Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Dr. Zoe Chance on How You Apply the Science of Winning Hearts | EP 523
Episode Date: October 22, 2024In this compelling episode of the Passion Struck podcast, Dr. Zoe Chance, Yale professor and author of Influence Is Your Superpower, joins John R. Miles to uncover the science behind winning hearts an...d minds through ethical interpersonal influence. Dr. Chance dives deep into the ways we can harness influence to create meaningful change—not just in our personal lives but in the world around us.The conversation explores how influence, when used ethically, becomes a tool for connection rather than manipulation. Dr. Chance shares research-backed strategies on how to negotiate confidently, build trust, and align with others to achieve positive outcomes. Listeners will walk away with actionable insights into how to use influence to elevate relationships, inspire others, and drive real-world impact.Whether you’re leading a team, managing relationships, or simply looking to improve your communication skills, this episode provides powerful tools to win hearts while staying true to your values.Full show notes and resources:  https://passionstruck.com/zoe-chance-apply-the-science-of-winning-hearts/SponsorsBabbel: Unlock the power of learning a new language with Babbel's innovative system. Passion Struck listeners can get 60% off their subscription at Babbel.com/PASSION.Hims: Regrow your hair before it's too late! Start your free online visit today at Hims.com/PASSIONSTRUCK.Quince: Experience luxury for less with Quince's premium products at radically low prices. Enjoy free shipping and 365-day returns at Quince.com/PASSION.For more information about our sponsors and promo codes, visit: passionstruck.com/dealsIn this episode, you will learn:The importance of reaching out to individuals at the right time to influence their decisions effectively.Insights from Dr. Zoe Chance on interpersonal influence and how it can be used ethically and effectively.The significance of social support in the writing process and the challenges authors face in getting their work recognized.The impact of influential teachers and mentors on personal growth and resilience.The role of behavioral science in understanding consumer behavior and decision-making.The concept of "moments of truth" in customer experience and how timing affects influence.The distinction between System 1 (unconscious, instinctive) and System 2 (conscious, analytical) thinking and their relevance in influencing others.Connect with Dr. Zoe Chance: https://www.zoechance.com/Order Passion StruckUnlock the principles that will transform your life! Order my book, Passion Struck: Twelve Powerful Principles to Unlock Your Purpose and Ignite Your Most Intentional Life. Recognized as a 2024 must-read by the Next Big Idea Club, this book has earned accolades such as the Business Minds Best Book Award, the Eric Hoffer Award, and the Non-Fiction Book Awards Gold Medal. Order your copy today and ignite your journey toward intentional living!Catch More Passion StruckMy solo episode on How Your Environment Influences Who You BecomeCan’t miss my episode with Alison Fragale on Master the Science of Status for SuccessWatch my episode with David S. Yeager on the Science of Inspiring Young MindsDiscover my interview with Finnian Kelly on How You Recode Your Mind and Manifest YouCatch my interview with Amanda Slavin on How to Change Lives By Inspiring ChangeIf you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a review! Even one sentence helps. Be sure to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can personally thank you!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up next on Passion Struck.
When you can reach somebody who wants to do a DIY home improvement project,
and you make it easy, you give them the information that they need,
the tools, maybe you get them discounts.
It's the opposite of annoying.
It's a blessing and they appreciate it.
So just the simple ability to figure out when is the right time
to reach out to someone that I'm trying to influence
is pure gold.
Welcome to Passion Struck.
Hi, I'm your host, John R. Miles.
And on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips,
and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice
for you and those around you.
Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the
best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.
We have long form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to
authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders,
visionaries, and athletes. Now, let's go out there and become Passion Struck.
Hey, Passion Struck fam. I am thrilled to welcome you back to episode 523 of the Passion Struck
podcast. First off, a huge shout out to each and every one of you who tunes in every week, eager to
grow, learn, and transform. You're the heartbeat of this community
and your energy keeps us going strong.
If this is your first time tuning in,
welcome to the Passion Struck Movement.
You've just joined a community that's all about
igniting purpose, living boldly,
and making intentional choices in life.
Now, before we dive into today's episode,
let me take a moment to recap
some powerful conversations from last week.
I had an incredible conversation with Terri Cole, where we explored her new book, Too
Much, and discussed how to break free from high-functioning codependency.
Then I had the pleasure of sitting down with Dr. Art Markman, one of the world's foremost
cognitive scientists, where we discussed how to align our habits with our goals and make
smarter decisions.
And in my solo episode, I shared the remarkable story of Jamie Siminoff and how he built Ring,
offering six key lessons for startup success.
If you missed any of those episodes,
I highly encourage you to check them all out.
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Head over to passionstruck.com slash newsletter
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With over 500 episodes, it can be overwhelming.
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Check them out on Spotify or visit passionstruck.com slash Star packs to dive in. Now let's get into today's episode because we
have a truly exciting guest who is here to unlock the secrets of one of the most crucial yet
misunderstood skills we all possess interpersonal influence. Our guest is Dr. Zoe Chance, a dynamic
writer, researcher, and educator whose work has transformed the way we think
about influence and behavior.
Dr. Chance earned her doctorate from Harvard
and now teaches the most popular course
at Yale School of Management,
which inspired her international bestseller,
Influence is Your Superpower.
Her innovative framework, her behavior change,
has even shaped Google's global food policy.
Before her academic career,
she managed a 200 million segment
of the Barbies brand at Mattel, proving her expertise spans
both the boardroom and beyond.
In today's episode, Dr. Chance will
guide us through the nuances of interpersonal influence,
revealing how you can use the superpower ethically
and effectively.
Whether you're looking to raise money for charity,
negotiate a great deal, or simply get along better
with your loved ones, Dr. Chance will
share insights on how to harness your influence for good.
