Persuasion involves moving or motivating your audience by presenting arguments that convince them to adopt your view or do as you want. Youβve been doing this ever since you learned to speak. From convincing your parents to give you a treat to persuading them to lend you the car keys, youβve developed more sophisticated means of persuasion over the years simply because of the rewards that come with their success. Now that youβve entered (or will soon enter) the professional world, honing persuasive strategies for the workplace is vital to your livelihood when the reward is a sale, a promotion, or merely a regular paycheque.
Persuasion begins with motivation. If persuasion is a process and your audienceβs action (e.g., buying a product or service) is the goal, then motivating them to accept an argument or a series of positions leading to the decision that you want them to adopt helps achieve that goal. If your goal is to convince a pet owner to spay or neuter their pet, for instance, you would use a few convincing arguments compelling them to accept that spaying or neutering is the right thing to do.
Persuasive Messages Topics
- 8.4.1: The Rhetorical Triangle
- 8.4.2: Principles of Persuasion
- 8.4.3: Indirect AIDA Pattern of Persuasion