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How to Be Persuasive

By Naomi Karten

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Summary: Successfully persuading others to adopt your point of view is a matter of neither magic nor luck. It's a skill and like any skill, improvement takes know-how, opportunity, and practice. In this week's column, Naomi Karten offers pointers to help you strengthen your persuasion skills.


Infosys
When I ask audience members who of them would like to be more persuasive, hands shoot up. Yet, many people approach persuasion in a way that undermines their chance of success; in the process, they succeed only at being unpersuasive.

I recall, for example, the project manager whose hotheadedness led customers to discount even her most astute ideas. And the developer who pooh-poohed everyone else’s needs, yet wanted them to rally around his own. And the IT director who was such a relentless talkaholic that people took circuitous routes around the floor to avoid him.

Make no mistake: The starting point in being persuasive is to build trust and credibility so that when you seek to persuade, people will give you a fair hearing. You can then draw from the following suggestions to successfully prepare and present your case.

Choose Your Cases Wisely
If you repeatedly try to gain buy-in for things that are exceedingly unlikely, blatantly unrealistic, or technically impossible, you risk creating a cry-wolf reaction in those you're trying to persuade. Once that happens, they won't take you seriously when you have a legitimate matter to put forward.

Still, sometimes it's worth a shot. One project manager, Cliff, summoned the courage to ask his boss for a three-month leave to pursue some personal goals. Cliff was so sure the answer would be "Are you out of your mind?" that he almost didn't hear his boss say, "OK, let's find a way to make this happen."

Be Specific About Your Desired Outcome
If, for example, you'd like more (of whatever), be precise. Two additional testers or twelve? Five new laptops or fifteen? An extra week or two months? And explain why. Most people want to know the "why" behind the "what."

To support your proposal, gather as much relevant data as you can. This will show you've given the matter serious thought and are not just acting on a whim. The fact that you've done your homework gives you a distinct advantage over those who demand, plead, or whine in hopes of being persuasive.

Do for Others Before Asking Them to Do for You
According to the reciprocity principle, people feel obligated to give back when a favor—even an unrequested favor—has been done for them. In my favorite book on persuasion, Influence, author Robert Cialdini points out that even people we don't like have an improved chance of getting us to do what they want merely by doing us a small favor beforehand. According to Cialdini, the result is often a positive response to a request "that, except for an existing feeling of indebtedness, would have surely been refused."

This principle has chilling implications when applied for nefarious purposes. But what could be better than providing genuine value to others as a consistent practice? Then, when you seek their support for something that's important to you, they may be more inclined to give it.

Focus on Issues Pertinent to Those You Want to Persuade
How will they benefit from your desired outcome? What issues could make it difficult for them to honor your request? What objections might they have and how can you counter these objections?

Consider, also, what these people emphasize when they seek to persuade. If, for example, they stress facts and figures, strive to do the same. If they focus on how people—or productivity, deadlines, etc.—will be affected, orient your key points accordingly. The more your own case meshes with what matters to these people, the better your chances of winning them over.

Persuade Professionally
Compelling though your case may be, sputtering and stammering will weaken its impact. Too many "ums" and "uhs" won't help either, nor will staring at the ceiling in hopes of sudden inspiration once you're on the spot.

If you'll be making your case in spoken form, practice it as if you're giving a presentation—which you are (see my StickyMinds.com article, Strengthening Your Speaking Savvy). If it'll be in written form, make it articulate. A typo-laden email message may be fine for trivial communications, but if you want to be persuasive about important matters, a polished, professional-looking write-up will carry more weight.

Pay Attention to Timing
Teammates who slave over buggy code all weekend may be too bleary-eyed on Monday to care what you want. Your manager may not be sympathetic to your ideas after going a few rounds with a demanding, scope-expanding customer. Some people can't focus before their first (or fifth) cup of coffee. So don’t just pop into the other party's office or cubicle when the mood strikes you and assume you'll get undivided (or even fractional) attention.

I recall a fellow named Hank who was so eager to present his Great Idea to his boss, Chuck, that he confronted Chuck at 8 a.m. on Chuck's first day back from vacation. Not only did Chuck have emails overflowing his inboxes, but his own manager had graciously welcomed him back with a crisis. Did Chuck pay attention to Hank's idea? Not a chance.

Don't Expect an Instantaneous Yes
It might not be a stretch to persuade a coworker to change today's lunch date to tomorrow. But making a pitch for something big, such as the adoption of agile methods, is unlikely to get an immediate "Sure, why not?" (Wouldn't that be wonderful?)

