Title: Persuasion
1Persuasion
- How to get people to do what you want.
2Why discuss persuasion?
- Up to 3000 advertising messages a day!
- Include signs, flyers, scented ads, previews
- Blatant attempts include commercials
- We like to think that we are smart and thus
immune to their deceit but we are not - Daryl Bems aspirin commercial example
- Robert Zajoncs research when dealing with
similar products familiarity makes a huge
difference
3Routes of Persuasion
- Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) Petty and
Cacioppo - Two routes can be used to persuade
- Central relies on facts, figures, and thought.
Changes tend to be more permanent due to
effortful processing. - Peripheral attempts to persuade you without
thought occurring. Relies on emotion. Leads to
superficial and temporary change.
4Yale Communication Paradigm
- Hovland, Janis, and Kelly are the main
contributors. - Based upon research undertaken to support the
U.S. Army during WWII - The question they investigated was Who said what
to whom with what effect
5Who
- Credibility messages are more persuasive if they
come from credible sources. - Hovland and Weiss attribute same point of view
to Oppenheimer or Pravda. Participants are
persuaded by Oppenheimer. - Objective indicators of expertise (Ph.D. vs.
Bachelors Degree). - Begin persuasion effort by saying things that the
listener agrees with (perceived as more
intelligent).
6More Credibility
- Credibility is further increased by
- Speaking confidently.
- Sleeper effect Delayed impact of discounted
message as we remember the message but forget why
we discounted it. - Perceptions of trustworthiness are increased by
- Speaking fast (reduces time to counterargue)
- Argue against own self-interest (Good example is
heir to the R.J. Reynolds fortune arguing against
cigarette smoking) - Appear to not be trying to persuade someone.
7Who Attractiveness
- Both physical attractiveness and attractiveness
based upon similarity can influence us if - We are not motivated to think deeply.
- If the issue is one of subjective preference.
- Celebrity endorsements are based on this idea.
- The greater the number of products endorsed the
less effective a celebrity becomes.
8What
- Reason versus emotion
- Arousing both positive and negative feelings can
lead to attitude change. - Making people happy makes them easier to persuade
(happy people rely on heavily on peripheral
cues). - Fear arousing messages change attitudes and
behavior, if specific directions are included for
avoiding the negative outcome (Leventhal and
colleagues).
9What Discrepancy
- Greatest attitude change occurs after the
presentation of a message with a moderate amount
of discrepancy from original opinion. - Large discrepancy leads people to shut out
message. - However, can increase discrepancy as communicator
prestige increases Becomes more difficult to
derogate the messenger.
10What Other Factors
- One vs. Two sided arguments
- Two sided if audience is knowledgeable
- Two sided if initial opinion of audience runs
contrary to persuasive message - Order of presentation
- Primacy wins if short gap exists between the two
messages - Recency wins if decision will be made immediately
after the competing messages
11To Whom?
- Forewarned is forearmed.
- Inoculation Effect Developed by William McGuire
- Receive exposure to a brief communication that
they can refute, immunize against a full-blown
presentation of the argument - Same exact logic as our immunization programs
- The person who is easiest to brainwash is the one
whos beliefs have never been challenged. - Distracted people dont counterargue.
- Overall, stimulating thinking makes strong
messages more persuasive and weak messages less
persuasive.
12Pratkanis and Aronson (1992) How to become a
cult leader
- Create your own social reality. Cut off external
sources of information. Mail should be censored.
Isolate cult headquarters from the rest of the
world - Establish an ingroup of followers and an outgroup
of the unredeemed. - Jones called doubters the enemy
- Suicide would lead to salvation for the chosen
people.
13Cult Leader Tips
- Generate commitment through dissonance reduction.
Insure obedience by establishing a spiral of
escalating commitment - Foot in the door technique
- Cognitive dissonance and justification of actions
- Severe initiations lead to higher evaluation of
groups.
14Cult Leader Tips
- Maintain the notion of a promised land and a
vision of a better world. Provides a powerful
incentive to keep working. Maintains hope by
providing a sense of purpose and freedom.