I have some persuasive advice for you – Bite
your lip and stay silent for a while. Normally when I talk about persuasion I
offer up ways to proactively connect on the six principles of influence. But
sometimes silence is golden because quite often less is more. Allow me to ask
you a few questions to drive home why this is the case.
When will people appreciate your advice most?
When they ask for it.
When do people appreciate your “gifts” most?
When they want them.
So why do we keep offering advice and giving gifts to people before they ask?
So why do we keep offering advice and giving gifts to people before they ask?
There is a time and place for offering up
help, sharing advice and giving gifts. Initiating on each of these engages the
principle of reciprocity because quite often the other person will feel some
obligation to give back to you. However, there are times when they’ll
appreciate what you have to offer even more. That time is when they seek you
out and ask for it. I’ve noticed this much more as of late at work and
home.
Since my daughter Abigail was a toddler I’ve
always made it a priority to spend time with her. For many years it was a
father-daughter group through the YMCA known as Indian Princess. Next it was
taekwondo for about five years. More recently it’s been time every weekend at
coffee shops. I was the initiator with all of these.
When we stopped going to taekwondo it was a
combination of her losing interesting plus being busy with high school and an
after school job. A while ago she approached me about starting back up with
taekwondo. Initially I said no because of my training-related travel, her work
schedule and I just didn’t think she’d be dedicated enough to make it several
times a week. More time passed and I still resisted which made her want it even
more. That’s scarcity in action because the less available something is the
more we tend to want it.
I finally relented and told her when summer
rolls around and she’s on break and my travel lightens up that we’ll join taekwondo for the
summer to see how it goes. Do you think she’ll be more into it and appreciate
it more because she had to wait and pursue me on it? You bet!
Another example happened recently. Abigail
shared a string of texts she had with a boy. I had some strong opinions about
the “conversation” as I listened but I didn’t offer up any thoughts. I kept
reminding myself she’s an adult (she turned 18 years old in December) and can
handle herself. Finally she asked my opinion but I didn’t say anything so she
asked again. She could see I was thinking and was curious. I knew at that point
she’d value what I had to say far more than if I just offered up my opinion
unprompted.
I’ve also noticed the same phenomenon at work.
Over the years I’ve established expertise in several areas but I try to hold
back until someone wants what I have. This goes for my training, coaching and
consulting. When someone seeks me out, they’ll value what I can offer much
more.
Here are a few keys to help make this approach
more effective.
1. Establish your expertise and trustworthiness. Both
of these elements will add to your authority and make people rely on your wisdom
even more. If you don’t have expertise, at least in business, there’s no real reason
people will seek you out. On the flip side, if you’re not trustworthy then it
won’t matter how smart you are. You need both!
2. Start by giving. Even if you have expertise
people may be unaware of that fact. When you start by giving, you show what you’re
capable of and engage reciprocity. Doing this helps establish a relationship
which will make others feel more comfortable approaching you down the road.
3. Withhold a little bit. As noted earlier,
people want more of what they can have less of. That’s scarcity. If you
constantly offer up advice without being asked or make yourself available 24x7
then you’re missing the chance to leverage scarcity.
So next time you’re tempted to jump in with
your two cents, bite your lip and remember, quite often, less is more. Give it
a try and let me know what you notice about others’ response to you.
Brian Ahearn, CMCT®
Chief Influence Officer
Chief Influence Officer
influencePEOPLE
Helping You Learn to Hear “Yes”.
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.


Tell you what I think, Brian...ah, nevermind.
ReplyDeleteBill B
Bill,
DeleteI appreciate...well, you know.
Thanks for another interesting idea + idea to practice!
ReplyDeleteI'll be keeping this in mind going forward.
Glad to see you liked it. Let me know how it works as you implement the idea.
Delete