Lord777
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Start convincing small
On the eve of the 2000 US presidential election, sociologist Anthony Greenwald conducted an interesting experiment on potential voters. He called them at home and asked two questions. First, do they feel responsible for the fate of their country? Second: are they ready to come to the polls? As a result, at the polling stations where voters interviewed by Greenwald were registered, a high turnout was recorded - 86.7%. At the same time, on average in the country, only 61.5% came to vote.
This is how psychology explained the high turnout. At first, Greenwald asked about their sense of responsibility for their country. Of course, most of the respondents answered that yes, they feel responsible for the country, how could it be otherwise, since the opposite answer is socially disapproved. The next question logically followed from the previous one. And it is logical that, again, most people answered in the affirmative. After all, it would sound strange: a person feels responsibility for the country, but is not going to vote.
So, after the majority of the respondents publicly announced that they were going to vote, they motivated themselves to act in accordance with the obligations they had just assumed. That is, to act from the position of a responsible citizen, which Greenwald forced them to accept.
Be the first to do a favor
Every person, if he has at least some semblance of conscience, always feels obligated when he is rendered a service, help, or given a gift. Guided by this thesis, Professor Dennis Regan from Karolinska University conducted his experiment.
Two people were invited into the room under the pretext of assessing the quality of the paintings (yes, they found an excuse): one was a real test subject, and the second was an assistant to the test person. The experiment was carried out in two versions. In the first case, the assistant left the room for five minutes, and then returned with two cans of Coca-Cola: he took one for himself, and handed the second to the subject, thereby showing him an uninvited courtesy. In the second case, the assistant returned empty-handed.
Give the illusion that it's almost done
American psychologist Ran Kivets conducted an experiment with loyalty programs in coffee shops. The essence of such programs is to collect stickers on the card (one sticker for the purchase of one coffee). When there are ten of them, the card can be exchanged for free coffee.
Kivets divided the subjects into two groups. The first group was offered a blank card with a field for 10 stickers. The second group was given cards with space for 12 stickers, two of which had already been glued on.
As you can guess, in the second case, filling out the cards, and therefore buying coffee, went much more actively. Although in both cases it was necessary to paste 10 stickers.
Whenever you ask for a favor, remember to mention that the deed is almost done. “Look, I've already moved this piano to the door. It remains to take him out of the apartment, and then some miserable nine floors." The perfectionist who sits deep within the object of your manipulation will not be able to resist the desire to help you complete the task.
Use the herd feeling
As unpleasant as it sounds, a person tends to keep his mental activity to a minimum. It is much easier for him to rely on someone else's opinion, and even more so on the opinion of the majority, than to develop his own. This was used by John Darley of New York University and Bibb Latane of Columbia University when conducting their experiment to study the influence of the "effect of someone else's opinion" on people's behavior.
Several people were supposedly invited to the audience to pass the creative test, and there was only one subject, and all the rest were Darley and Latane's assistants. Smoke was blown into the audience right in the middle of testing. So, the reaction of the only subject to what was happening entirely depended on the behavior of the people around him: if everyone sat with stone faces, as if nothing was happening, then the subject also tried not to show it. If everyone panicked, he would panic too.
On the eve of the 2000 US presidential election, sociologist Anthony Greenwald conducted an interesting experiment on potential voters. He called them at home and asked two questions. First, do they feel responsible for the fate of their country? Second: are they ready to come to the polls? As a result, at the polling stations where voters interviewed by Greenwald were registered, a high turnout was recorded - 86.7%. At the same time, on average in the country, only 61.5% came to vote.
This is how psychology explained the high turnout. At first, Greenwald asked about their sense of responsibility for their country. Of course, most of the respondents answered that yes, they feel responsible for the country, how could it be otherwise, since the opposite answer is socially disapproved. The next question logically followed from the previous one. And it is logical that, again, most people answered in the affirmative. After all, it would sound strange: a person feels responsibility for the country, but is not going to vote.
So, after the majority of the respondents publicly announced that they were going to vote, they motivated themselves to act in accordance with the obligations they had just assumed. That is, to act from the position of a responsible citizen, which Greenwald forced them to accept.
Be the first to do a favor
Every person, if he has at least some semblance of conscience, always feels obligated when he is rendered a service, help, or given a gift. Guided by this thesis, Professor Dennis Regan from Karolinska University conducted his experiment.
Two people were invited into the room under the pretext of assessing the quality of the paintings (yes, they found an excuse): one was a real test subject, and the second was an assistant to the test person. The experiment was carried out in two versions. In the first case, the assistant left the room for five minutes, and then returned with two cans of Coca-Cola: he took one for himself, and handed the second to the subject, thereby showing him an uninvited courtesy. In the second case, the assistant returned empty-handed.
Give the illusion that it's almost done
American psychologist Ran Kivets conducted an experiment with loyalty programs in coffee shops. The essence of such programs is to collect stickers on the card (one sticker for the purchase of one coffee). When there are ten of them, the card can be exchanged for free coffee.
Kivets divided the subjects into two groups. The first group was offered a blank card with a field for 10 stickers. The second group was given cards with space for 12 stickers, two of which had already been glued on.
As you can guess, in the second case, filling out the cards, and therefore buying coffee, went much more actively. Although in both cases it was necessary to paste 10 stickers.
Whenever you ask for a favor, remember to mention that the deed is almost done. “Look, I've already moved this piano to the door. It remains to take him out of the apartment, and then some miserable nine floors." The perfectionist who sits deep within the object of your manipulation will not be able to resist the desire to help you complete the task.
Use the herd feeling
As unpleasant as it sounds, a person tends to keep his mental activity to a minimum. It is much easier for him to rely on someone else's opinion, and even more so on the opinion of the majority, than to develop his own. This was used by John Darley of New York University and Bibb Latane of Columbia University when conducting their experiment to study the influence of the "effect of someone else's opinion" on people's behavior.
Several people were supposedly invited to the audience to pass the creative test, and there was only one subject, and all the rest were Darley and Latane's assistants. Smoke was blown into the audience right in the middle of testing. So, the reaction of the only subject to what was happening entirely depended on the behavior of the people around him: if everyone sat with stone faces, as if nothing was happening, then the subject also tried not to show it. If everyone panicked, he would panic too.