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"Look out, Goliath—David has a training manual! . . . One of the best books on social psychology ever written."
---Daniel Gilbert, New York Times bestselling author of Stumbling on Happiness
No one doubts the power of the majority. It makes the rules and enforces them, and most of us are willing to go along with it, most of the time. But what happens when you're not? What about when the issue is so important to you that you're willing to take on the naysayers? It doesn't matter if you're trying to sell a new product or service, persuade colleagues to try out a new business plan, start a revolution, or simply convince your family where to go for dinner. In all of these cases you're going up against the majority, and more often than not your efforts are going to come up short.
Or at least that was the case before Dr. William Crano—an expert in the field of influence—applied the science of persuasion to those moments when you find yourself outnumbered and overmatched. By doing so, he has discovered proven strategies, such as working from the inside and changing the game from subjective preferences to objective decisions, and distilled these strategies and more into an extraordinary collection of rules that radically affect the likelihood of success.
The Rules of Influence—the most powerful guide to being persuasive even under the most inhospitable conditions—gives you the tools to overcome overwhelming odds and take back control in every situation.
- Sales Rank: #1269730 in eBooks
- Published on: 2012-03-27
- Released on: 2012-03-27
- Format: Kindle eBook
Review
“Look out, Goliath―David has a training manual! In this smart and engaging book, Crano uses cutting-edge scientific research to show us how the few can influence the many, and how the weak can beat the strong. One of the best books on social psychology ever written.” ―Daniel Gilbert, New York Times bestselling author of Stumbling on Happiness
“Machiavelli had it easy ― all he had to do was advise one Prince on how to gain power and how to keep it. William Crano has chosen the opposite, and more difficult task: to advise citizens in a democracy on how to be heard, and listened to, by the powers that be. Based on deep layers of research, yet written with verve, this thoughtful book is an essential manual for informed social action.” ―Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, bestselling author of Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience and Good Business
“The Rules of Influence by Crano is the seminal work defining specifically how those in the minority must proceed if they are to influence others and cause change. Groundbreaking. Fascinating. Brilliant.” ―Kevin Hogan, Psy.D., author of The Science of Influence
“The author succeeds in explaining the concepts and studies in a manner accessible even to readers with no prior knowledge of social psychology, and he cites abundant examples of the success of his proposed rules from history and politics.” ―Kirkus Reviews
“Clearly it's important to allow those with minority views to have voices and influence in politics and business and on social issues. But what is the most effective way to effect change if your message is being drowned out by those in power? Crano lays out a set of effective rules of engagement for alternative thinkers that involves working from the inside, being persistent, staying on message, being flexible, and other strategies to give the little guy a chance for his voice to be heard.” ―Booklist
About the Author
Dr. William D. Crano is a professor of psychology at Claremont Graduate University, an American Psychological Association and Association for Psychological Science fellow, and a former NATO senior scientist. He is married with three children and lives in California.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
ONE
Who and What Is a Minority?
Everything great and intelligent resides in the minority.
—Goethe
Although race and ethnicity often spring to mind when the word minority is used, these features are, for our purposes, not particularly important determinants of minority status. Minority groups come in all shapes, sizes, and colors, and while it is true that minorities sometimes are identified by obvious physical features like skin color, sex, height, or weight, even definitions based on physical features can shift according to circumstance. Princeton University was established in 1746, and for more than 200 years, Old Nassau admitted only males as full-time students. In 1961, Sabra Meservey was accepted into the Oriental Studies graduate program.3 She was the first and only woman officially enrolled in the school at the time, and to her credit gained a master’s degree two years later. Then, as now, women outnumbered men in the state and the country. Women were the numeric majority, but Sabra Meservey, a woman, was decidedly in the minority at Princeton University. Place and circumstance matter.
Along with demographics, majority or minority status also can be based on beliefs or behaviors. Suppose you are a member of the Republican National Committee. At a meeting of the state chairpersons, you realize that the vast majority of the committee’s membership is male. If you are a male, you are by simple arithmetic in the group’s demographic majority; if female, you are in the minority. These demographic differences might not affect your work on the committee or the reception you receive from your fellow delegates, but suppose that while talking with them, you mention that you heartily agreed with President Obama’s decision to bail out the auto companies. This position is unquestionably contrary to the committee’s and the party’s stated position, and no matter your demographic features, you have just jumped squarely into the minority.4 Your deviation from the company line has placed you there, irrespective of your sex, age, race, religion, height, weight, or accent. Even if all these other features conform perfectly to the picture of the average Republican National Committee state chairperson, you still are in the minority. Opinions matter, and most of the time, they matter more than demographics when determining your status in the groups in which you find yourself.
