Influence-The Psychology of Persuasion: Robert B. Cialdini
Science/Psychology
Influence-The Psychology of Persuasion
Robert B. Cialdini, PH.D
Ethologists for long have found some strange patterns of behaviour in
birds. A mother turkey fawns and takes are of a chic that makes cheep-cheep
sounds. Actually, even if a stuffed polecat, a natural enemy of turkey is
artificially made to produce the sound, mothering behaviour of the mother
turkey is switched on. And if a turkey chick doesn’t utter these magical notes,
it is neglected by its mother. This is trigger feature of animal behaviour.
‘Click’ of a particular stimulus ‘whirrs’ the appropriate response, the ‘click-whirr’
pattern. Humans have inherited much of their behaviour from animals, from whom they
descended in millions of years. ‘Click-whirr’ pattern of our behaviour has been
confirmed by psychologists in many ingenious experiments. In most situations
that we face in daily living, this action-reaction form of behaviour serves us
well. It is fast and it saves the body precious resources of energy involved in
thought process. Energy, that can be utilised for better purpose.
Marketing professionals have for long exploited this peculiarity of human
behaviour to solicit customers. Most customers do not possess all the knowledge
about the good or service that they propose to purchase. In such situations
people go by the urging of the trigger factors, if any is detected in the
intended purchase. These initiate the automatic whirr response of mind which
approves such purchase. Marketing strategists cunningly strive to include these
features in their goods/service, presence of which exhorts the mind of buyers
to neglect every other feature of the commodity. Robert B. Cialdini, a
psychologist, explains the working of these ‘click-whirr’ patterns of human
mind, the weapons of influence used by the exploiters. He groups these under
six headings and discusses each in a chapter. He cites many psychological
experiments done to elucidate these. He illustrates his assertions with some
simple imaginary situations too.
Book is written in an easy prose. Psychological concepts being invoked
are clearly explained. Situations in examples and experiments being referred
are familiar to the reader, thus easy to follow and fun to know. It is
fascinating to be told about workings of human mind, about its decision-making
apparatus which evolved to equip it to make decisions quickly and correctly in
most situations an individual faces in his daily life. But which errs heavily
when confronted with certain infrequent circumstances. But I am not sure, if we
would be able to recall this bias of our mind, when we face these situations in
life. Notwithstanding these scruples, book is a rewarding read as it adds to
knowledge and is entertaining simultaneously. One class of people who may gain
by this book is marketing executives. Enthusiasts of human psychology will find
it interesting too. I can’t help suggesting Daniel Kahneman’s incredibly
well written book Thinking Fast and Slow that talks about human
decision-making apparatus in uncertain situations. In lucidity, simplicity and
clarity of exposition of scientific principles for layperson this book of
Kahneman, in my opinion, has set a tall benchmark, against which similar books
will be compared for a long time.
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