[iwar] Everyday Influence

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2002-01-25 21:26:53


Return-Path: <sentto-279987-4380-1012022772-fc=all.net@returns.groups.yahoo.com>
Delivered-To: fc@all.net
Received: from 204.181.12.215 [204.181.12.215] by localhost with POP3 (fetchmail-5.7.4) for fc@localhost (single-drop); Fri, 25 Jan 2002 21:29:08 -0800 (PST)
Received: (qmail 1888 invoked by uid 510); 26 Jan 2002 05:26:04 -0000
Received: from n20.groups.yahoo.com (216.115.96.70) by all.net with SMTP; 26 Jan 2002 05:26:04 -0000
X-eGroups-Return: sentto-279987-4380-1012022772-fc=all.net@returns.groups.yahoo.com
Received: from [216.115.97.166] by n20.groups.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 26 Jan 2002 05:15:52 -0000
X-Sender: fc@red.all.net
X-Apparently-To: iwar@onelist.com
Received: (EGP: mail-8_0_1_3); 26 Jan 2002 05:26:11 -0000
Received: (qmail 68596 invoked from network); 26 Jan 2002 05:26:10 -0000
Received: from unknown (216.115.97.172) by m12.grp.snv.yahoo.com with QMQP; 26 Jan 2002 05:26:10 -0000
Received: from unknown (HELO red.all.net) (12.232.72.98) by mta2.grp.snv.yahoo.com with SMTP; 26 Jan 2002 05:26:10 -0000
Received: (from fc@localhost) by red.all.net (8.11.2/8.11.2) id g0Q5Qrp28910 for iwar@onelist.com; Fri, 25 Jan 2002 21:26:53 -0800
Message-Id: <200201260526.g0Q5Qrp28910@red.all.net>
To: iwar@onelist.com (Information Warfare Mailing List)
Organization: I'm not allowed to say
X-Mailer: don't even ask
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.5 PL3]
From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
X-Yahoo-Profile: fcallnet
Mailing-List: list iwar@yahoogroups.com; contact iwar-owner@yahoogroups.com
Delivered-To: mailing list iwar@yahoogroups.com
Precedence: bulk
List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:iwar-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Jan 2002 21:26:53 -0800 (PST)
Subject: [iwar] Everyday Influence
Reply-To: iwar@yahoogroups.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

http://www.chapman.edu/comm/comm/faculty/thobbs/com401/socialinfluence/evryinfl.html


Persuasion is everywhere. 

I once tried to count the number of direct attempts to control my
thoughts and behavior I encountered in a single day.  This included
people requesting me to do things, forcing me to do things, asking me to
buy things, telling me to pay for things, showing me where to stop and
when to go, suggesting how I should think about things, offering me
slogans to repeat, songs to remember, attitudes to change, and
ideologies to believe.  I avoided the morning newspaper and radio
program, because I knew I couldn't count that fast.  By the time I
reached my office at mid-morning, I lost count somewhere around 500. 

We live in an environment dense with influence attempts.  A large
portion of the population makes a living simply getting others to comply
with their requests.  Conservative estimates suggest that a person will
receive up to 400 persuasive appeals from marketers alone in the course
of a single day.  Whether a manager encouraging productivity, a
policeman directing traffic, a salesperson closing a sale, or a
president telling us we need to spend more money on social programs--
each of us is subjected to an uncountable number of influence attempts
each day. 

Don't believe me yet? OK, let's focus on just the mass media, a major
contender for your attention, time, and most profitably, your inevitable
compliance.  Each year, the average American spends 1550 hours of TV,
listens to 1160 hours of radio, and spends 290 hours reading newspapers
and magazines.  If you watch the normal amount of TV, each day you'll
have seen 100 TV ads. 

If your job were to simply do the average amount of watching, listening,
and reading of the mass media, you'd be at it 8 hours a day, 7 days a
week, 375 days a year! (No, that's not a misprint--you couldn't get it
done in a year at this pace.  You'd have to work overtime.)

And that doesn't even include the time you spend interfacing with people
at work.  It has been estimated, for instance, that general managers
spend upward of 80% of their time in verbal communication--most of it
attempting to cajole or persuade fellow employees.  Don't forget your
spouse, your children, your neighbors, strangers, and countless others
you meet in the course of an average day-- all of whom want you to do
something and are going to try to get you to do it.  (Do you feel
exhausted?)

From my vantage point, society is a massive group of people influencing,
persuading, requesting, demanding, cajoling, exhorting, inveigling, and
otherwise manipulating each other to further their ends. 

We call it society because we persuade instead of physically coerce. 
Imagine if each influence attempt were replaced with coercion--the store
owner whacking you across the knees if you didn't purchase that shirt,
your boss punching you in the stomach to make you work harder, the
policeman simply shooting you in the back for doing 45 mph in a 35 mph
zone.  After the typical day, you'd be a physical wreck.  Persuasion, on
the other hand, makes society work smoothly--while physical coercion
grinds it to a halt.  Successful persuasion makes physical coercion
unnecessary--interpersonally and internationally.  Thus society benefits
from persuasion. 
...

------------------
http://all.net/ 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : 2002-12-31 02:15:03 PST