The Secrets of Persuasion
A
Our mother may have told you the secret to getting what you ask for was to say please. The reality is rather more surprising. Adam Dudding talks to a psychologist who has made a lifeβs work from the science of persuasion. Some scientists peer at things through high-powered microscopes. Others goad rats through mazes or mix bubbling fluids in glass beakers. Robert Cialdini, for his part, does curious things with towels and believes that by doing so he is discovering important insights into how society works.
B
Cialdiniβs towel experiments (more of them later), are part of his research into how we persuade others to say yes. He wants to know why some people have a knack for bending the will of others, be it a telephone cold-caller talking to you about timeshares, or a parent whose children are compliant even without threats of extreme violence. While heβs anxious not to be seen as the man whoβs written the bible for snake-oil salesmen, for decades the Arizona State University social psychology professor has been creating systems for the principles and methods of persuasion and writing bestsellers about them. Some people seem to be born with the skills; Cialdiniβs claim is that by applying a little science, even those of us who arenβt should be able to get our own way more often. βAll my life Iβve been an easy mark for the blandishment of salespeople and fundraisers and Iβd always wondered why they could get me to buy things I didnβt want and give to causes I hadnβt heard of,β says Cialdini on the phone from London, where his is plugging his latest book.
C
He found that laboratory experiments on the psychology of persuasion were telling only part of the story, so he began to research influence in the real world, enrolling in sales-training programmes: βI learnt how to sell automobiles from a lot, how to sell insurance from an office, how to sell encyclopedias door to door.β He concluded there were six general βprinciples of influenceβ and has since put them to the test under slightly more scientific conditions. Most recently, that has meant messing about with towels. Many hotels leave a little card in each bathroom asking guests to reuse towels and thus conserve water and electricity and reduce pollution. Cialdini and his colleagues wanted to test the relative effectiveness of different words on those cards. Would guests be motivated to co-operate simply because it would help save the planet, or were other factors more compelling? To test this, the researchers changed the cardβs message from an environmental one to the simple (and truthful) statement that the majority of guests at the hotel had reused their towel at least once. Guests given this message were 26% more likely to reuse their towels than those given the old message. In Cialdiniβs book βYes! 50 Secrets from the Science of Persuasionβ, co-written with another social scientist and a business consultant, he explains that guests were responding to the persuasive force of βsocial proofβ, the idea that our decisions are strongly influenced by what we believe other people like us are doing.
D
So much for towels. Cialdini has also learnt a lot from confectionery. Yes! Cites the work of New Jersey behavioural scientist David Strohmetz, who wanted to see how restaurant patrons would respond to ridiculously small favour from their food server, in the form of after-dinner chocolate for each diner. The secret, it seems, is in how you give the chocolate. When the chocolates arrived in a heap with the bill, tips went up a miserly 3% compared to when no chocolate was given. But when the chocolates were dropped individually in front of each diner, tips went up 14%. The scientific breakthrough, though, came when the waitress gave each diner one chocolate, headed away from the table then doubled back to give them one more each as if such generosity had only just occurred to her. Tips went up 23%. This is βreciprocityβ in action: we want to return favours done to us, often without bothering to calculate the relative value of what is being received and given.
E
Geeling Ng, operations manager at Aucklandβs Soul Bar, says sheβs never heard of Kiwi waiting staff using such a cynical trick, not least because New Zealand tipping culture is so different from that of the US: βIf you did that in New Zealand, as diners were leaving theyβd say βcan we have some more?β β But she certainly understands the general principle of reciprocity. The way to a dinerβs heart is βto give them something theyβre not expecting in the way of service. It might be something as small as leaving a mint on their plate, or it might be remembering that last time they were in they wanted their water with no ice and no lemon. βIn America, it would translate into an instant tip. In New Zealand, it translates into a huge smile and thanks to you.β And no doubt, return visits.
