week 6: power & influence news theories/applications types of power interpersonal influence...
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Week 6: Power & Influence
• News
• Theories/Applications
• Types of power
• Interpersonal influence
• Machiavellian manipulation
• Understanding systems
• Revenge effects
• What is power?
• What types of power do you most often use?
• What are the types you least often use? Why?
• How did you develop power?
Discussion
The Types of Power
Power Description Limit
Reward Controls tangible, social, emotional, spiritual rewards for (non)compliance
May become fixated on rewards even for mundane activities; desensitization
Coercive Use of threat or force to gain compliance
Fear of punishment, doing only required level of work, negative attention, distrust & lack loyalty
Legitimate Resulting from elected, selected, or appointed position; conferred & can be revoked
May exclude action by non-legitimated, can be extended criminally & abusively
Expert Knowledge, experience, special skills & talents
Unreasonable expectations, failure to be current, does not require common sense or ethics
Referent Identification or affiliation with another/group
Guilt/glory by association, associative traits tend to linger, paying for other’s misdeeds
Information Possessing or gatekeeping information others want
May be inaccessible or illegal
Connection Brokering & being able to effectively network for information & influence
Machiavellian, diffused efforts, bad associations
Self Monitoring
…the ability to observe the reactions of other people to your behavior and adjust your behavior accordingly to improve the relationship
Self Monitoring
___ 1.) I find it hard to imitate the behavior of others. ___ 2.) My behavior is usually an expression of my true inner feelings, attitudes, and beliefs. ___ 3.) At parties and social gatherings, I do not attempt to do or say things that others will like. ___ 4.) I can only argue for ideas which I already believe. ___ 5.) I can make impromptu speeches even on topics about which I have almost no information. ___ 6.) I guess I put on a show to impress or entertain people. ___ 7.) When I am uncertain how to act in a social situation, I look to the behavior of others for cues. ___ 8.) I would probably make a good actor. ___ 9.) I rarely need the advice of my friends to choose movies, books, or music. ___ 10.) I sometimes appear to others to be experiencing deeper emotions than I actually am. ___ 11.) I laugh more when I watch a comedy with others than when alone. ___ 12.) In a group of people I am rarely the center of attention. ___ 13.) In different situations and with different people, I often act like very different persons. ___ 14.) I am not particularly good at making other people like me. ___ 15.) Even if I am not enjoying myself, I often pretend to be having a good time. ___ 16.) I'm not always the person I appear to be. ___ 17.) I would not change my opinions (or the way I do things) in order to please someone else or win their favor. ___ 18.) I have considered being an entertainer. ___ 19.) In order to get along and be liked, I tend to be what people expect me to be rather than anything else. ___ 20.) I have never been good at games like charades or improvisational acting. ___ 21.) I have trouble changing my behavior to suit different people and different situations. ___ 22.) At a party, I let others keep the jokes and stories going. ___ 23.) I feel a bit awkward in company and do not show up quite so well as I should. ___ 24.) I can look anyone in the eye and tell a lie with a straight face (if for a right end). ___ 25.) I may deceive people by being friendly when I really dislike them.
1.) F 2.) F 3.) F 4.) F 5.) T 6.) T 7.) T 8.) T 9.) F 10.) T 11.) T 12.) F 13.) T 14.) F 15.) T 16.) T 17.) F 18.) T 19.) T 20.) F 21.) F 22.) F 23.) F 24.) T 25.) T
15-25= High, 9-14 Moderate, 0-8 Low
Self-Monitoring(behavioral flexibility)
Attention to situational and interpersonal cues & reactions
• Less predictable and consistent across situations• More likely to get promoted• Greater mobility (job related geographic moves)• Accomplish tasks by meeting other’s expectations• May be more responsive to group norms• Takes on more flexible (multiple) roles• Attitudes don’t predict behavior• Good at detecting emotions & lies
• Not as vigilant and tends to act on internal states• Consistent across situations• May intentionally offend people• View self as principles• Attitudes predict behavior• Less good at lying & detecting lies• Closely acquainted social group
High Scorers
Low Scorers
Avoidance Approach
Distribution of Need Behaviors
• Fears failure• Avoids
responsibility, risks & actions
• Remains aloof• Maintains social
distance
• Dependent and subordinate
• Minimizes position & resources
• Must win at any cost
• Must be on top & receive all credit
• Demands blind loyalty & harmony
• Not tolerate disagreement
• Control everyone & everything
• Exaggerates own position & resources
ACHn
AFFn
POWn
• Men are generally more Machiavellian than women
• Older adults have lower Mach scores than younger
• There is no difference between high and low Machs on intelligence and ability
• Mach is not related to demographic variables such as educational level or status
• High Machs tend to be in professions that emphasize control and manipulation of people: politics, management, religion, advertising, law, and behavioral sciences
Conclusions about Mach
The copier request study
“Excuse me, may I use the Xerox machine, because I’m late to class?”
