.
"Primaries and Opinion Polls," Atlantic Monthly.
Awards and honors
Robert F. Greenhill Award, awarded by the Harvard Business School faculty for contributions to the school's mission.
Best Negotiation Book of the Year, awarded by the International Institute for Conflict Prevention & Resolution-Alternative Dispute Resolution, for Environmental Dispute Resolution.
Other appointments
International Steering Committee of Afghanistan Center for Dispute Resolution
Advisory Council of the Moscow-based Center for Mediation and Law
Advisory Council of the ADR Center in Rome
Advisory Board of the Central European Review of Economics and Management