Hidden Brain - How to Win People Over
Episode Date: October 14, 2024We humans are a social species, and so it's not surprising that we care a lot about what other people think of us. It's also not surprising that many of us stumble when we try to manage others' views ...of us. This week, organizational psychologist Alison Fragale explains why that is, and offers better ways to win friends and influence people. Enjoy today's episode? Be sure to check out some of these other Hidden Brain conversations: How Others See YouYou 2.0: How to See Yourself ClearlyInnovation 2.0: The Influence You Have Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
As we go through life, other people often hold the keys to our success and happiness.
In school, how your teachers think of you makes a difference in how they evaluate you.
Do they see you as a serious scholar or a disinterested student?
As you grow older, you might try to impress someone whom you see as a
potential romantic partner. You want this person to like you, to date you. In the
workplace, we jockey for status and opportunities. We might ask a boss for a
raise or a promotion. How you come across to her will influence whether she says yes to you or tells you to take a hike.
Countless books and reddit threads tell you how to navigate these waters.
A YouTube influencer might tell you to play nice. A TikTok star might recommend playing hardball.
Much of the advice you get will be contradicted by other advice you get.
In recent years, social scientists have started to study how we can more effectively influence
how others think of us. They've discovered both pitfalls and opportunities in the way we go about
trying to influence the opinions of people. Unlike a lot of what you hear on YouTube and TikTok,
these researchers are not just sharing
their personal opinions,
their conclusions are guided by experimental evidence.
The science of how to win friends and influence people,
this week on Hidden Brain.
Let's say you have a job interview. How do you carry yourself?
You might wear a nice outfit, walk into the room with your shoulders back, and offer a
firm handshake.
Or imagine you run into a neighbor.
You smile at them, make small talk, give a friendly wave.
What about buying a car?
Chances are you speak confidently to salesmen, so they offer you a good deal.
Each of these is a small way we interact with other people.
At the University of North Carolina, organizational psychologist Allison Fragale studies these interactions and how they shape what others think of us.
Allison Fragale, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you. So great to be here.
Allison Fragale, welcome to Hidden Brain. Thank you. So great to be here.
Allison, I want to take you back to one of your early efforts to win friends and influence people.
In your sophomore year of high school, you decided to run for a position on your student council.
What was the position you wanted and how did it turn out?
Not well. I lost. I had a position my freshman year, decided I was going to run again for sophomore year,
felt pretty confident, and was really surprised and disappointed that I didn't win.
So the fires of your political ambition continued to burn bright, and you decided to give it another
shot the following year. Did you decide to do anything differently?
I did. I was running for a junior vice president position. And because I thought I had been a
little bit complacent in my sophomore year, I put a lot of work position. And because I thought I had been a little bit complacent
in my sophomore year, I put a lot of work into my speech.
I thought this is, you know, it's high school.
It's all won and lost in the quality of that speech
and it's gotta promise great things.
And it also importantly has to be funny.
So I worked and my mom tried to help me write a good speech.
What did she come up with?
Or what did you come up with together? Well, when I told her I was running for vice president, she thought about the presidency
and said, what does the vice president even do except wait around for the president to
die?
And I said, maybe that can go in the speech.
So I put in there something that seemed a lot funnier in high school, but it did land
well, which was that I was well prepared to step in, in the event of the untimely death of our president. As I said,
we were too young at that point to really have thought about, you know, our death and
mortality. But people thought it was funny. So I thought I had a great joke. I'm well
known. I'm liked. I'm going to win this.
Alison thought she had the election sewn up, but like countless politicos before her,
she was in for a shock.
I do remember a friend of mine who I recently reconnected with, she was running unopposed
in the same election, so she knew that she was going to have a position and she was part
of counting the votes.
And I very much remember her coming into the student lounge after the speeches with the
saddest look on her face,
telling me everything I needed to know that I did not win.
She told me I had lost by a few votes,
to whom I no longer remember, but my attempt was a failure.
So I understand you were quite upset
when you didn't win this race
and your mother gave you some advice.
What did she tell you, Allison?
She told me what mothers everywhere say and what I now repeat to my own kids. She said, don't worry about what other people think of you. It's the kind of thing that all moms say it and
no kids actually ever feel one bit better about it. But I think that messaging was given to me
at many different times of disappointment in my life. And as a parent, I get it. You feel so bad for your kid when they're suffering
and all you can tell them is to try to detach
from the expectations or the judgment
of the world around you.
So you were not successful at changing
how your classmates thought of you,
but many years later you found yourself
navigating a different problem that was also related
to how people think of you.