We'll dive into why many common strategies for influence might be backfiring, and explore how to
cultivate charisma, negotiate with ease, and spot manipulators. Along the way, we'll encounter
memorable stories and surprising examples from skydivers to mind readers, and discover how
influence can truly shape your life, your organization, and perhaps even history. So get ready to rediscover your superpower and
learn how to make a positive impact with your influence. Let's welcome Dr. Zoe Chance to
Passionstruck. Thank you for choosing Passionstruck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your
journey to creating an intentional life. Now, let that journey begin.
Let that journey begin.
I am absolutely thrilled today to have Dr. Zoe Chance on Passion Struck. Welcome, Zoe.
Thank you so much, John.
Great to meet you.
Zoe, when we first connected, you mentioned to me the Onagadori chicken renowned for
having the longest tail in the world.
How does this remarkable bird
symbolize your work and what you strive to achieve in your field?
Well, I'll tell you the genesis of how you and I connected was through team Onagadori,
which is a small semi-secret cultish book of book authors who are writing on behavioral science. Most of us are behavioral
scientists, some science journalists, and we're people who are experts in our field,
but we're not celebrities whose book launches and is an instant New York Times bestseller.
So these are long tailed books that have to be very carefully,
gently, and with a great amount of labor and love brought into the world and
nurtured while they're there.
It's like these chickens called the onigiri chicken,
which are famous in Japan.
And they are so revered that these are given sometimes as gifts to heads of
state.
And they're so delicate that when one of these chickens is given as a gift, it's also given
with a caretaker to lovingly make sure that this chicken will survive and thrive.
Their tails can be four meters long.
These chickens have the craziest tails.
And this is how it feels for me to be an
author of a book that's out in the world. My book has been out for a couple of years now and still
nurturing it and I appreciate your help in that. And John, do you relate at all to that feeling
of the nurturing that goes on from an author toward his book? Well I absolutely do. I didn't go into this hoping it was going to be a best seller.
I mean, if that was a result, that was great.
But for me, the bigger thing I was looking for was lasting impact.
And I wanted people to read this because I didn't create it for it to be a book
that just sat on your bookshelf.
I wanted it to be something that someone would take out and use in
their life to make it better.
It's such a challenge for those of us who are writing in self-help or self-help adjacent
categories to not be writing a shelf help book, right?
Like you said, it sits on the shelf and looks pretty.
When I was in the process of working on this book, it was really lonely and a lot of authors
are lonely. And a lot of authors are lonely.
And I knew from experience, from research and behavioral science, that social support
is such a big help and motivation. So I started this author group before my book came out,
just recruiting some of my friends who are also lonely, writing books so that we could
help each other, advise each other, cry on each other's shoulders, cheer each other on,
and pick us up when we fell down.
I love the group. I am not going to give out the names, but I will say that I've had a large number of them on this podcast because what I'm trying to do here is I think there are a lot of
podcasts and books out there that try to do self-help and they sugarcoat it. And to me,
what I'm really trying to do is give episodes that showcase someone
who's applying these things in their life.
But I'm also trying to give listeners the actual science so they know
how to apply it in their life.
And I was talking to David Yaden.
I'm not sure if you know who David is, but he's a Wharton doctor graduate,
but in neuroscience and he's now.
Study really, uh, and our subconscious at Johns Hopkins, but we were exploring
this and I was doing a lot of research on neuroscience and he said, John
neuroscience is great, but it doesn't get you very quick results.
If you want someone to change their life, behavior science is a much better lens
to go really deep on because it can have lasting change and do it in a much quicker manner. So
I love that you all are putting so many incredible books that give that guidance to listeners of this
podcast and readers worldwide. So thank you for doing that. And Don, thank you for being our partner
and helping so many of us share our work with the world.
We're all on the same page along with you
in having the purpose of our book be about the impact
that we hope that it can have.
So thank you.
Zoe, switching gears, you teach a course
that is one of the most popular.
And I know for me that there have been teachers in my life that have changed my life for the
better.
Some have challenged me to think about how I could become a better version of myself.
Some have challenged me to dig deeper in myself, to overcome challenges I was when I was taking
math or engineering courses.
Some have disappointed me.
Is there a teacher who changed your life for the better or even for the worse?
Thank you.
I've been really lucky to have a lot of them.
And the first teacher of actually, no, my third grade teacher was amazing too.
But one of my first teachers who made a huge impact on my life was my Taekwondo teacher during high school.
And his name is Jeff Arch. He was my mentor and he taught me resilience.
He taught me humility. He taught me to do things that are hard and keep doing
them because they're hard and come back. And he also was there for me in so many ways like
a dad. He was like my Mr. Miyagi. And if you've seen the movie Karate Kid, you know who that
is. So Jeff was outside of his Taekwondo teaching, He was a writer and he was writing a screenplay.
And I remember when he went to a workshop at Tony Robbins,
this was at Tony Robbins' house,
and he was in this workshop of 12 people and he comes back to us
and he's written this screenplay so fast.
He has it printed out and he throws it down on the table
and he puts his fist down and he says,
this is a million dollar screenplay right there.
And I was like, oh gosh, who are you, Jeff?
Like you're a Taekwondo teacher.
You're not some Hollywood screenwriter.
And how could you even be dreaming that big?
And I'm ashamed that I saw him as too small to have this dream of making
it as a Hollywood screenwriter. The screenplay was Sleepless in Seattle and he was nominated for an
Oscar for it. Oh my gosh. He was right. And after seeing how he had dreams that were bigger than in some ways he deserved to have,
I really have wanted to be someone who doesn't sell myself or anyone else short in what I believe
can be accomplished. I love that answer. Thank you so much for that perspective. And speaking of selling yourself short.
John, can I just ask you about a teacher?
You said you've had teachers with good impact.
Maybe not so much.
I just wanted to hear one.
The good or the bad.
Either way, whatever, whatever.
I'll tell you one that was bad.
