Title: Influencing without Authority
1Influencing without Authority
- Rebecca Jones, MLS
- rebecca_at_dysartjones.com
- 905.731.5836
- www.dysartjones.com
2Or.
- Authority without Influence?
Principles for influencing are based on social
learning
3Influencing is built on
4Influencers
- Influence without Authority by Cohen and Bradford
- The Art of Woo by Shell and Moussa
- Influencer by Patterson Grenny
- The Influence Model in Journal of Organizational
Excellence, Winter 2005 - Situation Management Systems Positive Power and
Influence Programs www.smsinc.com - Dave Pollard How to Save the World blog
5Influencing starts with us
- Wanting to learn
- Seeing ourselves as influencers
- Learning?
- Yes..that to change how people behave, we have
to change how they think..and that means us
6OH yeah!
- Influencing within cross-functional teams
- The fine art of leadership, team building,
politics and influencing
7Some underlying principles
- One in ten Americans tell the other nine how to
vote, where to eat, what to buy - Passionate, informed, well-connected, articulate
people with broad social networks, to whom others
look for advice recommendations - Talkers
- Two thirds of US consumer goods sales are
influenced by word-of-mouth traffic (McKinsey,
May 2001)
The Influentials Keller Berry, 2003
8Some underlying principles
- Influencers tend to be expert in a specific
domain - Tend to be Early Adopters or certainly know how
to build relationships with early adopters to
move change through
9The Classic Corn Research Early Adopters
10Effective influencers
- Are opinion leaders
- Knowledgeable about the issues being dealt with
- Viewed as trustworthy
- With connections
- Use their knowledge connections to help others
11And just a few more.
- Teams are most effective when
- There are no assumptions clarity reigns
- Every members talents gifts are recognized
utilized
12Cohen-Bradford Influence without Authority Model
Identify currencies yours theirs
Diagnose the other persons situation
Influence through give take
Develop deal with relationships
Assume all are potential allies
Clarify your goals priorities
13Case study Nettie Seabrooks
- Her currencies
- Credibility built through high-quality work
- Competent
- Placing the organizations interests first
- Building many relationships at all levels
- Visibility
- Trustworthy
14Wooing
- Knowing what you want
- Getting it in front of a few people
- Forming, moulding building a snowball
- Following the network
- One idea, one ally, one email, one conversation,
one meeting, one presentation at a time
15Influencing is built on
16Influencing skills
- Know your strengths weaknesses
- Work to your strengths
- Keep the organizational perspective
- Critical success factor for credibility
expertise
Competence
17Influencing skills
- Get to know people, what they do, keep in touch
regardless of level - Build trust its incremental fragile
- You cannot antagonize and influence at the same
time. J.S. Knox
Relationships
18Influencing skills
- Be clear on what you want
- Be clear on what youve got, where your lines
will be drawn - Communicate clearly, in the style of the listener
Clarity
19At The Table Voice
- To move to the decision-making table
- Clear direction which can be articulated
- Cross-functional experience
- Financial understanding of ROI investments
- Presence
- Rebecca Jones research for SLA Executive
Institute, Information Outlook
20Influencing Styles
- Involving pull - communication style matches
others building collaboration - Inquiring push - listening carefully to
identify others needs currencies to give
take - Leading pull - engaging people to share
stories common grounds - Proposing push - presenting possible
solutions or a choice of options structured
rational
21Inquiring
- Based on assumption that people are more
motivated by what theyll lose - Scarcity principle people want what they cant
have - Reciprocity principle give get in return
- Present an idea, explaining what it is theyll
get from you or what they might lose
22Leading or Visioning
- Based on assumption that people want to help
create the solution - Requires a good blend of both expertise
credibility - trust - Use images metaphors, not facts logic
23Proposing or Persuading
- Goal is to gain real commitment
- Remember the credibility card
- What do they want that I can give them?
- Why might they say no?
- Ask for it close the sale
- Will you commit?
- When will you..
- Not We hope you will.
24Involving
- Based on assumption that people like to be a part
of what other people are involved in - Name specific individuals who are or have been
involved - Works especially well if the people LIKE those
who are involved - People are more influenced when they feel they
are part of the process, are complimented
thanked for their contribution
25All styles
- Require
- Clarity communication skills are critical
- Competence must know what you are doing
- Relationships must know which style to pursue
26Dave Pollards September 18, 2007 How to Save the
World Blog
27Cross-functional Groups
- Clarity
- What is the goal? Your goal? Each members goal?
- What of their time are they to work with the
group? - Whats valuable for them? WIIFT? What currencies
are they seeking? - What about their boss?
- Bring in senior person sponsoring group to adjust
clarity for group
28Cross-functional Groups
- Relationships
- Your listening inquiry skills are more
important than ever - Talk with each member
- Keep people in the loop
- Organizational interests come first
29Planning your approach
- Whats your objective?
- What do you know?
- What do you need to know?
- What style(s) will you apply?
- Draft your approach
- Try it learn
30- Influence may be the highest level of all human
skills.
31Thank you
- Let us know how you are doing!
- rebecca_at_dysartjones.com