Cialdini's Influence
Cialdini's PRE-suasion
Other Influence & Persuasion Concepts
Cognition & Rationality in Negotiation
Surprise Me!
100

We want to do things for others if they are pleasant to be around.

What is the principle of liking?

100

The way a person dresses, talks, and acts.

What is "Self-presentation?"
100

Term from biology: contextual features that elicit heuristics.

What is a "trigger feature" eliciting a "fixed-action pattern"?

100

When people make offers in negotiation based on goals, opening offers, or prior offers; the new offers do not move much, so they tap into this heuristic.

What is 'Anchoring"?

100

Realtors hope to take advantage of this effect when they list two properties for similar prices; one is a dump and the other is nice.

What are "contrast effects"?

200

When two beliefs don't match OR when an attitude doesn't match an action.

What is Cognitive Dissonance?

200

Whatever we concentrate on increases in significance.

What is "Attention = Importance?"

200

Says if everyone is doing it, then it must be the right thing to do.

What is "Social Proof" (consensus)?

200

The information is vivid and readily retrievable from memory.  So it taps into this heuristic.

What is "Availability" heuristic?

200

Assuming "my loss is your gain"

What is the "mythical fixed pie"?

300

When a person does something for us and we feel we must do something similar in return.

What is the Norm of Reciprocity (Exchange)?

300

Visual associations that link ideas with a brand to increase desire (e.g., happy kids playing with a new toy)

What are "Connections?"

300

When done publicly, leads to actions consistent with the position (e.g., goal setting)

What is "Commitment?"

300

The union found four contracts with this clause; "so it is common"; this tapped into this heuristic.

What is the "Representativeness" heuristic?

300

Caused by illusions of superiority, optimism, & control.

What is overconfidence?

400

This principle says "We want what we can't have"; when things are less available, they become more desirable.

What is "Scarcity?"

400

Language that associates the proposal with 'belonging', 'family', 'shared identity', or other type of close group. 

What is "Unity?"

400

One of the two routes of persuasion.

What is "Central Route?"  What is "Peripheral Route?"

400

When people increase the resources they devote to an issue (instead of cutting their losses); "throwing good $ after bad."

What is the "Escalation of commitment to a (failing) course of action"?

400

I see events as they are. If others have same info, they'll agree with me.  If not it is bcs they are lazy or biased.

What is "Naive Realism"?

500

Persuasion approach: compliance with small requests leads to compliance with larger requests.

What is the "Foot in the Door" technique?

500

Mentioning "you" in the proposal, rather than others (e.g., "most people")

What is "One way to HOLD another person's attention?"

500

Asking for a lot, then asking for much less.  A technique for gaining compliance with the smaller request.

What is "Door in the Face?" or "Rejection, then Retreat?" or "Want it all gambit" or "Kitchen Sink approach"?

500

When two people can look at the same issue and come to opposite conclusions based on their own biases (e.g., a referee made a good or bad call, depending on which fans judged the call)

What is "Divergent Construal"?

500

One way (of 3) to keep from falling victim to the norm of reciprocity when a person offers a concession.

What are: 1. reject the initial offer; 2. accept it, but keep your guard up; 3. use the Vise technique.