THE FIVE PRINCIPLES OF PERSUASION
F
Reciprocity: People want to give back to those who have given to them. The trick here is to get in first. Thatβs why charities put a crummy pen inside a mailout, and why smiling women in supermarkets hand out dollops of free food. Scarcity: People want more of things they can have less of. Advertisers ruthlessly exploit scarcity (βlimit four per customerβ, βsale must end soonβ), and Cialdini suggests parents do too: βKids want things that are less available, so say βthis is an unusual opportunity; you can only have this for a certain timeβ.β
G
Authority: We trust people who know what theyβre talking about. So inform people honestly of your credentials before you set out to influence them. βYouβd be surprised how many people fail to do that,β says Cialdini. βThey feel itβs impolite to talk about their expertise.β In one study, therapists whose patients wouldnβt do their exercises were advised to display their qualification certificates prominently. They did and experienced an immediate leap in patient compliance.
H
Commitment/consistency: We want to act in a way that is consistent with the commitments we have already made. Exploit this to get a higher sign-up rate when soliciting charitable donations. First, ask workmates if they think they will sponsor you on your egg-and-spoon marathon. Later, return with the sponsorship form to those who said yes and remind them of their earlier commitment.
I
Linking: We say yes more often to people we like. Obvious enough, but reasons for βlinkingβ can be weird. In one study, people were sent survey forms and asked to return them to a named researcher. When the researcher gave a fake name resembling that of the subject (eg, Cynthia Johnson is sent a survey by βCindy Johansenβ), surveys were twice as likely to be completed. We favour people who resemble us, even if the resemblance is as minor as the sound of their name.
J
Social proof:Β We decide what to do by looking around to see what others just like us are doing. Useful for parents, says Cialdini. βFind groups of children who are behaving in a way that you would like your child to, because the child looks to the side, rather than at you.β More perniciously, social proof is the force underpinning the competitive materialism of βkeeping up with the Jonesesβ
Questions 1-4
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
1 . The main purpose of Cialdiniβs research of writing is to
A explain the reason way researcher should investigate in person
B explore the secret that why some people become the famous salesperson
C help people to sale products
D prove maybe there is a science in the psychology of persuasion
2. Which of the statement is CORRECT according to Cialdiniβs research methodology
A he checked data in a lot of latest books
B he conducted this experiment in the laboratory
C he interviewed and contract with many salespeople
D he made lot phone calls collecting what he wants to know
3. Which of the following is CORRECT according to towel experiment in the passage?
A Different hotel guests act in a different response
B Most guests act by the idea of environment preservation
C more customers tend to cooperate as the message requires than simply act environmentally
D people tend to follow the hotelβs original message more
4. Which of the following is CORRECT according to the candy shop experiment in the passage?
A Presenting way affects dinerβs tips
B Regular customer gives tips more than irregulars
C People give tips only when offered chocolate
D Chocolate with bill got higher tips
Questions 5-8
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 5-8 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement is true
FALSE if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
5 TRUEFALSENOT GIVEN Robert Cialdini experienced βprinciples of influenceβ himself in realistic life.
6 TRUEFALSENOT GIVEN Principle of persuasion has different types in different countries.
7 TRUEFALSENOT GIVEN In New Zealand, people tend to give tips to attendants after being served chocolate.
8 TRUEFALSENOT GIVEN Elder generation of New Zealand is easily attracted by extra service of restaurants by the principle of reciprocity.
Questions 9-13
Use the information in the passage to match the category (listed A-E) with correct description below.
Write the appropriate letters A-E in boxes 9-13 on answer sheet.
NB You may use any letter more than once.
A Reciprocity of scarcity
B Authority
C previous comment
D Linking
E Social Proof
9 ABCDE Some expert may reveal qualification in front of clients.
10 ABCDE Parents tend to say something that other kids are doing the same.
11 ABCDE Advertisers ruthlessly exploit the limitation of chances.
12 ABCDE Use a familiar name in a survey.
13 ABCDE Ask colleagues to offer a helping hand