Getting buy-in for something that entails a major change usually takes patience and quiet persistence. Let the idea seep in. Show how other organizations or teams have benefited. Find credible allies who can add clout to your case. Suggest ways to start small and with minimal risk. Give it time. Building your case slowly and steadily will improve your odds of success.

If the Answer Is No, Learn from the Rejection
If you get turned down, accept the decision gracefully. Arguing and "yes, but"-ing will simply peg you as a nuisance, making it even harder to succeed next time around.

Instead, request an explanation and then do your own personal retrospective. Ask yourself: Do I still think my proposal was realistic and reasonable? Did I package my idea appropriately? What should I do differently next time around?

Savor the Unexpected "Go for It"
Back when I was an IT manager, there was some expensive hardware my staff and I yearned for that the director would need to fund. To get his go-ahead, we prepared a compellingly persuasive presentation and demo. At the appointed time, the director showed up, took one look at the product, and said, "Buy it!" We did. No complaints


About the Author
Naomi Karten (www.nkarten.com), is the author of numerous books and ebooks, including Changing How You Communicate During Change and How to Survive, Excel and Advance as an Introvert, as well as her popular newsletter, Perceptions & Realities. As a highly experienced seminar leader and speaker, she draws from her psychology and IT background to help organizations improve customer satisfaction, manage change, and strengthen teamwork. She has delivered seminars and presentations to more than 100,000 people all over the US, Canada, and Europe, as well as Tokyo and Hong Kong. She would enjoy hearing from you at naomi@nkarten.com.

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StickyMinds.com Weekly Column From 8/20/2007 

Member Comments
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Comment:    
by Vamsidhar Bethanabatla 8/24/2007

Recently, my team member came with a requirement to log user actions. He also suggested that we would log SQL queries. I suggested logging meaningful, human readable messages at particular events instead of queries. Also, pointed out that in case in future we need to give an user interface for the log we won't be able to make sense out of queries and few other valid arguments. But, to my wonder, he was adamant. All this disheartens us. So many valid points but no result. When you say "If the Answer Is No, Learn from the Rejection", it relates to me very well. Infact, that's what I did. I said "ok, you continue with your approach", hoping...Read On

Author's Response:
8/24/2007    
Hi Vamsidhar. I’m so glad you liked the article, and thanks for relating your own experience. It certainly can be disheartening to make a good case and have it dismissed. But alas, we can’t always get our way, so good for you for accepting the situation. Sometimes, as people gain their own experience, they eventually come around to seeing things the way we hoped they would. When that happens, they often buy into the idea even more strongly than if they accepted our persuasive case to begin with. And we can smile to ourselves, knowing that it was our argument that influenced the point of view they eventually adopted.

 
 
Comment:    
by Robert Rose-Coutre 8/21/2007

Hi Naomi, thanks for another fantastic column! A related issue is that often staffmembers forget to offer any argument at all, let alone a persuasive one. People often express discontent about how something is done, or how their job is going, or something else about the company, without putting forward any argument for improvement. When this happens, I try to do two things: 1. remind them that they should accompany a complaint with a proposal; and 2. the proposal should be persuasive. Your column is great for giving me more ideas on how to fill in the daunting requirement "Be Persuasive." Your column is very practical, useful, and well...Read On

Author's Response:
8/21/2007    
Robert, thank you both for your feedback and for your own advice. You make an excellent point about not just sitting there venting, something it’s so easy to fall into the habit of doing. Accompanying the complaint with a proposal is great advice. People often have more power to influence change and trigger improvements than they realize, and even more so if they present their concerns in the form of a persuasive proposal. I’m glad my suggestions will help you help your staffmembers.

 
 
Comment:    
by Sanat Sharma 8/21/2007

Good written, Naomi. It is very true that if you want to convince your point, you should present it to the front party in a very polite, technical, political and diplomatic way. This is the success key if someone wants to succeed. We should remember that attitude is the major component of a person’s character. It is the attitude not the aptitude that decides ones altitude.

-- Sanat Sharma

Author's Response:
8/21/2007    
“It is the attitude not the aptitude that decides one’s altitude.” What a quotable quote that is! Thanks so much, Sanat. Attitude certainly does make a difference, and not just in seeking to persuade.

 
 
Comment:    
by Tanmay Vora 8/20/2007

That was very well written. One of the important pre-requisites for persuation is to be articulate - both in verbal as well as written communication. When trying to persuade, it is also important to think about potential questions that may be ask and be prepared with the right responses and neccessary facts. Timing, as you rightly say is also very crucial.

Author's Response:
8/20/2007    
Thanks for your comments, Tanmay. Preparing and being prepared can make all the difference, and the points you highlighted are so important in doing just that.

 
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