I had in high school, this English teacher
who was beloved by all my classmates and she had one of everyone's most favorite classes. She made
English fun. And I remember I was preparing to get out all my applications to go to college and
everything else. And I was trying to decide where I wanted to take my life.
I met with her to do a mentoring conversation and it went in a completely
different way than I had ever imagined.
She basically told me that my life would never amount to anything that I am.
I'm good at faking my life, but I would not
be able to build my life on the basis of what she saw in me.
And it actually really caused me not to take the traditional path that I probably would
have gone down to go University of Michigan, Duke or Brown.
But instead I accepted an appointment to the Naval Academy.
And I think it was one of the driving forces because I wanted to challenge myself more
and step out of comfort into putting myself into the perils of having to be
uncomfortable to reach what I wanted in life.
So that was an interesting counter intuitive advice I got,
but I think it ended up being pretty profound because I guess it sparked in me
a desire to make her wrong.
It's incredible how you managed to spin a silver lining out of that.
As a teacher, I'm appalled that she would give you that feedback
No matter who you were as a kid and also you got into the freaking Naval Academy
You were clearly doing really well. It's not like you were some slacker
Who hadn't figured out your life at all yet? So
Good job, and I want to smack her
So good job.
And, uh, I want to smack her.
Getting back to what you were just saying.
One of the things that I love about behavior scientists is when I find one who had a career before they actually got into it.
And another person comes to mind is Angela Duckworth, who for a period of
time was doing consulting, who for a period of time
was doing consulting, she was a teacher, etc. Another one is Annie Duke, professional poker player.
And what I like about it is that practical real life experience, I think is so vital,
because it's been vital in how I interpret behavior science. You spent a portion of your career managing a $200 million
segment of the Barbie brand.
How did that, I guess, aspect of your career
spark your initial interest in the science of influence,
which is what you're known for?
And how did that journey begin for you?
Well, John, I got interested in influence, the study of it during that period of my life
where somebody gave me Bob Cialdini's book, Influence,
and I was getting curious about doing this kind of work
at the same time that I was realizing
how much I sucked at actual influence. So we had the
number one girls brand in the world, it still is. And for
anyone who's curious, when I saw the Barbie movie, it was
basically traumatizing. I was having PTSD because Mattel was
not unlike Mattel is represented in the movie back then. But I
hear from students who've been there recently that it's a much better, more fun, engaging, and a good place to work now. But what was going on was we
were selling to people without fully understanding their behavior and how they made the decisions
that they did. And then also I was trying to influence senior managers
and failing at persuading the senior vice president
in our group or the president of the company, CEO.
And both of these failures turned out to later,
I learned, be explained by some basic principles
of behavioral economics.
But when I was there at Mattel,
we would ask girls, say in our core target market, ages three to five, we would say,
who's Barbie and what does she do? And they would say, she's a bride and she gets married.
Okay, great. And we would put together bridal play sets and a big cake room, flower girls,
presents, dress, everything you need for a Barbie wedding.
And then we would send our insights team spies to observe these little girls in their houses.
How do they really play with Barbie?
And these little girls were having Barbie weddings, but it would be like a mermaid Barbie
and the dog.
And they just didn't need all of the stuff we were trying to sell them.
Or when girls are getting a little bit older, we would ask them at ages seven to
nine as they're in air quotes aging out a Barbie, who's Barbie and what does she do?
And girls by that point have become self conscious and aware of what they look like and how they're
perceived. And the positive part of that is that they get excited about fashion. So they
would say Barbie is a fashion model and she wears cool clothes.
So we'd hire fashion designers, design a whole bunch of cool clothes and they would sell okay.
But the bridal place, that's not as spectacularly well as we thought.
We would send our insights team into those girls' houses.
And what we would find is that this was, if you've seen the Barbie movie, weird Barbie stage where Barbie not only is not wearing any clothes at all but she's lucky if she
has hair or even a head. They're torturing her and girls weren't playing
with Barbie the way that they said that they wanted to play with Barbie and
that's just an example of my curiosity wanting to understand how is it that we
can understand, predict, and influence people's
decisions and behavior ultimately to try to be helpful. I also just learned about myself
that I just don't care about selling things. And I used to be a teacher and I came back to teaching
after that. Well, I think you and I would agree that I think one thing that everyone should have to try to do is be in a sales role for at least a portion of your life, because it is so much harder if it's not a natural thing for you to do to try to learn how to do.
It's such a good way to build resilience and face rejection and get through it. What have you sold, Jen?
and face rejection and get through it. What have you sold, Jen?
Oh my gosh, I've sold everything from software
to consulting services to personal transformations.
Is there any part of the sales process
that still makes you uncomfortable
or have you embraced it all by now?
When I had first gotten out of the military, I had been in consulting for I think three,
four years and I had transitioned to Anderson Business Consulting.
People would recognize it as Accenture today.
I remember I was doing these pitches to clients and admittedly, I was putting them to sleep because I was
doing these long PowerPoint presentations.
I happened to stumble upon a methodology that PricewaterhouseCoopers had that they called
the placemat exercise, meaning they would take this thing that looked like a placemat
that you would put in front of you at dinner and on it,
whatever they were selling,
they would articulate it in that one placemat.
And what it taught me was that we need to be crystal clear
on what we're selling and we need to simplify it
in a way that the person who's buying it
completely understands it.
And if you can't do that through a placemat and have a 45 minute
to an hour long conversation about it, then you're not tight enough on your messages.
And that really taught me a critical skill about selling. And that is when I was sitting there
delivering all that information, I wasn't looking and
experiencing the emotional state of the person who was buying from me because I was so much
concentrating on delivering content
That I wasn't really
watching their body language their receptivity and taking those cues to alter the conversation and
I think that is one of the most important things when it comes to selling or influencing anyone
is that whole technique of you've got to listen,
put yourself in the other person's shoes
and adapt the message that you're giving to them.
