 I
hate selling. As a believer in the principles of complexity (adapt to
the situation/environment, don't try to change it), I think trying to
change people's minds is inherently, unnecessarily difficult, and often
futile. Tell people what makes sense to you, and if it makes sense to them, they will say 'yes'. If it doesn't, don't try to persuade them, come up with another approach or solution that will make sense to them.
Sometimes, however, you have no choice - you have to make a pitch. This is especially true when you're dealing with decision-makers in a hierarchy and they don't agree with each other.
That means someone besides you has to change their mind. Recently, I've
seen several presentations that use a simple, four-pronged approach to
persuade someone to change their mind. I don't know where it
originates, but it seems quite powerful, and based on its growing
popularity it presumably works. It's summarized in the diagram above.
The idea is to appeal to your audience in four different ways, for two reasons:
- Depending
on their worldview, sensitivities, drivers and biases, different people
are persuaded by different things: Some respond better to negatives
(threats, risks) and others to positives (benefits, opportunities), and
- Depending
on their context for understanding the problem or issue, different
people have different levels of knowledge and awareness about it: By
taking different approaches to persuasion, we appeal to different
understandings and contexts, at least one of which should work for each
audience member.
The four approaches are:
- Anxieties: What is causing stress to your audience that your idea/proposal will relieve?
Audiences that respond to this approach are those who focus on the
urgent before the important. If an issue is keeping them awake at night
they will have a propensity to listen and respond positively to ideas
and proposals that address it, even if the benefits are otherwise
small. So by talking about possible anxieties, you have a better chance
of 'tapping into' anxieties that this audience segment feels, and
getting them engaged.
- Incapabilities: What can your audience not currently do that your idea/proposal will enable them to do?
Audiences that respond to this approach are those who focus on
vulnerabilities rather than abilities. If an issue makes them feel that
they are at risk if they do not resolve it, they will have a propensity
to listen and respond positively to ideas and proposals that address
it, even if the benefits are otherwise small. So by talking about
incapabilities, you have a better chance of engaging that segment of
the audience that responds to risk more than opportunity.
- Needs: What does your audience need that your idea/proposal will address?
A third segment of your audience will be process focused, and will
respond to ideas and proposals that address needs that they have
already identified and perhaps articulated, which are not being met
(and could not be readily met) by any obvious solution. You engage this
segment by recognizing and anticipating what they need and want,
without them having to tell you.
- Benefits: What are the specific, measurable benefits to your audience of your idea/proposal?
A final segment of your audience is impressed more by opportunity than
risk, and will respond to ideas and proposals that stress benefits that
they can personally relate to in the context of doing their job, task or hobby. They are not generally impressed by generic
lists of benefits - they want to know that you know enough about how
they would personally use your idea or proposal if it was implemented
(so you need to do your homework to know your audience). They are also
not generally impressed by lists of features.
By
"audience" I am referring to whichever group you are trying to persuade
- 'real' customers who will pay money for your idea or proposal,
managers who you need to get to buy into and approve your idea or
proposal, or internal users of your organization's tools and processes.
The keys to being able to incorporate these four approaches effectively into your 'pitch' are:
- Knowing your audience
- What's keeping them awake at night, how and why they might use your
idea or proposal, and which of the four approaches they are most likely
to respond to.
- Avoiding repetition
- It takes some skill to be able to incorporate all four approaches
without obviously saying the same thing four times different ways, and
boring or annoying your audience. Using different examples or stories
can help you engage all four audience segments without being repetitive.
- Being brief and direct
- If you've done your homework, you needn't be vague or circular in
making your point. Get to it directly, point out the anxieties,
incapabilities, needs and benefits that your idea or proposal
addresses/delivers, and stop. Leave it to the audience to connect the
dots and conclude for themselves that your idea or proposal is a good
idea (and let them say it so it becomes to some extent their idea
or proposal!) - don't hit them over the head by saying it yourself. If
they don't respond (either immediately, or in the case of more cautious
or discreet 'customers' reasonably soon afterwards), draw them out by
asking questions about how they
think their anxieties, incapabilities, needs or desired benefits might
be addressed/delivered. If your idea/proposal meets those criteria,
then they're probably sold on it - ask them to approve it. If they
offer some very different solution, you haven't sold them, and it's
time to go back to the drawing board.
I'm just in the process of trying this out for the first time. I'm being subtle (not using the terms anxieties, incapabilities*, needs and benefits
in my pitch) because I don't want my audience to feel manipulated. And
because I have different audiences I'm preparing several 'flavours' of
the pitch with different emphases. I'll let you know how it turns out.
Has anyone else used this four-pronged technique? Anyone know who
invented it?
* I know this isn't a real word. It should be, though. |