The Principle of Reciprocity. People feel obligated to say yes to those they owe. Clear examples come from the charity organizations. When charities include small gifts (return address labels with your name and address on them) in their direct mailings, they double the response from recipients. As a trainer to implement this principle, always enter a training situation with the thought of helping or leading through example. Give of yourself. Show them your are genuinely concerned about their growth and advancement. Period. When you take the personal time to show you care it will have a positive impact on your trainee. When this is sincerely felt and expressed, it creates an obligation that the employee will find extremely difficult to ignore. Its one thing when you have a class room filled with trainees or sales reps that are all there by physical obligation (they have to be there), its another to obligate them to listen and learn, by showing a genuine concern for their growth and advancement. They may be there to learn, but theres not guarantee that they will. As the leader you need to use influence to change their behavior and make them want to learn. The Principle of Scarcity. There have been studies done in psychology that show that people generally have a stronger reaction towards something they may lose over something they stand to gain. When you start to study this principle in greater detail its all pretty fun to watch. When you present something that in concept, may be difficult to get in the future the reaction towards wanting it, increases even more. If your presentation focuses on what they will lose without having or learning your concept there appears to be a much greater attraction over presenting it in a way that shows what they have to gain. For example if you were running a special training course or program and highlighted what an employee stood to lose by not going through the course over what they stood to gain chances are there would be much more acceptance and participation. The Principle of Authority. Employees are more likely to view you as credible if youve positioned yourself as not just a trainer, but as someone who has special knowledge or unique credibility. If you can demonstrate a proven track record of providing people with the necessary skill-sets for advancement and success you can increase their perception of you as an authority. Always reveal anything about your background or experience that would tend to increase their perception of you as a credible, authoritative figure. Another way to use this principle is to emphasize your training departments reputation and history of success. Its all about how you position yourself. The credibility factor is a huge persuasive and influential tool that you must leverage as a trainer. Our system, OmniTrackPlus is an online training and development system that allows you to put your entire training program, on autopilot. Online training has never been so simple and yet, so effective. With the systems proven, robust automation tools, you have the ability to systematically engage, interact with and influence your trainees... while you sleep. In our next article, youll be introduced to a few more principles. Until the next time then, have a wonderful day! George You have full permission to reprint this article within your website or newsletter as long as you leave the article fully intact and include the "About The Author" resource box. Thanks! |