It's so important and helpful and great skill to build.
I just happened to be yesterday
at a research seminar at Yale where one of my colleagues was presenting
his research on using AI to evaluate people
who were interviewing for sales positions
and who evaluate who's going to be successful
on the dimensions that humans were also judging them
as successful.
And one of the biggest mistakes that candidates would make
that would hurt their evaluations
was spending too much time talking about the features
of the product.
Instead of what they're talking about the needs
of why this would be helpful.
Absolutely, and I think the other thing
someone in sales really needs to do
is you can't go into something cold.
I got really good at doing tons of research. So I understood what the company was going for. I'd
look at their board documents. I'd look at their investor pitches and I'd try to understand what
their market struggles were so that I could relate to the person on the other side.
And you do a lot of that still on this podcast, which I've
heard in your different interviews.
And you got to do a lot of research because I don't want my interview to be
the same one that Lewis house or Jay Shetty or Ed Malad or Mel Robbins does
with the same person, I want it to be different and I want it to be impactful.
And most importantly, I want it to be something that impacts my
audience to make them better.
Something I did want to pick up on about your time at Mattel is when I was at
Lowe's, it was really the first time I ever experienced behavior science.
And when people think of a retailer like Lowe's, they probably don't realize how
sophisticated behind the scenes they were on using analytics.
When I was there, the company,
and what really differentiated it at that point
from Home Depot is we absolutely ran the whole business
and competed based on analytics.
And one of the most sophisticated areas
where I would say we were probably one of the top 20
companies in the entire world was customer experience. And it was the first time I
interacted with behavior scientists because we had hired not a lot of them, but there were like two
or three in this group. And I helped them build this capability that we called single view of the customer.
And through behavior science and some underlying data sources that we were able to tap into,
we had a 92% accuracy rate of understanding our customer.
And because they had that, they knew if the customer was living in their primary location,
a secondary home, if they were on vacation, but more importantly, by observing their behavior,
we could determine when a person was going to start a home improvement project,
which was the Holy Grail, and then the behavior science experts were then able to target them with messages and workflows
that would get them into the process and to stay loyal to Lowe's and it was one of the most
impressive things I had ever experienced up to that point in my career. It's really amazing and
to me a little bit scary sometimes, how much organizations can learn about us
through connecting different unrelatedly,
seemingly unrelated pieces of data.
When you say 92% rate of understanding the customer,
do you mean recognizing them or predicting what they will do?
Well, the first step was to even recognize them,
was to match so that we knew exactly who they were,
what their address was, what store they shopped at,
their living patterns, their credit cards that
were tied to them, all of that.
And then based on that, you could then follow them.
So we used, I mean, it must be even so much more sophisticated
now with AI, but we would follow our customers
to learn for queues of what would amount to a larger share of their wallet.
And when we would get those queues, the team would get alerted and then we would use that
to then drive at this point, instead of collecting information, we would then
insert information to them, whether that was a mailer, an email, a store associate.
We were getting so good that when they would walk into the store, if they were
what we would consider a premier customer, we could even trigger someone in the store
to go approach them, to recognize them and thank them for shopping or something else just to make what we were trying to do,
we called was a total closed loop experience.
So regardless, if you were shopping in the store,
calling the call center, working through the web,
however you were interfacing us,
that we knew who you were
and you felt like it was customized to you.
Which is- That's fascinating. Yeah, it's really the Holy grail of retail.
And John, this brings up one of the topics that I was teaching in my Yale
class this week, actually, which is the principle of moments of truth and how,
if you reach someone at the right time, this is the secret to not being annoying.
So if you're trying to influence someone to buy
things for a DIY home improvement project when they're on vacation or they just don't have any
interest or funds to do that, it's annoying. But when you can reach somebody who wants to do
a DIY home improvement project and you make it easy, You give them the information that they need, the tools, maybe you give them discounts.
It's the opposite of annoying.
It's a blessing and they appreciate it.
So just the simple ability to figure out when is the right time to reach out to
someone that I'm trying to influence is pure gold.
It absolutely is.
It was one of the most important things we were working on.
And I think it's one of the most important things any company can work on.
Because if you don't understand your customers, you're never going to be as successful as you could be.
And with moments of truth, it's helpful to think of the whole context.
So the time and also the place.
And the ideal moment
of truth is when you can solve a problem that they have right now.
And at the very least is reach out to somebody when they have the
bandwidth to pay attention so that you're not trying to
interrupt all the other things they're doing.
Absolutely. Well, Zoe, I'm gonna double down on this Lowe's
topic because as when I was there, we brought in a third party
who had psychologist, organization or cultural psychologist who were evaluating senior executives
who had the potential that they could be C-levels or even the CEO of Lowe's.
And I was fortunate to get tapped as one of those.
And we went through this long exercise and I wound up in the top right hand
quadrant, right where you'd want to be.
And I was so thrilled.
And I went and talked to this psychologist who was the
head leading it for a debrief.
And she says to me, John, you've had this phenomenal career up until this point.
You're the youngest vice president at Lowe's.
Your career skyrocketed.
You've done all these things.
And then she said the Marshall Goldsmith line,
but what got you here won't get you to where you want to be.
And she didn't really give me the answer.
And it left me, I have to tell you,
coming out of that conversation, being so
frustrated because I didn't know what I was lacking or what she meant at that
point, I felt like I was Superman.
And as time passed, I realized that where I was weak is that I had gotten that
success because of my intellect, because of my hard work,
because of my ability to out think other people.
But as I was getting more senior,
emotional intelligence and influence become paramount,
especially as you go up into the C-suite.
And I think as a CEO, which I've done, probably 90% of my job is, was influence.
I'm influencing customers to buy the product.
I'm influencing the board.
I'm influencing the company to do what we need to do to hit our
KPIs and core strategy.
It's all about influence.
