Read How to Win Friends and Influence People Online
Authors: Dale Carnegie
Tags: #Success, #Careers - General, #Interpersonal Relations, #Business & Economics, #Business Communication, #Persuasion (Psychology), #Communication In Business, #Family & Relationships, #Personal Growth, #Self-Help, #Applied Psychology, #Psychology, #Leadership, #Personal Growth - Success, #General, #Careers
So the only way cm earth to influence other people is
to talk about what they want and show them how to get
it.
Remember that tomorrow when you are trying to get
somebody to do something. If, for example, you don’t
want your children to smoke, don’t preach at them, and
don’t talk about what you want; but show them that cigarettes
may keep them from making the basketball team
or winning the hundred-yard dash.
This is a good thing to remember regardless of
whether you are dealing with children or calves or chimpanzees.
For example: one day Ralph Waldo Emerson
and his son tried to get a calf into the barn. But they
made the common mistake of thinking only of what they
wanted: Emerson pushed and his son pulled. But the
calf was doing just what they were doing; he was thinking
only of what he wanted; so he stiffened his legs and
stubbornly refused to leave the pasture. The Irish housemaid
saw their predicament. She couldn’t write essays
and books; but, on this occasion at least, she had more
horse sense, or calf sense, than Emerson had. She
thought of what the calf wanted; so she put her maternal
finger in the calf’s mouth and let the calf suck her finger
as she gently led him into the barn.
Every act you have ever performed since the day you
were born was performed because you wanted something.
How about the time you gave a large contribution
to the Red Cross? Yes, that is no exception to the rule.
You gave the Red Cross the donation because you
wanted to lend a helping hand; you wanted to do a beautiful,
unselfish, divine act. " Inasmuch as ye have done it
unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done
it unto me.”
If you hadn’t wanted that feeling more than you
wanted your money, you would not have made the contribution.
Of course, you might have made the contribution
because you were ashamed to refuse or because a
customer asked you to do it. But one thing is certain. You
made the contribution because you wanted something.
Harry A, Overstreet in his illuminating book
Influencing
Human Behavior
said; “Action springs out of what
we fundamentally desire . . . and the best piece of advice
which can be given to would-be persuaders,
whether in business, in the home, in the school, in politics,
is: First, arouse in the other person an eager want.
He who can do this has the whole world with him. He
who cannot walks a lonely way.”
Andrew Carnegie, the poverty-stricken Scotch lad
who started to work at two cents an hour and finally gave
away $365 million, learned early in life that the only
way to influence people is to talk in terms of what the
other person wants. He attended school only four years;
yet he learned how to handle people.
To illustrate: His sister-in-law was worried sick over
her two boys. They were at Yale, and they were so busy
with their own affairs that they neglected to write home
and paid no attention whatever to their mother’s frantic
letters.
Then Carnegie offered to wager a hundred dollars that
he could get an answer by return mail, without even
asking for it. Someone called his bet; so he wrote his
nephews a chatty letter, mentioning casually in a post-script
that he was sending each one a five-dollar bill.
He neglected, however, to enclose the money.
Back came replies by return mail thanking “Dear
Uncle Andrew” for his kind note and-you can finish
the sentence yourself.
Another example of persuading comes from Stan
Novak of Cleveland, Ohio, a participant in our course.
Stan came home from work one evening to find his
youngest son, Tim, kicking and screaming on the living
room floor. He was to start kindergarten the next day and
was protesting that he would not go. Stan’s normal reaction
would have been to banish the child to his room
and tell him he’d just better make up his mind to go. He
had no choice. But tonight, recognizing that this would
not really help Tim start kindergarten in the best frame
of mind, Stan sat down and thought, “If I were Tim, why
would I be excited about going to kindergarten?” He
and his wife made a list of all the fun things Tim would
do such as finger painting, singing songs, making new
friends. Then they put them into action. “We all started
finger-painting on the kitchen table-my wife, Lil, my
other son Bob, and myself, all having fun. Soon Tim was
peeping around the corner. Next he was begging to participate.
‘Oh, no! You have to go to kindergarten first to
learn how to finger-paint.’ With all the enthusiasm I
could muster I went through the list talking in terms he
could understand-telling him all the fun he would
have in kindergarten. The next morning, I thought I was
the first one up. I went downstairs and found Tim sitting
sound asleep in the living room chair. ‘What are you
doing here?’ I asked. ‘I’m waiting to go to kindergarten.
I don’t want to be late.’ The enthusiasm of our entire
family had aroused in Tim an eager want that no amount
of discussion or threat could have possibly accomplished.”
Tomorrow you may want to persuade somebody to do
something. Before you speak, pause and ask yourself:
“How can I make this person want to do it?”
That question will stop us from rushing into a situation
heedlessly, with futile chatter about our desires.
At one time I rented the grand ballroom of a certain
New York hotel for twenty nights in each season in order
to hold a series of lectures.
At the beginning of one season, I was suddenly informed
that I should have to pay almost three times as
much rent as formerly. This news reached me after the
tickets had been printed and distributed and all announcements
had been made.
Naturally, I didn’t want to pay the increase, but what
was the use of talking to the hotel about what I wanted?
