Persuasion Communication What Is Persuasion?
Persuasion Communication What Is Persuasion?
Persuasion Communication What Is Persuasion?
What is Persuasion?
What do advertisements and debate club have in common?
They're both examples of persuasive techniques at work.
Persuasion basically means trying to influence the way someone thinks or behaves. There are all
kinds of different ways to persuade someone to do something. The ad is using an appeal to emotion.
It's associating the soda with being happy, so it's trying to persuade you to buy the soda so you'll be
happy like the people in the ad. The students at the debate club are doing something different.
Instead of appealing to emotion, they're trying to persuade each other with logical arguments that
use facts and evidence.
Being persuasive isn't the same thing as being right. The implied claim in the soda ad is that drinking
the soda will give you a lot of friends and make you happy. That's objectively not true. But that kind
of advertising can be very persuasive, and a lot of people are influenced by it. In this lesson, you'll
look at theories of persuasion and how they work.
Telling the person in green that pandas are endangered won't change his mind at all. He already
knows! If you want him to change his behavior and support the WWF, you'd have to address his
beliefs and values.
First, respectfully acknowledge the belief and find something in common. Calling someone stupid
isn't very persuasive. Most people will just get defensive and stop listening to you. Try to find
common ground. Acknowledging the belief and trying to find common ground this way is
called stimulation.
4 Strategies-
Most business people see persuasion as a straightforward process. They think it comprises: