Thursday, May 21, 2020
Resistance is Futile But So is Persuasion
Resistance is Futile â" But So is Persuasion Daniel Pink, author is a bit of a subversive genius. Heâs written some of my favorite business books, including Free Agent Nation and To Sell is Human. He has a way of looking at and writing about human behavior that makes you think twice about your assumptions. And now, heâs given me the keys to the kingdom (and by extension, you, gentle reader) by giving me a surefire way to persuade anyone to do something I need done. First a step back. Pinkâs premise for To Sell is Human is that âYes, one in nine Americans works in sales. But so do the other eight. Whether weâre employees pitching colleagues on a new idea, entrepreneurs enticing funders to invest, or parents and teachers cajoling children to study, we spend our days trying to move others. Like it or not, weâre all in sales now.â He reminds us in the book that no one actually persuades anyone to change behavior or take action based on the persuaderâs reasons. We canât be persuaded; we can only persuade ourselves. This makes intuitive sense. We donât buy a product to solve the salesmanâs problem; we buy to solve our own problem. Thatâs why effective sales people get inside their customerâs head to understand where the pain points are â" thatâs where they will be able to craft an argument that works. Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'ysn-9gfNSz12uZuObnBx8A',sig:'RZdYIdroZ-wcPf03EURHMLvlSYITW7RRP43DtLbJPrs=',w:'332px',h:'516px',items:'539793487',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); So Pink has developed a 2-question technique that he says will move the needle for anyone when you use it. Itâs the start of real persuasion if itâs used well. Letâs say you have a colleague who is consistently late with information needed for your monthly report. Youâve ask, cajoled, even threatened to ask your boss to intervene; nothing has worked. She says she intends to be more timely, but sheâs been late every month for the last year, and itâs apparent that sheâs just not motivated by timeliness or your intense need to deliver good work with less stress. When you call a meeting to discuss the issue one final time, you might try to explain your position and your pain points, but this time will probably not result in real change. So hereâs the first question Pink recommends you ask. âDebbie (your fictional colleague): On a scale of 1 to 10, how ready are you to change this pattern and get the information into the system on time so we can deliver the report on time without stress?â Debbie will pick a number that represents her readiness for change. Letâs say she picks 4. âIâd like to do better,â she says, âbut I have a crazy schedule, and I just canât get to it when you think I should.â Hereâs your next question, and this is a crucial moment, so deliver it well. âThanks for being honest with me, Debbie. You picked 4 on the scale of 1 â" 10. You could have picked a 1. Can you tell me why you didnât pick a lower number?â Cliffhanger: Read next weekâs post to find out how and why this works.
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