“Excuse me, may I use the Xerox machine?”
“Excuse me, may I use the Xerox machine, because I have to make some copies?”
94%compliance
60%compliance
93% compliance“because”…(it doesn’t matter why…)
Dissonance Tasks
Participants complete a boring task
Group 1
Group 2
Paid only $1
Paid $20 Question:Which Group
reported liking the task more?
Cognitive Dissonance
• psychological discomfort caused by inconsistencies among a person’s beliefs, attitudes, and actions
• varies in intensity based on importance of issue and degree of inconsistency
• induces a “drive state” to avoid or reduce dissonance by changing beliefs, attitudes, or behaviors and thereby restore consistency
Tendency to avoid information can be countered by eliciting interest, norm of fairness, or perceive usefulness of information
Post-decision “buyer’s remorse” may be increased by importance or difficulty or irreversibility of decision
Counter-attitudinal action, freely chosen with little incentive or justification, leads to attitude change (e.g., new product at special low price)
Applications:
The Persuasion Pitch
Attention Getting• Ad, promo, announcement• physical, emotional, cognitive attention-getters
Confidence Building (credibility & trust)• expertise (authority figures)• sincerity (smiles, gestures)• benevolence (brand names, associations)
Desire (need for change or product)• praise the product (quality, efficiency, etc.)• promise audience benefits (needs)
Urgency (act quickly)• elicit emotional response to rush without thinking• deadlines, emergencies, sales
Action (desired behavior)• trigger words (“vote,” “buy.” etc.)• devices: coupons, contests, sweepstakes, 800 #
Reciprocation: Give & Take, gifts & prizes, free, samplers
Commitment & consistency: careful decision & justify, bait & switch, FITD, 30-day trial period
Comparison & contrast: everyone else does it, canned laughter, salting collection plate, audience ringers, presigned contributors, testimonials, my idea is better because…
Likeability: attractiveness, similarity, compliment, nice, Tupperware parties, Mary Kay cosmetics, celebrities
Authority: title, office, uniform, expert, degree, “I’m no doctor but I play one on TV…,” doctors agree…
Card stacking: one-sided information, list, testimonials
Scarcity: limited quantity makes it valuable, limited time only, first come first served
Demonstration: See how easy, you can do it too, look how nice
Persuasion Tactics
Audience Tactics
Strongly Hostile
Weakly Hostile
NoOpinion
Favorable
• they care about topic• if you fail they will actively work against you• scale back goal (won’t convince them)• approach indirectly; don’t give away reasoning— make them think along with you
• adversely convinced but not actuated• build appeal on logic• appear objective
• Uninformed: time to inform, scale back goal• Consciously neutral: self-restraint, use logic• Apathetic: arouse feelings, provide support
• because they know they may become bored• may become insulted with basics• persuade to follow specific course of action• convince of the practicality of the action
Providing Argument & Evidence
Reasoning• avoid generalizing about what everyone knows• have prepared examples, statistics, quotes• sequence argument logically• use sources that are credible to audience
Emotion• use language that arouses emotion• focus emotional appeals on major points • use vivid descriptions & explanations• build credibility• deliver evidence in a confident, convincing
manner
Elaboration Likelihood
Method (ELM)Of Persuasion
Or, what you think is what you get…
Persuasive Communication
Nature of Active Cognitive Processing: (initial attitude, argument quality, etc.)
FavorableThoughts
Predominate
UnfavorableThoughts
Predominate
Neither orNeutral
Predominate
Cognitive Structure Change: Are new cognitions adopted and stored in memory? Are different responses made salient than previously?
• personal relevance• personal importance• personal responsibility
Motivated to Process?
• dissonance arousal• need for cognition• repetition
• cognitive complexity• critical thinking• distraction free• low arousal
Ability to Process?
• appropriate schema• message pace• repetition• issue familiarity
Enduring positive attitude change (persuasion)
Enduring negative attitude change (boomerang)
• greater persistence• resistant to counterattacks & fading• predictive of behavior• > brand memory• > elaboration• >usage intention• > attitude accessibility• > attitude confidence• > attitude-behavior consistency
Peripheral Cues Present?• reciprocity (obligated, did a favor)• consistency (way it’s done, similar to before)• social proof (peer pressure, conformity)• liking (attractiveness, friendliness)• celebrity (identification, prestige)• authority (expertise, experience, credibility)• rapid speech, forceful presentation, charismatic style• scarcity (limited time offer)• tangible rewards• appealing visuals & music (emotional arousal)• fear appeal• weak counter-arguments
Attitude Shift:• short-lived• susceptible to influence• unpredictable
Retain or Regain Initial Attitude
Foot in the door…
First make a small request, then when granted, make a larger (more desirable) request
• works best with prosocial/altruistic requests
• works best if no extra incentives are offered
• 10% improvement over simple request, 20% if no incentive
• works by cognitive dissonance & self esteem
Door in the face…
Make a large request, then when it is refused, make a smaller (more desired) request
• more effective if prosocial/altruistic (do it for everybody) than selfish
• should be no delay between requests
• slight delay produces 10% improvement, no delay 20%
• works by reciprocal concessions
What do we know about lying?
