The Little Book of Yes: How to Win Friends, Boost Your Confidence and Persuade Others
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The Little Book of Yes How to Win Frien
ON LOSING
Think about the things someone you want to persuade will gain if they say ‘Yes’ to your request. Now state those as things they could lose if they don’t carefully consider your offer. Use competition to increase your persuasiveness. If people come to know that your availability or services are in demand by others then these things become more attractive. Value your time so that others will too. Don’t say ‘I’m free all day, you choose a time.’ Instead say: ‘I can meet on Saturday, either at four or seven.’ 21 ENDING If you want to have impact, and for people to remember you, make sure that you end on a high Have you noticed how pop stars and other performers typically play their most popular songs or perform their best-loved acts at the end of their concerts, rather than at the beginning or during the middle? There is a reason. They know that their fans will go home feeling much happier as a result. Don’t get us wrong, first impressions matter. Of course they do. But what happens at the end of an experience is usually much more important and certainly much more memorable. As an example, imagine that one day you are asked to take part in an experiment about pain. For the first part of the experiment you are asked to place your hand in an ice-cold bucket of water for sixty seconds. It is an uncomfortable experience but you manage to endure it. Now comes the second part of the experiment. You are asked to place your other hand in the ice-cold bucket of water, again for sixty seconds. However, after the one minute has elapsed you are asked to keep your hand in the bucket for a further thirty seconds during which time the temperature of the water is increased by one degree centigrade. You are then asked which of these two experiences you would like to repeat. Would you like to endure sixty seconds of pain? Or sixty seconds of pain together with thirty seconds of additional, although slightly less extreme, pain? Would you be surprised to learn that most people choose the latter? They actually choose to experience more pain. This makes no sense at all until you begin to consider that there are quite large differences between our actual experiences and what we remember about them. When we reflect on our experiences we seldom recall their entirety and instead focus on specific moments. And, when it comes to remembering our experiences, one moment in particular matters a lot more than the others: the ending. The water experiment is a nice demonstration of how we can endure quite a lot of discomfort and still look back favourably on an experience providing that things ended well. What it also demonstrates is how we tend to pay less attention to how long an uncomfortable experience lasts and, on some occasions, disregard its duration entirely. That probably explains why people in the ‘ice bucket’ experiment were willing to endure an extra 50 per cent of discomfort. As they reflected on their experience they disregarded the amount of time they were in pain and instead remembered that the second experience ended better than the first. Examples aren’t just limited to pop stars and their songs, or psychologists with their buckets of cold water. You can find them everywhere. The presentation at work that was going so well until someone split a jug of water on the laptop. An otherwise wonderful date that was marred because the waiter was rude at the end of the evening. A relaxing weekend away with a loved one spoiled by a delayed return journey or cancelled flight. Notice that these unfortunate endings do nothing to impact on the experience itself. Until the waiter was rude or the airline cancelled the flight, you were having a perfectly wonderful time. What is impacted is your memory of those experiences. With that in mind, making subtle changes to the way experiences end is important when it comes to engaging others. If you want to have fabulous memories of your next vacation, rather than spreading your budget thinly by booking lots of small excursions and day trips, you’ll be much better off spending a bigger chunk of your budget on one or two amazing experiences that you should schedule towards the end of your holiday. And if you are going to treat yourself by upgrading to a nicer seat, remember that you’ll probably have much happier memories if you travel back in style instead of upgrading on the flight out. The same is true when it comes to the conversations and interactions you have with others. How they end can have a significant influence on how happy others feel about us. So if you need to have a difficult conversation with a friend or family member, have the tough chat early and then arrange for something more pleasant to be talked about or an activity that can be shared and enjoyed together at the end. As your favourite aunt would advise, never go to bed on an argument. |
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