It had to do with how you tell others where you went to grad school. Can you explain, Addison?
Well, I've played introduction dodgeball for years and years that when you meet
somebody and they ask for something about you like, where'd you go to college?
Where'd you grow up? And I developed this habit of not liking to disclose where I
went to school. So I went to
Dartmouth College for undergrad, I went to Stanford to get my PhD, and when
people would say things like, where'd you go? I would give these vague answers like,
oh in the Northeast, in New Hampshire, on the West Coast, and then they would have
to pull it out of me. I remember sitting at a blackjack table in Las Vegas with a
stranger asking me where
I went to school and I didn't even want to tell this guy that I was never going to see again
where I went. And finally, you know, I said I went to Stanford and then I immediately,
he said, oh, that's very impressive. And then I immediately just went into downplaying it. Well,
not really, you know, I, you know, I just, I applied on a whim. I had some story about how that no one should pay attention to that.
And every time I would have to say where I went to school,
I would almost choke on the words and avoid eye contact.
So why do you think you have played dodgeball when it comes to this question?
What do you think you're trying to hide from others?
I feel really grateful and really privileged
that I got to go to those institutions,
but I never have been able to utter those words
without thinking that I sound obnoxious and like a snob.
And that's never my intention in any interaction
to make anyone feel bad.
And so I developed this habit of just going to great lengths
to disclose it and then only
making situations more awkward when other people would press, it would then
just come off as weird as why did I have to ask nine questions to get a basic
fact out of you? And I do it, I will disclose it now, but it still makes me really uncomfortable.
Yeah, I'm also wondering if it can communicate the wrong message and a
message that you were not trying to communicate at all, which is, you know,
that you at some level thought that you went to a better school than the other
person asking you this question and you thought they would feel bad as a result
of not having gone to such a good school and so you're trying to hide the fact
that you went to an elite school in order to make them feel better. And in
some ways, could you be communicating to them in some ways that you actually have
a hierarchy of schools in mind and that you actually thought that you did go to a better
school?
I think that's very much true because now as we're talking this and I think when someone
then first discloses to me, oh, I went to Harvard or I went to Yale or something, I
am much more likely to feel comfortable disclosing in exchange.
So I do think there's probably an underlying assumption
that if I'm talking to somebody I know nothing about,
chances are statistically, they didn't go to a school
that was as highly ranked, and I wouldn't want to be
in a situation where I was saying
that I had done something that was better.
Yeah, but of course, once they find out
that you did go to Dartmouth and to Stanford,
then they not only know that you went to Dartmouth and to Stanford
But they know that you think that they might have thought that
They might have looked inferior if you told them that you went to Dartmouth or Stanford
It's not a winning strategy, but I just have come to see how many times I confronted it
It makes me uncomfortable and I start playing dodgeball
I confronted it, it makes me uncomfortable, and I start playing dodgeball.
So your stories reveal the potential errors we make
and how we seek to influence what others think of us.
I want to look at a couple of other examples
before we get to the science of what has
underlined these interactions.
Early in your teaching career, Allison,
you won a prestigious teaching award.
What was this award, and how did winning make you feel?
My second year as a professor, I won what's called the Weatherspoon teaching award. There are several of them at the University of North Carolina named for the wonderful benefactor who funded them.
And I won the one for undergraduate teaching, which was the course I was teaching when I started
at UNC. So I was in my second year and I
won this prestigious award. So one person wins in every teaching category each year.
Yeah, yeah. So this is a big deal because to win in your second year means that
you really made a very strong impression in your first year.
I did and I felt good about it, especially because I came into UNC. I had never
taught a single day in my life because my graduate program didn't give me that opportunity. So I went from never
teaching in year one to winning an award in year two. And I did feel very proud
about it and I felt that I had actually earned it because I put a lot of my heart
and effort into making that class really great.
Allison continued to be a great teacher, But as the months unfolded, something strange happened.
Year three, she didn't win another teaching award.
Year four, same thing.
Year five?
I'd come off of winning one award, so I thought winning awards wasn't really that hard to do.
And I started to think about, surely I'm going to get recognized at some point.
They're going to run out of people to award.
The school's only so big. If nothing else, the process of elimination. So, I wouldn't,
I was always happy because the other people who would win were also amazing. So there was never
any, I'm definitely a better teacher than that person because it's not true. But there was a
part of me that always thought surely at some point I'm going to have to win because I do a really good job at this.
So a senior colleague comes up to you at one point and makes an interesting suggestion. Tell me what the suggestion was and how you responded.
Yeah, so my friend who's the chair of my area at the time comes into my office at the school,
shuts the doors of something bad is going to happen, but he says something very kind. He said, I had been teaching this required course.
I was getting ready to ready to transition out of it, hand it over to someone else.
And he said, you haven't won this award yet.
And would you like me to put together a group of people to nominate you for the award,
essentially to court nominations so that the the award committee would see not just one or two letters but ten or twelve letters just from students from faculty
Etc and it was a very very kind nice offer coming from a place of respect
I think for the work that I had done and did you jump at this opportunity? I
Didn't I had the opposite reaction and I feel a little, I said absolutely not. And
my facial expression led on some kind of offense. Like this was the most unethical, terrible
idea I had ever heard of. And I don't know if this person who was asking me had done
it, but I came to find out that lots of people did this. And I think in my reaction, it was
almost offensive. Like this thing that many people were doing, which was creating these nominating committees, was so off-putting
to me. So I said, no thanks, I'm not interested. I don't want to win it that way.
So you wanted to win it in a way where you played no role whatsoever in engineering it.
You just wanted to happen organically.
I had this belief that that was how the people were winning was that
students were just so moved by your teaching that they would just run
forward at this nomination process in mass and write these glowing letters and
the committee would read letter after letter of grateful student and they
would have no choice but to award you this. But that really wasn't how these
things were actually happening. It was genuine and it was people saying, this person really deserves to win. So let's put
together a strategic approach for helping show this person's great work. But it felt
icky to me.
Alison's experiences are hardly unique.
When it comes to showcasing our achievements or telling other people about our accomplishments,
we often do one of two things.
Sometimes we come across as boastful.
Other times we are so afraid about coming across as boastful that we hide our achievements
under a rock. We expect the
world to discover our genius and come knocking on our door with accolades.
In time, after Alison became a researcher who studies how people win and lose
respect, she realized not just that both strategies were flawed, but why they were flawed.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedant.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedant. In one of Aesop's fables, a donkey finds the skin of a lion left in the forest by a hunter.
The donkey decides to try it on.
He hides in a thicket and as various animals walk by, he jumps out and scares them out
of their wits.
The scam works perfectly until the donkey breaks out in laughter at his frightened victims.
His braes echo through the forest.
A fox walking by gives him some advice.
If you had kept your mouth shut, you might have frightened me too.
But you gave yourself away with that silly brae.
How do you want others to see you?
As a powerful lion?
A generous friend?
A confident colleague?
Organizational psychologist Alison Fregale says like that donkey in the story, most of
us undermine our own efforts to get people to see us the way we want to be seen.
Alison, I want to go back to the advice your mother gave you in high school when you lost
that election for vice president.
She told you not to worry about what other people thought of you.
Was it good advice?
It's kind, but if it's taken the way most people take it, it's not good advice because it tells us that we should ignore
or stop trying to influence how other people see us.
And I do think that is bad advice.
And do you think it's bad advice
because that's an impossibility for us
that we are a social species,
that other people's opinions of us do matter
and asking us to ignore those opinions in some ways,
goes against
every part of our social being? Exactly, because when we think about how many impressions we carry
of other people, so if we use ourselves, those impressions guide our behavior. And so when you
are negotiating with somebody, if you don't trust that person, if you don't like that person, the
thoughts in your head about that other person have a great impact on whether or not you're going to be able to reach an agreement
and whether or not it's going to be good. And so if we get into this logic, which I understand it's
a lore, is we don't have to care about what other people think or don't worry about what other people
think, it can lead us to some really suboptimal problematic strategies that don't serve us well,
and then we're left confused as to why I didn't get a good outcome.
So you've become interested in studying something that many people would like to pretend doesn't matter. You study status. What do you mean by status, Allison?
The way we study it is the respect and regard that others have for us. So my status is how much other people respect and regard me.
Your status is how much other people respect and regard you.
So when people say they don't care about status or that status doesn't matter, you sometimes
cite the words of a 16th century English playwright.
What did Christopher Marlowe have to say about status? He allegedly said, and it turns out that
it's very problematic to quote long dead people because there's very little
internet record of it, but allegedly he said we control 50% of a relationship, we
influence 100% of it. And I think that's really wise advice, which is when it comes to status,
it exists only in other people's minds, but its effects are very real and significant. And we can
influence it. We cannot guarantee that another human being will give us respect and regard,
but we can do things that make it more likely that that will be the case.
So let's look at some of the ways that can make it more or less likely that we can change how
other people think of us. One way we try to protect our status is by demonstrating
that we are smart and competent people. But the way we do this often doesn't
communicate what we think it communicates. I understand this once
happened to you in a conversation you had with an employee of yours, your nanny?