They were interested only in what they wanted. So a
couple of days later I went to see the manager.
"I was a bit shocked when I got your letter,” I said,
“but I don’t blame you at all. If I had been in your position,
I should probably have written a similar letter myself.
Your duty as the manager of the hotel is to make all
the profit possible. If you don’t do that, you will be fired
and you ought to be fired. Now, let’s take a piece of
paper and write down the advantages and the disadvantages
that will accrue to you, if you insist on this increase
in rent.”
Then I took a letterhead and ran a line through the
center and headed one column “Advantages” and the
other column “Disadvantages.”
I wrote down under the head “Advantages” these
words: “Ballroom free.” Then I went on to say: “You
will have the advantage of having the ballroom free to
rent for dances and conventions. That is a big advantage,
for affairs like that will pay you much more than you can
get for a series of lectures. If I tie your ballroom up
for twenty nights during the course of the season, it is
sure to mean a loss of some very profitable business to
you.
“Now, let’s ‘consider the disadvantages. First, instead
of increasing your income from me, you are going to
decrease it. In fact, you are going to wipe it out because
I cannot pay the rent you are asking. I shall be forced to
hold these lectures at some other place.
“There’s another disadvantage to you also. These lectures
attract crowds of educated and cultured people to
your hotel. That is good advertising for you, isn’t it? In
fact, if you spent five thousand dollars advertising in the
newspapers, you couldn’t bring as many people to look
at your hotel as I can bring by these lectures. That is
worth a lot to a hotel, isn’t it?”
As I talked, I wrote these two “disadvantages” under
the proper heading, and handed the sheet of paper to
the manager, saying: "I wish you would carefully consider
both the advantages and disadvantages that are
going to accrue to you and then give me your final decision.”
I received a letter the next day, informing me that my
rent would be increased only 50 percent instead of 300
percent.
Mind you, I got this reduction without saying a word
about what I wanted. I talked all the time about what
the other person wanted and how he could get it.
Suppose I had done the human, natural thing; suppose
I had stormed into his office and said, “What do you
mean by raising my rent three hundred percent when
you know the tickets have been printed and the announcements
made? Three hundred percent! Ridiculous!
Absurd! I won’t pay it!”
What would have happened then? An argument would
have begun to steam and boil and sputter - and you
know how arguments end. Even if I had convinced him
that he was wrong, his pride would have made it difficult
for him to back down and give in.
Here is one of the best bits of advice ever given about
the fine art of human relationships. “If there is any one
secret of success,” said Henry Ford, “it lies in the ability
to get the other person’s point of view and see things
from that person’s angle as well as from your own.”
That is so good, I want to repeat it:
"If there is any one
secret of success, it lies in the ability to get the other
person's point of view and see things from that person’s
angle as well as from your own.”
That is so simple, so obvious, that anyone ought to see
the truth of it at a glance; yet 90 percent of the people
on this earth ignore it 90 percent of the time.
An example? Look at the letters that come across your
desk tomorrow morning, and you will find that most of
them violate this important canon of common sense.
Take this one, a letter written by the head of the radio
department of an advertising agency with offices scattered
across the continent. This letter was sent to the
managers of local radio stations throughout the country.
(I have set down, in brackets, my reactions to each paragraph.)
Mr. John Blank,
Blankville,
Indiana
Dear Mr. Blank:
The ------ company desires to retain its position in advertising
agency leadership in the radio field.
[Who cares what your company desires? I am worried
about my own problems. The bank is foreclosing the
mortage on my house, the bugs are destroying the hollyhocks,
the stock market tumbled yesterday. I missed
the eight-fifteen this morning, I wasn’t invited to the
Jones’s dance last night, the doctor tells me I have high
blood pressure and neuritis and dandruff. And then what
happens? I come down to the office this morning worried,
open my mail and here is some little whippersnapper
off in New York yapping about what his company
wants. Bah! If he only realized what sort of impression
his letter makes, he would get out of the advertising
business and start manufacturing sheep dip.]
This agency’s national advertising accounts were the
bulwark of the network. Our subsequent clearances of
station time have kept us at the top of agencies year after
year.
[You are big and rich and right at the top, are you? So
what? I don’t give two whoops in Hades if you are as big
as General Motors and General Electric and the General
Staff of the U.S. Army all combined. If you had as much
sense as a half-witted hummingbird, you would realize
that I am interested in how big I am - not how big you
are. All this talk about your enormous success makes me
feel small and unimportant.]
We
desire to service our accounts with the last word on
radio station information
.
[You desire! You desire. You unmitigated ass. I’m not
interested in what you desire or what the President of
the United States desires. Let me tell you once and for
all that I am interested in what I desire - and you
haven’t said a word about that yet in this absurd letter of
yours .]
Will you, therefore, put the ---------- company on your
preferred list for weekly station information - every single
detail that will be useful to an agency in intelligently booking
time.
[“Preferred list.” You have your nerve! You make me
feel insignificant by your big talk about your company
- nd then you ask me to put you on a “preferred” list,
and you don’t even say “please” when you ask it.]
A
prompt acknowledgment of this letter, giving us your
latest “doings,” will be mutually helpful.