And when I think about this, I think a lot of people think that influence is
just something we have something we're born with. And to me, it's
like courage. You can develop courage, even if it's not an
inherent trait for you. What experiences for you led you to
believe that influence could be taught?
We're, I believe, influencing each other all the time and I think part of what
you're talking about is influencing people in the direction that we're
trying or hoping to influence them and I have been blessed to be teaching this course
that I teach at Yale. It's called Mastering Influence and Persuasion for I
think it might be now in its 12th year. It's so much fun. I got to invent it.
This is what I believe I was born to do and I get to watch over the course of
this is a half semester course. So I have 150 students right now who are with me in seven weeks and to see the transformations
from the beginning to the end of what happens
when we have this personal transformation that has us showing up
differently in the world and then changes how the world reacts
to us. The exercise, just as an example that students did this week,
it's real world challenges for every single class.
The one for yesterday was a game called Bigger and Better,
and you start with a paperclip and then you and a partner trade up
as many times as you want for a week with anyone who's willing to trade with you
for something bigger and better and bigger and better.
The craziest, biggest, best thing has ended up being a Volkswagen
Jetta that students got over a week.
And they gave it away to a refugee family and it was beautiful.
Yesterday, the biggest, best thing or one of them was a pizza party for the entire
class and a Python in a jar in some kind of liquid.
And somehow this happened from a combination effort of a pizza place and a tattoo parlor.
But overall what happened for these 150 students out in the world was that they were going out
and they were sharing, here's a crazy idea, would you like to play this game with us?
And asking for something more than they can pay back in return. And then seeing how the world
welcomed them and how so many people are open to being part of something that sounds cool and
participating in a generous way. Then fast forwarding to students who have finished
the class and gone out into the world
and use these techniques,
I hear back from former students all the time,
like one of them is the domestic,
has been the domestic climate chief of staff
and now she's Biden's special advisor in climate,
running the White House climate team
and saying this is exactly how things are
done in the White House. Another former student ended up changing the course of history in Tunisia
where he works and influencing the democratic process there through all of these skills that
he learned in the class. There's so many students who launch startups, nonprofits, and have better
relationships that they tell me about.
So this is, I guess that wasn't, how did I figure out that this could be taught?
That was probably my own personal experience that I wanted to share and teach other people.
So I get it reinforced through this class every year.
Well, those were some great examples of how important it is.
And just for anyone who's listening, the red paper clip story is something that I covered on
this podcast not too long ago, episode 471, Kyle MacDonald story. And I did it on four ways to master
creative thinking. But if you really think about it, what Kyle did is a master class in influence.
If you really think about it, what Kyle did is a master class in influence. It's so fun.
I share the pictures and that story with my class.
And then did you share on the podcast that when he gets the house, well, whatever, spoiler,
when he gets the house that the town of Kipling in Saskatchewan also makes him honorary mater
for a day.
And they are a Guinness Book of World Records holding giant red paperclip statue that's still there
Apparently for anyone who wants to take a road trip. It's a masterclass on influence for sure
Well, absolutely
It is such a fun story an unbelievable story. Your book is
Really a masterpiece at understanding our inherent superpowers. In fact, the book is Influence is Your Superpower.
And when I think about this as a superpower,
I think there's a common misconception that people have about influence being
an individual effort, how can we start shifting that mindset
so that we realize it's really in our interconnectedness
that our influence can change?
If you're a nice person who doesn't think it would be good
nice person who doesn't think it would be good to study and practice the dark arts of interpersonal influence. I totally understand and I don't blame you
and it's an indicator that unconsciously you're playing small. And in order to do anything more than you can easily through your individual
effort accomplish, we're going to have to influence other people. And if you want
to have more influence than you can as one human being, it's definitely going to
be by empowering other people. Maybe even by teaching other people some of the dark arts of influence which might not be so dark. So if we're not
trying to influence each other and if we're not trying to study it and
practice it, what happens because influence is power is that we're just
leaving the world in the hands of the power hungry people who have no
reluctance to study and practice the arts of influence. So I think absolutely everyone who has a good heart needs
to study this science. As I was studying for this and I was listening to some of the other
podcasts you've been on, one of the things that you said during one of them really stood out to me.
I remember myself being in so many meetings throughout my career where as I look back
now, oftentimes if I didn't think that I was an expert in the area or that it was my area that I was trying to influence, I would sit
back and let the discussion play out.
And what I noticed was that those who spoke up earliest in the discussion, whether their
opinion was right or wrong, significantly influenced the direction that the rest of
the meeting ended up going in.
And it's something that you brought up
that it's so vital to understand
that if you wanna influence something at work
or could be even in a meeting,
I don't wanna say meeting,
it could be you're just out with your friends
and a topic comes up.
Jumping in early and expressing your idea early is vital.
Can you just explore that a little bit more?
It's similar to the psychological principle
of the anchoring effect that some people interested
in behavioral science have studied where,
say in a negotiation, whoever introduces a number first,
it has a bit of a gravitational pull
on the discussion of the range of what might be possible.
And similarly, whoever joins or starts a conversation on the early side about an idea
has this gravitational effect on where the conversation goes, what the direction is,
and what might be possible or what might seem reasonable. Even deeper than this, another reason
to speak up early as a practice in a conversation is so that you and other people register your own
presence in this group. And you know how in group dynamics just is such that when we're talking to
a group of people, we're not making eye contact with everyone.
As the speaker, you rarely notice that,
but as a listener, you definitely notice it
if you're one of the people
who is not getting eye contacted by the speakers.
If that's been going on for a while,
then it's harder for you to speak up.
And then if you do speak up,
people are like, oh, well, that person is here. Hey, Zoe. If you speak up earlier, if you do speak up people are like oh well that person is here hey Zoe.
