I recently watched a very interesting interview with Charles Duhigg, the author of The Power of Habit. I read the book several years ago and was fascinated by the subject matter and scientific research Duhigg shared throughout the book. Watching his interview renewed my interest in the subject and started me thinking about how habits and influence intersect.I’ve personally seen how forming good habits can be extremely beneficial. As a teenager I got in the habit of working out because I wanted to get in shape for football. The habit of weightlifting stayed with me because I enjoyed it and I eventually I added running to my fitness mix. For decades my days have consisted of getting up very early to read, then workout or run. For me that morning habit is as regular as eating breakfast or showering before work. Duhigg would call this a “keystone” habit because it positively affects other things I do. For example; in addition to being a little smarter and more fit, by the time I get to work I feel ready to tackle just about anything because of my morning routine.The great thing about habits is they remove the burden of thinking. That frees us up to devote energy to other items competing for our attention. If you pause for a moment to consider your habits you’ll probably realize almost all of them occur with little or no thought. When habits are good that’s wonderful. However, when habits are poor it can be tough to change them.As a persuader it’s important that you understand this because quite often you’re not looking to persuade someone into a one-time behavioral change. After all, you don’t want to have to persuade your child every day to do their homework do you? If you’re the boss at work you don’t want to have the same conversation over and over to influence an employee to show up on time, do you? Wouldn’t it be great if those behavioral changes took hold and were lasting? It’s my goal to help you learn how to Influence PEOPLE into lasting change.Let’s look at the example of trying to persuade an employee to show up to work on time. You could use every principle of influence in this effort.Liking – Appeal to the relationship you have with them and ask them to do a personal favor for you and start showing up on time.Reciprocity – Leverage something you’ve done for the person in the past by referencing it and asking for their help in return.Consensus – Let them know everyone else makes it to work on time so there’s no reason they shouldn’t also.Authority – While not always advisable, you can reference you’re the boss and this is the expectation. However, beware that playing on your positional authority can cause resentment and that usually doesn’t lead to lasting change.Consistency – After having some conversation about why they’re late so often ask them if they’ll commit to start showing up on time rather than telling them that’s what they need to do.Scarcity – There is probably a downside to continually showing up late – no bonus opportunity, no raise, possibly losing their job – so appealing to this potential loss is certainly an option.In The Power of Habit, Duhigg shares scientific research that every habit has three parts: a cue, the routine and a reward. The cue is the trigger that starts the routine and it’s almost always one of five things:A certain location (some people only smoke in bars)Time of day (morning prompts many to exercise)An emotional state (loneliness causes some to drink)Other people (someone who pushes your buttons)An action that immediately precedes the routine (this could be a song triggering memories).The reward can be many things – pleasure, pain avoidance, feeling better about one’s self, feeling a sense of control, etc. Remember, we all get something out of our habits, even those that appear self-destructive. In some cases your attempts to change someone’s behavior can be very difficult because old habits die hard. In fact, Duhigg suggests, based on research, that you never really get rid of old habits, you only replace or change them. This is why so many smokers gain weight when they try to quit because they replace their smoking routine with eating when their cues trigger them. In the case of the late employee, you know it’s possible for them to get to work on time because the vast majority of people do it every day, even those who might have more hectic and stressful home lives than your chronically late employee. So what are you to do?You can help them identify the triggers that tend to make them late. For some people time is like money – they’ll use up every last penny or every last minute no matter how much extra time or money they may have. So getting up a little earlier may not be the solution. Help the person establish a new cue that will allow them to get to work with at least 10 minutes to spare. That could be another alarm clock going off, the coffee maker brewing a cup of coffee for their drive in or something else that alerts the person it’s time to stop everything and head to the car. If it’s a spouse or kids that are part of the problem then the person needs to let them suffer their own consequences for getting up late, not coming to breakfast on time or whatever else it might be. That won’t be easy but if they don’t do that they’ll forever be a slave to other people’s behavior and they, not the others, will pay the cost.The principles of influence can certainly come into play when you have this conversation with the employee. The conversation turns from “You need to get to work on time” to “How can I help you figure out what you need to do in order to get to work on time?” The more principles you use in that conversation the more success you’re likely to have.
Brian Ahearn, CMCT® Chief Influence Officer influencePEOPLE Helping You Learn to Hear “Yes”.Cialdini “Influence” Series! Would you like to learn more about influence from the experts? Check out the Cialdini “Influence” Series featuring Cialdini Method Certified Trainers from around the world.
Motivation – Intrinsic, Extrinsic, It is All The Same, Right? Wrong…
The question of why people do things or perhaps why they do not has puzzled mankind for centuries. In the recent past psychologists have researched motivation and developed numerous models and theories to help explain why we do things, such as:
Instinct Theory of Motivation
people are motivated to behave in certain ways because they are evolutionary programmed to do so
Incentive Theory of Motivation
people are motivated to do things because of external rewards
Drive Theory of Motivation
people are motivated to take certain actions in order to reduce the internal tension that is caused by unmet needs
Arousal Theory of Motivation
people take certain actions to either decrease or increase levels of arousal
Humanistic Theory of Motivation
people have a strong cognitive reasons to perform various actions
In the Principles of Persuasion Workshop we focus on and teach persuaders it is important to understand the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation.
Intrinsic motivation is when we undertake a behaviour because it is internally rewarding. We undertake the task or behaviour because of who we are, what we think of ourselves, it makes us feel good, or because we want to. It is not done for attainment of any specific external reward.
Extrinsic motivation is when we undertake a behaviour because it is externally rewarding. We undertake the task or behaviour because doing so will earn us a reward or allow us to avoid punishment or loss.
Yeah, okay you say. So what?
Here is the so what. Advertisers and marketers use Scarcity as a means of triggering the extrinsic motivation for you take action. They highlight how much time you have left, that the product is running out or that you are in competition with others so you had better get it quick so you don’t miss out. Yes it is a motivator but is it more powerful than an intrinsic motivator?
Research suggests not. Intrinsic motivation is known to last longer than an extrinsic motivator. People have more initiative when driven to achieve, they are more satisfied and are well…more motivated to see the task or action through to completion.
With extrinsic motivators – once the reward or punishment is gone then usually so to is the desired behaviour. With intrinsic motivation it is not usually person or issue centric – for example, if people volunteer their time to help animals or people less fortunate than themselves, the sense of purpose or satisfaction does not diminish after saving one dog or working on one soup kitchen.
Therefore why do marketing and advertising campaigns use the extrinsic motivator so much more?
In my opinion people who continue to just focus on extrinsic motivators do so because they are lazy. Extrinsic motivators are easier.
You can easily show people what they stand to lose or use market forces to genuinely create Scarcity or the perception of it. The reason it works is because every organism on earth is bound by Scarcity, i.e. if we don’t have enough to live we die – it is an easy trump card to get people to take action.
But it is overdone. Yelling, screaming rug salesmen do not motivate me to go and buy a rug. All they do is lower the price point of rugs because they obviously have 50, 60, 70, 80% mark-up in the rug because every one of them is marking the price down every other week. The frequency and overuse of it is working against them, not for them.
Triggering intrinsic motivation is harder. It takes genuine interaction. It requires the asking of well constructed questions and the willingness to listen. Not just an ability to make statements or tell people what to do. The persuader needs to elicit a commitment from the person in order to trigger the motivation and then this becomes the driver to stay on track.
So the choice is yours – rely on the extrinsic and overuse Scarcity at your own peril. If you want to truly master the art of influence – learn to ask great questions and elicit commitments to trigger the unending power source within – the intrinsic motivator.
Source: Cherry, K Theories of Motivation; A Closer Look at Some Important Theories of Motivation (http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologytopics/tp/theories-of-motivation.htm)
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Don’t Ask, Don’t Sell
One of the biggest reasons salespeople fail to make the sale is simply because they don’t ask for it. It’s easy to tell someone all about your company, product or service. After all, a good salesperson will know about these things backwards and forwards. However, asking for the sale (a.k.a. “closing the sale”) can be scary because of the fear of rejection.Some of the biggest regrets people have are not when they stepped out and failed but when they failed to step out. When we don’t take a chance we’re often haunted by what might have been and ask ourselves, “What if…?”Studies show people who ask for favors often underestimate the number of people who would be willing to help. In fact, they underestimate it by a lot! In one study, when asked how may strangers they’d have to ask to walk them a few blocks to a location they’ve been unable to find on a college campus, most people assumed they’d have to ask seven or more strangers before one person would take the time necessary to help. However, when they actually asked for help, the number of people they had to approach was only two or three before they got the help they needed. If you knew people would most likely respond positively to you twice as often as you thought they would, you’d probably have a lot more confidence to ask.Having been a consumer all my life and teaching sales for the past 20 years, I can tell you most salespeople fail to ask for the sale. They might fear being seen as too pushy or believe the propsective customer can sort out all the product features, weigh the benefits against the cost, and make a decision that’s in their best interest.But here’s the problem – as consumers, when we’re making purchases sometimes we’re overwhelmed by all the choices and price points. And the more money we’re about to spend the scarier it can be because we want to make sure we make the best choice. We want to avoid “buyer’s remorse.” A salesperson can alleviate much of that anxiety throughout the sales process but in the end the salesperson still needs to ask for the sale.One way to lessen the fear and increase the odds of hearing “Yes” is to learn up front exactly what the customer is looking for. If the salesperson can meet the customer’s requirements, then simply asking the following should work: “If we can get you A, B and C at a fair price, would you seriously consider buying from us?” Most people will agree to that; then it’s up to the salesperson to show their product or service has all the required features. This is known as “the up-front close” in sales circles.The reason this approach can be so effective is because the principle of consistency comes into play. This principle of influence tells us people generally live up to their word because they feel a little bad about themselves when they don’t. If someone says they’ll strongly consider you, your company or your product/service, then odds are they will if you can deliver what you said you would. Once the salesperson has asked the right questions up front and then clearly shows how their offering meets the requirements it becomes much easier and more comfortable to take the next step and ask for the sale. It’s like dating. Wasn’t it easier to ask for a date when you knew beforehand the other person was interested in you?Here’s my persuasion advice. You don’t have to live with the regret of what might have been. Remember, people are more likely to say “Yes” than you probably think. If you use the up-front close the odds that a customer will say “Yes” are significantly better. So remember – Don’t ask, don’t sell.
Brian Ahearn, CMCT® Chief Influence Officer influencePEOPLE Helping You Learn to Hear “Yes”.Cialdini “Influence” Series! Would you like to learn more about influence from the experts? Check out the Cialdini “Influence” Series featuring Cialdini Method Certified Trainers from around the world.
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