Yeah, so I
um
love to be correct or more accurately I should say I find it really hard to be
told that I've done something incorrectly. I've made a mistake because I feel like I do work so hard to try to
get all the things done and do all the right things. And so I was on the phone with my
nanny. I was on the speakerphone. My oldest child, who's 15, is in the car. And I'm leaving on a 6 a.m.
flight the next morning. And I said something like, you're gonna be here at 6 45 in the morning to
take the kids to school. And she said, I figured that might be the case because I saw it on your
calendar that you were leaving. Yes, I can be there. And I said, what do you
mean you figured it might be the case? We talked about it and you said that you were
going to come. And she said, I don't remember that. And to me, my first thought was, and
I said, I said this to her, I said, it's really important to me that you know that I don't
just leave town and assume that you're going to come in the middle of the night. I would
not have done that to you without telling you. I really feel like I
told you." She said, I don't remember, but she said, it doesn't matter. Either way, I'm
available to do it. So there was no problem. She was coming. She didn't seem aggravated.
We've worked together for years. But to me, the idea that I was not correct, that I had
done something like this was so disturbing that I pulled the car over on the
side of the road and my son said, why are we stopping? I said, because I know I told her.
So first thing I do is I search through my emails. I don't find it. So then I have to go through the
text thread, which is incredibly inconvenient to search, but there I find it. A few thumb swipes up
is me saying to her, can you comment 645 on whatever day it was Thursday? And she said, yes, not a problem.
I'll put it in the calendar.
And then I, that wasn't enough just to know that I had told her, I screenshot
it and I texted it back to her and I said, I see, I did tell you this and I
couldn't help myself even though as I tell it to you, like that doesn't look
very good on anyone and you're like, no, there was no need for that, but I did.
So, I mean, you are focused both on looking competent,
but also on demonstrating that you're not a cruel employer.
You were demonstrating that, in fact,
that you had been considerate of her earlier.
That was your motivation in wanting to do this.
But how do you think she saw this note that you sent her,
this screenshot, which basically said,
look, we had this text exchange, and in fact agreed to come on this day.
So I don't know for sure.
I didn't ask.
I just felt embarrassed by the whole thing.
But I think that essentially what I was doing was saying I was right, you were wrong.
That's the notion of the communication.
So when I've been in that situation, I don't feel very endeared to the person.
I feel like I've just been told I made a mistake
and I feel bad about it.
So the irony is yes, my desire to communicate to her,
I care about you and I would not do something to hurt you.
I then in a desire to not be accused of that,
I did something that was unnecessary
and certainly didn't have the effect of making me show up as super caring and warm.
Yeah, I mean your nanny is not thinking, you know, Allison is so so smart and so
competent and is always looking out for me. You know, she's thinking why does
Allison have this obsessive need to prove to me that she's right?
She might be thinking that. I'm just, again, I'm not going to ask her because I just don't,
I'm not psychologically prepared to hear the answer. But exactly, you have this,
it starts to seem logical, right? I've been accused of making a mistake. I must correct
the record that I didn't make a mistake. There's a pretty natural tendency to say,
oh, that makes sense. That's going to be reputation saving. But then when you do this,
you, I think there are some situations where absolutely correcting
the record could be really important.
And for me, what I've been able to observe about my own behavior is I have a knee-jerk
reaction to any time somebody says, Allison, you might be wrong if I really do think I'm
right to have to put that information out there.
And I can come up with not just this example, but others where in the act of doing that,
I'm probably
doing more harm to my reputation.
Because even when you're not being accused,
you've got to put in that information that says,
just so you know, I was doing everything right.
There's another way we try to make an impression on others.
You recently wrote a book, Allison,
and you wrote a very interesting dedication that
your editor had some thoughts about. What did you write and what was your editor's feedback?
Allison Frenzel So in the first full version of the manuscript that I sent to the editor,
the whole thing's done, and the dedication, I wrote it last, and I was actually quite proud of it.
This is what I wrote. I said, to those who've had to deal with me when I was neither likable nor badass,
especially my husband and kids who often get the worst of me and love me anyway,
anyone who knew me in high school, and those unfortunate enough to talk to me
before I've had three cups of coffee. That was my dedication. And her response was,
No. You cannot do this. It is way too self-deprecating.
You are writing a book to people who do not know you.
You cannot start off knocking yourself down
on page two of this book.
So we talked earlier about how you don't like to tell people
you went to Dartmouth and Stanford,
and it feels like this example is cut from the same cloth.
Self-deprecation is all about wanting
to come across as humble, but often people don't see
our behavior that way. What happens when we act and talk in self-deprecating ways, Allison?