If you speak up earlier people are looking at you when they're speaking they're including you in the
conversation and it's easier for you to speak up later. So I would say if you have something to
contribute to a conversation for the beginning absolutely do. But also get in the practice of just speaking up early,
even if you don't have that great thing to say,
like asking a question or agreeing or disagreeing
with something, reacting to what somebody else says
or being part of the chit chat before the meeting.
This is especially for introverts,
especially for people in junior roles
or people who just don't feel as comfortable. And behavioral introverts, especially for people in junior roles or people who just don't feel as comfortable.
And behavioral introverts are people who think before they speak. And that includes anyone
who's not super comfortable or anyone who is speaking a language that they're not completely
totally fluent in. So thank you for bringing up the timing again, John, and absolutely
agree with you about speaking up early.
Zoe, one of the things you asked me to do to make this a win for you was to bring up some practical examples for the audience to absorb so that they could picture themselves in these scenarios. The way I'm going to do this is I'm going to go through some of the core concepts of your book that I found, and I'm going to ask you about
that core concept, let you explain it, and then I'm going to provide a
scenario that we can discuss. One of the fascinating ideas in the book is that by
making it okay for someone to say no, they're more likely to want to say yes.
Can you explain how removing the pressure from a request
can actually increase the chances of a positive response?
Sure.
And I'd like to start with a challenge
for anyone who is joining us
and listening to this conversation,
which is the very first challenge
that I offer students in my class.
And I write about it in Influence Is Your Superpower.
And this is 24 hours of no.
And that's 24 hours of you saying no
to other people's invitations or requests
so that you get to experience
how much of a people pleaser you probably are.
Most of us are more of a people pleaser than we thought.
And also so that you can get some practice
becoming more comfortable with saying no,
especially saying no to the request
without necessarily saying no to the person
or the relationship.
When we get comfortable saying no,
we get comfortable with other people saying no to us.
And when we're comfortable with the idea
of other people saying no to us and when we're comfortable with the idea of other
people saying no to us then when we're asking them something or for something
or making an invitation we don't have pressure embedded in that request. We
don't have neediness in that edge to our voice which is repulsive. So pressure is
repulsive because people don't want to
be told what to do. They don't want their freedom to be restricted and even if
you're offering them something great they want to say no or run away. Like in
a study by one of my dissertation advisors they literally had a table set
up in the street in Boston. The sign says free money and they're giving away
$50 bills and some people are taking
them, and a bunch of people are crossing the street when they see the table with the sign
because they think they're going to be pressured to do something. Asking without pressure has people
feel that they have some agency and autonomy, and they're more willing to consider a request.
and autonomy and they're more willing to consider a request and asking without neediness has people feel
that they can choose whether to say yes or no
and they're not going to feel guilty if they say no.
So starting with you saying no,
ending with other people saying yes to you
in an indirect and magical.
Okay, well, I love that explanation. Let's give a listener a scenario that they can
put themselves in. And this is one I came up with because especially with the holiday season coming
up, I think it's something that many people might face. So let's say a listener or viewers in a
situation where they need to ask their manager for time off during a period of peak work and business.
They know their boss might hesitate to approve it,
but they really need that time off.
How can they use this no pressure approach you talk about
to make it easier for their boss to say yes?
If you were coming to me and you wanted to ask your boss for time off during this peak period, I guess this is because you're asking your boss who definitely knows that they can say no and perhaps should say no ish to you, I don't know that I would focus on trying to make it feel comfortable for
them saying no because I don't know if that's going to make them more likely in
this particular situation to want to say yes. I would use a different approach
here if you don't mind and I would ask my boss. So I would do the reinforcing
their autonomy, acknowledging their freedom.
So listen, I know there must be lots of other people asking for time off right now.
And you probably have a lot of requests.
I have this thing that's really important to me.
And I'm just wondering, what would it take to make it possible for me to have time off
at this point when other people want it to. So in this case I would probably
suggest asking how could this happen to enlist the boss in creative problem solving rather than
something like totally understand if it can't work. I know lots of people are asking no pressure.
I would ask what would it take?
What do you think?
But maybe you have a better way
of making it feel comfortable to say no
than I was thinking of.
Cause you're so experienced in these arts.
What do you think, John?
To me, I guess it comes down to
if I'm the person who's receiving this,
is this person who's asking for time off
someone who asks for a lot of time off. And is this a recurring pattern or is this someone who's one of my
star employees who never takes time off, who all of a sudden needs it. And even though I
need them during this busy time, it's probably better to reward them for it, to thank them
for all the contributions that they've given, even if it's going to cost us short-term headaches trying to figure out
how to get through it. So I would, if they're that person, put themselves in the boss's
shoes. But I would also say that the sooner you can get in for the request, the better
because a lot of times it's FIFO,
first in first out when it comes to these things.
And if you're too late, you have lost the opportunity
to even ask for it because there's not gonna be a way
for the boss to accommodate for you.
Yeah, and it will count more and more
the later you get what your reason is.
And if you get to ask early,
you don't need to have this most monumental reason behind you.
Correct.
So Zoe, in your book, you explain
that influence doesn't work the way that most of us
think because we don't think the way we think.
And you break down two different concepts.
You have a system one, a way of thinking,
and a system two, way of thinking.
And I was hoping you could go into what
these two different ways of thinking are
and why understanding them is essential to becoming
more influential.
Sure, and it might help if I then touch back
on the mysteries at Mattel of why I was so uninfluential and people weren't doing
what I thought they would do to make it concrete. These two systems, system one and system two,
I use an analogy of a gator and a judge because it's just a little more concrete and memorable.
System one and system two together are responsible for a hundred percent of our
decisions and behavior and the discipline of behavioral economics has
discovered many ways in which thinking in terms of these two systems can
predict anomalous behavior as well as normal behavior. System one is like an alligator. It is this
unconscious primal system that takes no effort at all and these are our snap
judgments, gut reactions, emotions are here, anything that through practice
becomes habitual, essentially effortless. And this is our dominant mode guiding
our decisions and behavior.
