TIP022: INFLUENCE – ROBERT CIALDINI’S PSYCHOLOGY OF PERSUASION

W/ PRESTON & STIG

 8 February 2015

In this episode, Preston and Stig provide an overview of the book “Influence,” an account of how Robert Cialdini guides you to become more influential in business.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Who is Robert Cialdini and what is his book “Influence” all about?
  • How can you become influential in business?
  • How do you avoid being negatively influenced by others?
  • Ask the Investors: Should I sell my winner stock and rebalance the number of bonds according to my age?

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  0:00  

This is Episode 22 of The Investor’s Podcast. 

Intro  0:40  

Broadcasting from Bel Air, Maryland, this is The Investor’s Podcast. They’ll read the books and summarize the lessons. They’ll test the waters and tell you when it’s cold. They’ll give you actionable investing strategies. Your hosts, Preston Pysh and Stig Brodersen!

Preston Pysh  1:03  

All right, guys, are you ready to do this? Today’s episode is going to be pretty exciting. I’m your host Preston Pysh for The Investor’s Podcast. As always, I am accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark. 

Today, we brought Calin Yablonski back on the show today. He was with us last week with the real estate episode. We brought him back because Calin sent me a very special Christmas gift this year.

Calin Yablonski  1:35  

Yeah, I think it came probably early January, something like that. Not a very accurate Santa Claus present. 

Preston Pysh  1:43  

It was wrapped though. I have to admit. This is crazy. I get these cues throughout my life. I don’t know if you guys have similar events, but I get these cues where things keep reappearing and they keep popping up. After I see this happen, like three times I take the obvious hint that somebody is trying to tell me something. 

This book happened to be one of those cues where we had the interview with Guy Spier. He kept mentioning this gentleman, Robert Cialdini, so I researched him more. 

Stig and I were building this list of all these different billionaires and what their favorite books were. This list is up on the top level page of the investors podcast.

There are about 10 to 15 billionaires and then we found all their favorite books. One of the books there was Charlie Munger’s favorite book, “Influence.” Charlie Munger is the Vice Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway. His favorite book is “Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion” by Robert Cialdini. That was the second cue. 

And so then I walked down to my mailbox here at the end of January, thinking that all my Christmas gifts had been opened. Then Calin sent me a book in the mail, which really excited me that I knew it was a book. It was in wrapping paper. When I opened it, it was “Influence” by Robert Cialdini. I took the obvious hand, it practically smacked me in the head this time to read this book.

To be quite honest with you, after reading it, I’m a little embarrassed that I hadn’t read it before because this is a powerful book. If you have not read this, you are doing yourself a disservice. This was a profound read. 

Just to give you guys, I mean that the title really says it all: “Influence. The Psychology of Persuasion.” If you’re a marketing person, this book is definitely going to be one of the staples for your industry. However, for anyone who’s not in marketing, and you’re just trying to understand how maybe you can be a little bit more effective at work or whatever it is that you’re trying to accomplish, I would strongly encourage you that this book is the one that’s going to probably give you some of the most information on how to do that. 

Anyway, I’m just going to start off with how the book begins and then what we’re going to do is we’re going to do a round robin. Calin is going to talk about the next chapter, then Stig will talk about the next one. There’s only a few key points in this book. We’ll cover each one of those key points. 

The book starts off with this story about a lady who’s selling jewelry. She lives in a vacation resort type area where her store is at. She’s trying to sell blue topaz, I think is what it was. What she’s trying to do is she’s trying to sell these blue topaz stones that she has in her jewelry store and she’s having difficulty doing that. She leaves this note for one of her workers that are going to be opening up the store the following day and she says. “Mark these blue topaz as half off.” 

She writes the one slash two in a certain manner that it was a little bit difficult to understand. So the lady, the store owner, comes back the next day. To her surprise, every single one of her blue topazes were sold. 

This is where it got really interesting because the lady says, “I went to see what my revenues were from selling the blue topazes. When I looked at the revenue that was generated, I was shocked and I was floored.” 

She was floored because she had actually made double what the price was where she couldn’t sell the price point that she couldn’t sell it at. The employee had actually doubled the price of the stones and the employee sold out all the stones, because they were twice as expensive. 

The book starts off with that story, which I thought was an attention grabber. And so, the lady contacted Robert Cialdini, who she knew, evidently from some way or the other, and she said, “I need to understand why this happened. What in the world happened psychologically that made this occur?”

Cialdini says, “Well, before I answer that question, I first got to explain something that’s a little bit more profound and how psychology works.” He starts off with a story about turkeys and how mother turkeys take care of their young whenever they’re born. 

He said the mother turkey will only take care of their babies, if the babies are making a  sound. If the baby isn’t making that sound, then the mother doesn’t come over and care for it.

What psychologists had done is they ran this test where they took that idea to the next level where the turkey has a predator. I can’t remember what the predator was? I don’t know if it necessarily says what the type of bird is. But there’s some type of predator… Stig is looking it up in the book right now. So the mother has this predator and whenever that predator comes around, the mother vehemently attacks this predator. 

What the psychologist did was they came up with this idea of “Well, let’s see if we can actually get the mother to take care of and to influence the mother to the point where she’d actually take care of the predator.” And so what the psychologists did is they replaced them. They took basically like a fake mock up of this predatory bird, and they put the chirping sound inside of the fake bird. Then they put that bird in front of one of these mother turkeys to see what would happen. 

Sure enough, whenever they did that, the mother turkey came over to this predator and basically started coddling the predator as if it was one of the one of her babies. 

Cialdini starts off the book with this example. He says that animals whenever there’s a certain type of reaction, whenever there’s this A quality of this A variable, there’s an immediate and not even thinking reaction with B. For example, the A variable is the chirping, the reaction, which is the B is the fact that the mother goes over and cares for them whenever they hear the chirping, regardless of all the other variables. 

Cialdini says that although this happens in the animal kingdom, it actually happens in the human domain as well. That’s how he starts the book. For me, whenever I was reading this, I was just like, “Oh, that is really cool.” So I’m very excited to know what in the world he’s going to say about how humans react and how we have this A to B reaction. What are they? I really wanted to figure out what they were. 

In real general terms, and I want to put this out there because if I don’t say now I’m going forget, in real general terms, and this is an overview for the whole book… Cialdini makes the argument that because there are so many variables that we are experiencing as humans, our minds can’t possibly account and understand all the variables all at once. 

What he says is, “What happens over time is that we create shortcuts and we create these ways to compensate and to live in this world with all these different variables, so that we can do things more efficiently. And because we create these shortcuts, that is the reason that this A to B exists.” 

Back to the opening scenario of the book where he’s talking about this woman trying to sell her blue topazes. He says that the reason that this woman was able to sell them at twice the price is because you had a couple different variables. You had people on vacation, willing to spend a lot of money. You had people on vacation, who didn’t want to spend the whole day in the jewelry store looking for jewelry. 

What happened was there was this A to B reaction that when people see A, the higher price, their reaction was B, that’s a higher quality and a better stone than anyone else. They made that reaction and they made that full circle as to whether there is higher quality, a better product because it’s a higher price, and therefore they purchased it. They went on their way. 

That short cut is what really caused that to occur. That’s an opening for the book. Let’s just jump into it here. What I just described was really the first chapter. Now what we’re going to do is we’re going to talk about the second chapter, which is reciprocation. 

Stig, go ahead and fire away what you learned about reciprocation in the second chapter. 

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