This example points to at least two different types of minorities, demographic minorities and opinion minorities. Demographic minorities consist of individuals with physical features that differ from those of the majorities of their membership groups. Opinion minorities, on the other hand, hold positions at odds with the majority’s. Because we are concerned primarily with influence, opinion minorities will command most of our attention, but the rules of influence operate irrespective of the type of minority—remember, in our work, minority is shorthand for groups or individuals with limited (or no) power to force acceptance of their positions. At the individual level, we are concerned with your capacity to influence others when they, not you, hold the upper hand, and research on minority influence provides the basis for this understanding. I believe it is critical to understand how minority groups exercise influence to understand how we can influence others when we do not have the power to force compliance.
Number and Power and the Definition of Legitimacy
To understand minority influence, it is important to understand what is meant by minority. In social research, minorities usually are defined in terms of number or power, neither of which, individually, captures the full meaning of the word. In combination, however, they paint a useful picture.
Number
In experimental laboratory research, number is the most common feature used to define minority or majority group status. The group with the most members is the majority and groups with fewer members are minorities. This research typically creates or assembles real or virtual groups of strangers who hold (or are said to hold) perceptions or opinions that are divergent from those of the majority, to which you belong. Research subjects may be told that 82 percent of their group holds a particular attitude, which is consistent with theirs. The subjects themselves are in the majority in this situation. Or, they might learn that only 18 percent of their fellow research participants hold a position consistent with theirs. In this case, the subjects are in the minority. The research is concerned with people’s reactions to this type of information. In some cases, the disagreement between majority and minority does not involve attitudes or opinions, but rather a simple perception—for example, you might be asked to judge the color of a large circle that is projected onto a movie screen or large flat-screen monitor. You and most of your group report seeing the circle as blue, but a small subset of the group might insist that the circle is green. How you come to grips with their disagreement on a fundamental perception, how the opposing groups interact with each other, and the conditions that lead to the minority’s success or failure in influencing the majority are the kinds of questions asked in research of this type.5
Number is used frequently in laboratory research because it is a convenient and efficient way of creating majority and minority groups, but it is only one, and probably not the most important indicator of majority or minority status. Another factor, power, often overwhelms number in determining minority status. Among other features, power has the unique capacity to define virtue or propriety, which in turn affects persuasion.
Power (or Status)
Before the end of apartheid in South Africa, whites ran the show. The black population was probably ten times that of the white population, but was considered the minority despite its overwhelming numbers. White rulers had the power to enforce their will and applied it ruthlessly. For many years, the white power structure wielded sufficient force to maintain its dominance. Number did not define majority status—power did. When the civilized world ultimately responded to the injustice of the system of apartheid through boycotts and ostracism of all things South African, the balance of power shifted. The force the white rulers of the country wielded could not be supported, and the practice of apartheid disintegrated.
Power is a key factor in defining group status. As shown in this example, power and number are not synonymous. The majority is the group with the muscle, even if it lacks numbers. A group may be accorded majority status because it controls resources—power—even if it is numerically inferior.
Writings by and about Jack Welch, the former and wildly successful CEO of General Electric, provide many interesting and instructive examples of the creative use of power, and power’s capacity to define majority and minority status. Welch was one of the most dynamic company CEOs in the history of American business. He was involved in the smallest details of his company. He seemed to know everything and everyone who worked at GE, no small feat for the boss of one of the largest and most powerful engines of the U.S. economy.
Welch often consulted with his division managers and their staffs on the many issues with which a company of GE’s size had to contend. Sometimes in these meetings, the obvious solution to problems would emerge organically over the course of the discussion. Jack Welch was an intuitive leader with an uncanny ability to work through problems, and to bring his employees with him, so that the proper plan of action evolved progressively over the course of their interactions. When it did not, he would lay out the conflicting alternatives about the decisions that could be made. Although there might be twenty people in the room, and nineteen of them felt that GE should move in one direction, the remaining voice often prevailed—if it was Welch’s.viii In this circumstance, as in many others we will consider, number did not rule, power did. Even when outnumbered, the person in charge is the majority. Number does not matter when it is confronted by superior force.