• 60% of people lie, males more than females (3x), average 25 times a day
• The general public holds many misconceptions about lying behavior
• Uncovering lying is easier for younger, women, trained people
• Actors are better than non-actors, and practice improves lying
• Good liars may use details to make their stories believable, but may have to search for details, be inconsistent, or elaborate over time
• In a self-test experiment in which they were asked to take a test but not look at the answers on the back of the page, 40% routinely cheated (60% if there was a reward for performance). 100% of those who cheated lied about doing so.
• In experiments at the University of Massachusetts, students were encouraged to introduced themselves to others. Over 60% lied about themselves (3 times every 10 minutes!), made up fictitious information to make themselves look better, yet there was no benefit to the lie.
1) Expand contractions, stressing full-form verbs, such as "did not" and "could not," to convince people they're speaking the truth.
2) Deny lying, making emphatic claims to be telling the truth, such as "I have no reason to lie." Pause and use nonword sounds during hesitations in their speech ("uh," "er" and "ah" are examples).
3) Make speech errors and more frequent gaffes than people who speak the truth. Errors can include grammar, tense and losing thought in midsentence.
4) Stutter, stammer and become tongue-tied.
5) Clear their throats and make other noises.
6) Use qualifiers and modifiers, explanatory words, such as "however," "sometimes" and "generally."
Possible verbal indicators of lying
Possible nonverbal indications of lying
• Avert their gaze, trying to avoid eye contact. • Close their hands/interlock their fingers. • Cross their arms as if creating a barrier. • Drink and swallow more often than those who tell the truth. • Use fewer hand gestures, staying stiff, controlling the movements of
their hands. • Shrug their shoulders and flip their hands over in an "open" (palms up)
fashion. • Perform hand-to-face grooming, touching their face, ears and hair. • Handle objects, such as pens, papers and eyeglasses. • Blink less than people who tell the truth. • Do less finger pointing. • Lean and shift — leaning forward, resting their elbows on desktops or
their knees. They also shift often when sitting. • Lick their lips often. • Pucker and tighten their lips. • Sigh and take deep breaths. • Smile more and laugh inappropriately.• Touch, scratch and rub their nose frequently.
NLP– the “eyes” have it
Visual Constructed
Image
VisualMemory
Recall Sound
Recall Feelings
Sensations
Self-Talk
Kenneth LayEnron CEO
Analysis of Clinton’s testimony regarding
Lewinsky affair
• 21 of the 23 indicators were clearly present, half the signs increased by more than 100%
• during truthful portions he did not lean at all, but during lying he leaned many times
• during a 16 minute segment of truthful testimony Clinton never touched his nose, but did so repeatedly while lying
• speech errors (1733%), stuttering (1444%), modifiers & qualifiers (402%), drinking & swallowing (355%), reduced blinking (268%), hand to face touching (250%), averting gaze (219%), expanded contractions (117%), leaning (100%), denials (63%),
1. Today's problems come from yesterday's solutions.
2. The harder you push, the harder the system pushes back.
3. Behavior grows better before it grows worse.
4. The easy way out usually leads back in.
5. The cure can be worse than the disease.
6. Faster is slower.
7. Cause and effect are not closely related in time and space.
8. Small changes can produce big results--but the areas of highest
leverage are often the least obvious.
9. You can have your cake and eat it too--but not all at once.
10. Dividing an elephant in half does not produce two small elephants.
11. There is no blame.
Systems Principles
Above causal loop diagram represents the key business dynamics for operations of the H-Desk Company. It may be helpful in locating the sources of different problems within the system as well as identifying the leverage points to rectify these problems. Note that a + sign means that cause and effect move in the same direction whereas a - sign indicate that they move in opposite to each other.
Understanding Obstacles to Innovation
Systems Theory Application
Variations in Work & Leadership Style
• For 124 mid- and first-level managers, only 14% were seen as using the same style across four situations • In another sample of 124
• 2.4% had a single style• .8% had a dual approach• 94.4 were multi-style (3 or more of 6 styles)• 2.4 unclassified
• The most variance in leader style was accounted for by situations requiring quality solution and/or subordinate acceptance in decision making