The
16th U.S. President, Abraham Lincoln, was one of the
most tactful people and effective positive persuaders
of all time. When he was on the Illinois law circuit
he often scored big points with judges and juries by
using one very simple method of persuasion - he pointed
out the other side's case before his own. He expounded
on the feasibility of his opponent's views, and allowed
everyone to see him as honest, fair, and genuinely concerned
with justice for all.
This
is an excellent idea whenever you are engaged in a disagreement
with someone, either one-on-one or within a group of
conflicting ideas. The more you can first point out
the legitimacy of the other's views, the more accepting
they'll be of yours.
Suggestion:
Go even one step further. Actually "take" the other
person's point of view. Take ownership of their position.
See the situation as you believe they see it. Feel it
as you believe they feel it. Put yourself in their shoes,
and in their mind. Imagine it's you who feels that way
and, in your mind, make their (your) case. Then, as
mentioned earlier, make their case out loud.
One
of two things will happen:
1.
You'll ooze with credibility and open up this person's
heart to being totally receptive to your point of view
as well.
2.
You'll possibly discover that you are not 100 percent
correct (and, dare I say, even wrong) :-), and have
learned something extremely valuable. Oh, how often
it's happened to me!
Yes,
actually feel their point of view, and make their case
before making your own. Get into the habit of doing
this on a regular basis and you'll become a WINNING
WITHOUT INTIMIDATION machine!
Bob
Burg
Bob
Burg is author of "Winning Without Intimidation"
and "Endless Referrals." To receive 20% off on Bob's
products visit www.YourSuccessStore.com
or call 877-929-0439. |