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What’s the difference between ethical persuasion and manipulation?
That was the primary topic of my conversation this week with Brian Ahearn. And it’s an important difference that any salesperson, marketer, or leader (all of whom influence people for a living) needs to be keenly aware of so they can stay on the right side of that divide.
Brian is the author of Influence PEOPLE: Powerful Everyday Opportunities to Persuade that are Lasting and Ethical which is what most of our conversation centered on as we discussed ethical influence.
We talked about the three criteria he uses to define ethical persuasion. That it:
That last one was the most interesting and informative for me. For example, one of the persuasion techniques (#6 below) is Scarcity. People are more willing to buy something if they know there’s not much of it. That leads to statements like these: “Get this while supplies last” or “This offer is good for today only”. And those are fine, as long as they’re true. But if you’re not really close to running out of supply, or you know good and well that you’d offer the same price tomorrow if they called you back, then those techniques are not fair.
But mostly we talked about his 7 Principles for Ethical Persuasion, which I’ll summarize here:
Okay, that’s just a quick summary. Brian explains more in our conversation here. But you can read more about all this principles in his book, Influence PEOPLE: Powerful Everyday Opportunities to Persuade that are Lasting and Ethical.
To learn more about Brian, connect with him on LinkedIn (here), or on his website: influencepeople.biz.
And if you send him an email to [email protected], you’ll get a link to a free 15-minute training video not covered in the book.
Click these links to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes or Stitcher, or Podbean.
—
Paul Smith is one of the world’s leading experts on business storytelling. He’s a keynote speaker, storytelling coach, and bestselling author.
Connect with him via email here. Follow him on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.
Sign up for his newsletter here to get one new story a week delivered to your inbox.
By Paul Smith4.5
1212 ratings
What’s the difference between ethical persuasion and manipulation?
That was the primary topic of my conversation this week with Brian Ahearn. And it’s an important difference that any salesperson, marketer, or leader (all of whom influence people for a living) needs to be keenly aware of so they can stay on the right side of that divide.
Brian is the author of Influence PEOPLE: Powerful Everyday Opportunities to Persuade that are Lasting and Ethical which is what most of our conversation centered on as we discussed ethical influence.
We talked about the three criteria he uses to define ethical persuasion. That it:
That last one was the most interesting and informative for me. For example, one of the persuasion techniques (#6 below) is Scarcity. People are more willing to buy something if they know there’s not much of it. That leads to statements like these: “Get this while supplies last” or “This offer is good for today only”. And those are fine, as long as they’re true. But if you’re not really close to running out of supply, or you know good and well that you’d offer the same price tomorrow if they called you back, then those techniques are not fair.
But mostly we talked about his 7 Principles for Ethical Persuasion, which I’ll summarize here:
Okay, that’s just a quick summary. Brian explains more in our conversation here. But you can read more about all this principles in his book, Influence PEOPLE: Powerful Everyday Opportunities to Persuade that are Lasting and Ethical.
To learn more about Brian, connect with him on LinkedIn (here), or on his website: influencepeople.biz.
And if you send him an email to [email protected], you’ll get a link to a free 15-minute training video not covered in the book.
Click these links to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes or Stitcher, or Podbean.
—
Paul Smith is one of the world’s leading experts on business storytelling. He’s a keynote speaker, storytelling coach, and bestselling author.
Connect with him via email here. Follow him on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.
Sign up for his newsletter here to get one new story a week delivered to your inbox.