Power’s Capacity to Define Morality (or Propriety)
Obviously, the more powerful group can compel others to do its bidding, but there’s more to it than that. Beyond the obvious, power often defines what is good and what is not; it sets the guidelines of proper behavior. Those in power have the capacity to define the rules of goodness or propriety or morality—to decide or define values, good and evil. The powerful define what is right or wrong, proper or improper, and the majority almost always reserves the positive adjectives for itself. Who do you think is responsible for the quip, “To the victors belong the spoils”? Certainly not the losing team. It is extremely unusual, for example, for leaders of a victorious army to be prosecuted for war crimes, even if their armies committed atrocities as a matter of course. Conversely, leaders of losing armies are almost always defined as depraved criminals who violated the norms of good conduct, which of course are defined by the winners (who by virtue of power can define morality any way they want).
The Nuremberg War Crimes Trials, which we considered in the introduction, offer a good example of the majority’s hold over the definition of morality. The trial of Saddam Hussein in 2005 and his subsequent execution a year later provides another illustrative example of the capacity of the group in power to define right and wrong. Almost nobody who objected to Hussein’s trial argued that he was a nice guy who did not deserve his fate. However, lots of people argued that the tribunal was a sham, a show trial staged to lend legitimacy to his execution. The winners defined the law, good and evi...
Most helpful customer reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Worth getting past the repetitive introduction
By Brandon N
If you're looking for a how-to book on interpersonal influence, then this isn't the book for you. It won't help you persuade your boss for a raise, it won't help you score a date, and it won't help you get your kids to clean their room. Fortunately, I didn't buy it expecting that it would.
What this book primarily does is explain how the minority of a group can influence the majority. The author goes about this very systematically, first explaining what groups are, why group membership is important to us, how we react to people in our groups versus those outside our groups. In fact, the first "rule of influence" doesn't even come until chapter 3.
So what does the author spend all that time talking about? Aside from discussing various social psychological studies that explain some of the empirical work behind these rules, he spends a lot of time relating the material to politics, history, business, law, sports, communications, public health, and probably a few more things I've forgotten.
People buying this looking for a quick guide on how to influence groups may get frustrated by this, in which case I would suggest they skip straight to chapter 9, where the author summarizes the common tactics the majority will take to marginalize a minority position. In chapter 10, he summarizes what the minority must do. For an explanation behind the summaries, read the rest of the book. This is probably a good idea anyway since you'll want to try out the tactics at some point. At least if you fail, you'll know what went wrong.
I would also suggest watching the movie 12 Angry Men after reading this book (preferably the 1957 version). You'll see what the main character does in a whole new light.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Better as an article than a book
By Michael P. Maslanka
First, the bad news:the first seventy pages or so are just so much throat clearing. Now the good news:Page 70 forward set out clearly(for the most part), in digestable and discrete rules how to influence the majority to see your point of view. The linchpin is that the majority must see the minority as a legitimate part of the majority. Crano expertly describes how the opponents of Prop 8 in California(prohibiting same sex marriage) lost;namely, they failed to normalize gays as part of the majority by having ads showing gay couples doing what hetro couples do---buying homes, going to work, living their lives. He sums it up:"...the minority must become recognized as a legitimate part of the larger group. Unless the campaign accomplished this, the opposition to the marriage ban was destined to fail---and it did." He alos lays out that the key to persuasion, after meeting this threshold, is to be persistent, consisitent, and unwilling to concede(but be flexible in how you achieve your goals). A worthwhile addition to persuasion literature.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Great book, written by a master
By B. Rosenberg
Dr. Crano is a jack of all trades: he is an expert in research methods; attitudes and persuasion; social influence; prevention science. All of his work is brilliant, and this book is no exception. His love for minority influence, in particular, shows through in this book. As one of his students, I have heard Dr. Crano talk passionately about The Rules of Influence for several years. The breadth and depth of his knowledge in the area of minority influence come through clearly in this book. What also makes this book special, though, is Dr. Crano's unmatched writing ability. The prose is accessible yet lofty; it is almost as entertaining as one of his lectures! Great book by a fantastic teacher, mentor, and person.
See all 8 customer reviews...
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