Because we're not conscious of it, we just don't notice that this is happening.
But this system is relatively effortless.
The other system too is like a judge, where it's like a human judge carefully weighing
evidence pro and con and second guessing the first response of the Gator. However, this system
takes a lot of mental bandwidth. It's our conscious attention. We can only focus on
one case at a time. And so we're not using this taxing system if we don't need to. And
this is where when we're trying to influence someone, timing matters a lot
because their conscious mind is always already busy. This system also is influenced by the snap
judgments and habits, biases of the gator part. When I was at Mattel and I didn't understand
about kids and the Barbie brand, I mentioned that the gator is lazy and the gator part of us is most biased
toward doing things that are easy. Anything that adds friction really reduces the likelihood
that someone will take action. So these little girls, for example, these girls who wanted
to have Barbie weddings and they did have Barbie weddings, it was just much easier to
have a mermaid and a dog than to use all of the
playset stuff that we were selling them. And with the girls getting a little bit older who were
playing with Barbie like weird Barbie, they said that Barbie was a fashion model. But then the
reason she wasn't wearing any clothes is that if you've ever played with Barbie, you just can't
get her clothes back on after you get them off because she has these stiff arms and stiff legs and you just can't pull them on. So there was really no mystery there. And then when I was
failing to persuade senior leadership at Mattel about my great ideas and new product lines,
it was that I was jumping to try to persuade the judge part with all of these facts and
figures, careful analysis and evidence before going through
the gatekeeper of the gator and having them be interested in my great idea in the first
place.
So people won't be persuaded by information very often at all, and they won't even pay
attention to the information until they're already interested.
And at that point they have a hypothesis.
So a lot of what I teach and write about is about influencing that gator unconscious piece of us.
Okay, so let's do a scenario on this. Let's say a listener is a salesperson, something we talked
about before, and they're trying to pitch a new product to a potential client who seems really
skeptical about it. Instead of relying solely on facts and data, how can they use what you just
taught about system one thinking to appeal to the client's gut reactions and make their pitch more
compelling? So in this particular case where you say that the client is skeptical. When we have some disagreement or some resistance, this is usually the threat detection system
of the gator part, and the threat detection system in all of us is overactive.
This system is constantly scanning the environment for
opportunities and threats like a gator lurking beneath the surface of the water.
The threats are much more important than the opportunities because if you miss an
opportunity you might go hungry, if you miss a threat you might die. When you're
trying to influence someone you're very likely a threat. Maybe it's a threat to their time or their attention, maybe some resources or social
capital, but very often what people perceive is that you're a threat to their freedom.
So if somebody has resistance, for whatever reason, to whatever your great idea is, that
person is going to need to feel heard before they're even able to
listen.
So, in a one-on-one conversation, like a sales conversation, it can sound like witnessing
and exploring their resistance.
I've shared with you my great idea, John, and it might be that you're just like...
And I would say, you're looking a little skeptical
and just leave it open for you to share this with me.
So you're telling me something you don't like about my idea.
And I say, really, really tell me more about that.
I might say, wow, it sounds terrible.
Is there anything else?
Is there anything else that makes you want to think twice or 20 times about the idea
of doing this together before we were to collaborate?
So if I let you get out all of the objections, concerns, resistance that you might have,
at that point when you know that I've heard you and I've understood and I really get you
and I'm not just blithely marching ahead telling you my product features, and I really get you, and I'm not just blithely marching ahead telling
you my product features, like I really get what you don't like or what your concerns
are, then you're...
You will be able to listen if I say something like, all of these concerns that you've just
shared with me, I get it, they're totally valid and I would feel certainly the same
way that you do if
I were in your situation.
I believe, though, that there's something that you're...
That I haven't shared with you yet that is going to make you excited about this possibility.
It might still not be something that you're interested in, but would you like to hear
this one piece that you don't know yet, just as an example? So if I offer to share with you something that now that I know you, I think that you
might in fact with more information feel differently.
So witnessing resistance before pressing forward with trying to influence somebody is super
important.
And if they're not resistant,
then it's probably the gator part
is just a matter of building rapport, right?
We're getting to know each other a little bit,
smiling, we find something in common.
Then the gator part is saying,
oh, I like John and I'm interested
in something that John might have to say.
Would you agree with that from your experience?
I guess I would.
Again, it comes all the way back to my time when I was at Anderson and thinking about
the buyer and being in their shoes, because most of them, especially if they didn't know
you, because where I was doing this was in Houston.
What I found about Houston is they were great at giving you initial meetings,
but they wouldn't buy from you unless they knew you. So they were inherently skeptical.
So you had to break through that skepticism and earn their trust before they were going
to do anything with you.
Absolutely. Would it be helpful if I shared a relevant strategy for influencing groups when you anticipate some resistance?
I think that would be a great one. Can I give you a scenario?
Oh, sure. Right.
Let's say a listener is leading a team and they want to encourage their colleagues to
adopt a new workflow or tool. However, they're encountering resistance because people feel
overwhelmed by the learning curve. I think this is something a lot of people probably experience.
How would you advise that they get their colleagues on board?
It's a miserable situation to be in.
And I was recently coaching someone in a big tech company who was running a team that had
this exact problem. When you have a group who needs to be brought on board
with a great idea to even say, try this as a pilot,
I recommend a strategy based on the Japanese principle
of Nemawashi, which is consensus building
or cultivating the roots.
And this is the really influential practice of having key pre-meetings before
the meeting. And it's most important to be meeting with people who might have some resistance
or that they have some resistance to this idea. So it could be people who don't like
you or your team. It could be people who've already voiced some objections to this idea.
And it also can always be people who
would have to actually implement this idea.
So when you're sharing your idea in a pre-meeting
with people who are resistant, you're
sharing the bare bones version, and you're
asking their advice about solving any concerns
that they come up with.
