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Influence, by Robert Cialdini

Influence, by Robert Cialdini

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Robert Cialdini's Influence was published in 1984. Forty years later, it remains by some distance the cleanest taxonomy ever written of how ordinary people get moved to say yes—and why, most of the time, they're not being persuaded. They're being triggered. Cialdini's word for it is click-run. Press a button, the cassette plays. Expensive—click, must be good. Expert said so—click, must be right. Everyone's doing it—click, must be the thing to do. The shortcuts are adaptive most of the time: expensive things usually are better, experts usually are expert, crowds usually know something. The problem is the counterfeits. Any trigger that reliably maps to something good can be faked. Once you know how the machinery works, you can fire the click without providing the run. The book identifies seven of these triggers—reciprocity, commitment and consistency, social proof, liking, authority, scarcity, and unity. This episode goes deep on four, extracts three mental models, names three common misreadings, and lands four applications for public affairs today. Influence is the companion to Episode 5 on Pre-Suasion. Same author, same research program, adjacent questions. Pre-Suasion is about what should happen before the ask. Influence is about what makes the ask land. In public affairs, you need both. In this episode Why Cialdini wrote the book (three years undercover inside compliance industries) The core idea: most influence works by pulling a trigger, not by winning an argument The four principles this episode goes deep on—reciprocity, commitment, social proof, and scarcity Three mental models: the ledger, the granted freedom, and the authority shortcut Three ways Influence gets misread by practitioners—and why treating it as a playbook is the worst of them Four modern applications: the modern lobbyist problem, signatory inflation, the dashboard problem, and the politics of withdrawn benefits The mastery lesson: why you don't graduate out of this book Key Quotes Although there are thousands of different tactics that compliance practitioners employ to produce yes, the majority fall within seven basic categories. Each of these categories is governed by a fundamental psychological principle that directs human behavior and in so doing gives the tactics their power. Although an obligation to repay constitutes the essence of the reciprocity rule, it's the obligation to receive that makes the rule so easy to exploit. Other studies have documented the unintended negative consequences of trying to move people away from a detrimental action by lamenting its frequency. People see a thing as more desirable when it recently has become less available to them than when it has been scarce all along. About this show Masters in Public Affairs goes back to the foundational books in this field and extracts the principles that the best practitioners return to again and again. The best performers work the fundamentals. That's true in sports, in music, in every craft. It's true in public affairs too. This show is about identifying those fundamentals—the mental models and first principles that remain true even as tactics and technology change. One book at a time. Book Robert Cialdini, Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (revised and expanded edition, 2021; original 1984)
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