And you're just witnessing
and exploring resistance like I talked about.
In the pre-meetings, by the way, I also recommend that you, if you can, have a conversation
with any of the most powerful decision makers or people who the group is going to look to
for their thoughts, and also with people who are allies who could support you.
When you talk to the people
with political power and status decision making also ask their advice about the politics when you
talk to allies also ask their advice ask if they'll support you in the meeting when you then share
your idea in the meeting the people who had all of these concerns have already shared them with you
so they're not needing to be one of those first few people to speak in the meeting and get the concern out there
because you get to be the person to share it. You get to frame it in a way that's helpful.
For example, I'm going to share this new process that we have a new tool, which I think is
going to make a huge difference for us in terms of productivity. And when I was talking
to John earlier, John had some concerns about the amount of effort,
for example, that it's going to take, and the amount of time that it will take some
logistics, which are going to be really important for us to figure out. And I have some ideas
about that. And when I'm sharing this and I'm voicing John's concern, then typically
John in this meeting is nodding, which looks like agreement, which might be like, yes, I agree with how bad this idea is. But I've brought John on to be a
collaborative member of the team. And also when you had pre-meetings with these people,
you shared the bare bones idea to leave some low hanging fruit so that other people can be
contributing their thoughts that you will
take action on if they're helpful.
So your whole idea is better.
And then you now have this collaborative team where all of these people have contributed
to it.
So handling resistance in a group is pre-meeting with individuals and hearing the resistance
so that it doesn't get aired so much in that big group.
And then quickly Zoe, because I know we're running out of time, there's one last scenario
I wanted to give you.
One of my favorite takeaways from your work is that authentic lasting influence is not
something achieved by individuals alone, which is something we talked about earlier in the
episode.
It's a collective effort, a group project, as you put it.
So let's say a listener's
trying to launch a community initiative to address something that we really need today,
like environmental sustainability in their local area. They know they can't do it alone,
but they're unsure how to get others involved. How can they use this concept of collective influence
to bring together a group of people and build momentum around the cause?
influence to bring together a group of people and build momentum around the cause.
Thank you for asking that.
And it's one of the most challenging aspects of influence
is trying to influence a group of people
to change their behavior, especially when,
like in the climate or sustainability example,
we don't have short-term benefits to offer them.
First of all, the broad perspective that influencing groups of people will always start with influencing
individuals and a lot of individual personal contact.
Interpersonal influence always takes a lot of work. And identifying people who already care about the topic
and helping mobilize and motivate them to take action
will always be easier and more effective
than trying to influence people who don't care
or people who disagree to change their mind and take action.
So often behavior is easier to influence
than minds or mental perspectives.
What I would suggest for a group of people
trying to do something like help with sustainability
is build momentum by focusing on one very specific,
high reward effort.
A lot of times what that looks like is policy.
So intervening to try to influence policy in your own organization or policy in your
community or influencing policymakers.
And that's something that we feel like it's not my job to make policy, but this is where
all of us can have a bigger effect than most of the rest of our life.
Well Zoe, it was such an enjoyable conversation today. Can you give the listeners a central
place that they can go if they want to learn more about your work and purchase your book?
Sure. My book is available in 28 languages and most places you can buy books. So I told you Gator
is really lazy. The easiest thing
that you can do is go to Amazon, find influence as your superpower, and you can find me, connect
with me, and more information at zoechance.com. Thank you so much for this conversation, John,
and for the interesting topics that you brought. And I appreciate the work and the preparation that
you had to do in order to bring these concrete examples and tie it to my work. And I'm just delighted and charmed to meet you. So thank you.
Thank you so much. It was my honor to have you on.
Wow. What an incredible conversation that was with Dr. Zoe Chance. We uncovered the secrets
of interpersonal influence. We learned how to harness the superpower and to make meaningful
change in our lives and the world around us. From negotiating with confidence to spotting manipulators, Zoe has given us tools
to change our approach to how we influence others. One key takeaway from today's episode is that
influence is not about manipulation or control. It's about genuine connection and aligning with
others to create positive outcomes. The next time that you find yourself in a situation where you need to influence someone,
think about how you can connect with them on a deeper level.
Whether it's raising funds for a cause, negotiating a deal, or simply communicating better with
a loved one, use your influence as a force for good.
As always, links to everything that we discussed here today, including Zoe's book, Influence
is Your Superpower, can be found in the show notes at passionstruck.com. If you're inspired to grab a copy of Zoe's book or that of
other guests that we featured on the show, please do so by going to the links that we feature in the
show notes or in my recommended book list. And if you want to watch today's episode, then you can
go to YouTube and watch it on our two channels, our main channel, John R. Miles, and our clips
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live intentionally, which you can find on passionstruck.com. For those of you who are interested in having
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I'd love to explore how we can work together. Head over to johnrmiles.com slash speaking
for more interesting ideas on the topics I can cover and ways that we can inspire your
organization. Before we wrap up, I am excited to share a sneak peek of our next episode.
I'll be sitting down with Dr. Susan Grah, soul healer and intuitive medium,
who has experienced the afterlife firsthand through near-death experience.
We'll explore her journey, spiritual guidance,
and what the afterlife can teach us about healing and connection.
You won't want to miss this powerful conversation.
Our soul wants expansion.
It craves it.
But the most important expansion is love.
Love is the hierarchy.
Love takes us to source.
The more we love, the higher we vibrate.
And so our goal is to have self-love.
Love of self is so important, love and knowledge.
And gaining the ability to have unconditional love,
which I don't know a human on this planet that has that.
Our brain gets in the way,
but our souls are teaching us through love
and then experiences.
And remember that we rise by lifting others.
If you found Zoe's insights valuable
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share the show with someone who could benefit from it.
The greatest compliment that you can give
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As always, do your best to apply what you hear on the show
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Until next time, live life passionately. you