Yeah, so when I failed to mention I'm where I went to school, it's self-deprecation of omission,
but then this dedication is a commission. I'm actually putting information out there in the
world voluntarily to say, hey, look at how I'm not good
at various things I am.
And so self-deprecation is a form of humor.
So one of the reasons that people use it is to be funny.
And humor is a good behavior to put out in the world
for our own reputation.
It creates social cohesion.
Humor is an intelligent act.
If it lands well, it's considered smarter.
So you know a lot of comedians that have their whole careers
are just poking fun of themselves.
So self-deprecation can be humorous.
And I think part of the reason I have come to use it
is partly that, because I have a humorous style,
and so it fits in with my forms of joke telling.
The challenge with it is why it's not
as good of a form of humor as other things,
is that people believe what we say about ourselves.
We are the experts on ourselves.
So if I tell you I'm not very good at something, and we see this,
when people make fun of their looks, they make fun of their intelligence,
people see them as less funny, as less good-looking, as less intelligent.
So we're the experts.
So we put ourselves down.
What ends up happening is people say,
oh, you just told me you're not very good at that.
You must not be very good at it.
So any benefit you might get from the social cohesion, oh, that's modest, that's nice,
you're taking that corresponding hit by telling somebody you're not very competent or skilled
in whatever you just put yourself down on.
There's also the point that if you're good at something, if you've won something and
you're trying to appease someone who has not won something, you've won the gold medal in
a race and you're trying to appease the person who is not on the medal stand by saying, oh
you know medals don't count or winning is not everything.
In some ways that doesn't make you more liked.
The person who hasn't won the medal doesn't want
to be told that medals don't count. They're upset about not having won the medal and you
as standing on the medal stand telling them that medals don't count is like the rich person
telling the poor person, well, you know, don't really worry about it. Money doesn't really
matter.
That's exactly right. So when people have outperformed others and then they try to downplay
their performance, their high performance, it doesn't land well exactly in the way that you described. People say,
I don't believe you one. So now you're, you know, you're not an honest person.
And two, you're, it doesn't make me feel any better.
So I don't actually feel connected to you or appreciate what you've done.
We've all done things like this to shape how others perceive us.
We downplay our accomplishments to seem humble.
We belabor a point to appear intelligent.
There are certain traits we all want to be known for.
Allison's research puts these traits into two distinct categories.
Yeah, so these are the two fundamental dimensions of person perception. Different people call them
different names, but you're going to have a dimension of assertiveness. Can you get stuff
done? It's going to be decisive and persistent and competent. And then a dimension of warmth.
Do you care about people other than yourself? And these are very much linked to status. So when we
think about people we respect, we respect people who are assertive and they can get tasks done well
and effectively. And we respect people who care assertive and they can get tasks done well and effectively and we respect people who care about
people other than themselves. Those are two fundamental dimensions of person perception.
We pay attention to people and what they're doing. We code their behavior along those those two dimensions and they're very much tied to
this idea of status. And
there can be attention because you can think about it as a two-dimensional space.
And there can be a tension because you can think about it as a two dimensional space. So you can be high on one dimension, low on the other.
So you can think about doing things that get you a lot of credit for being assertive and competent and decisive,
but are seen as less warm.
And you can think of situations where you can do things that are going to help you be seen as really nice and kind and likable,
but often at the expense of your own competence and capabilities.
And so that's where the tension exists, is because there are two cells
that people will find themselves, I've found myself in many, many times in life,
where you're getting one but you're not getting the other.
Allison has found in her research that people can be rated low on both assertiveness and on warmth.
We don't respect people who are selfish and lack confidence.
By contrast, everyone respects people who are seen as both assertive and kind.
The most beloved leaders in history invariably combine both qualities.
That's the quadrant we should all aspire to inhabit.
That's the quadrant we should all aspire to inhabit. But you can also be rated high on one dimension and low on the other.
A ruthless hedge fund manager might be rated very high on competence and assertiveness,
but be widely perceived as a jerk.
Or you can have people who are seen as sweet, but ineffectual.
To complicate matters, these two dimensions are sometimes
at odds with one another. To be seen as assertive can make you less likely to be seen as warm
and kind, especially if you're a woman. Women are stereotypically expected to be kind and
sweet, so if a woman shows up in a meeting as very assertive, people unconsciously assume
she cannot be nice.
The researcher Jennifer Chapman once conducted a study looking at the
teaching evaluations of male and female professors. I thought this was an amazing
and depressing study as a middle-aged professor myself. What Jennifer and her
colleagues did was they looked at longitudinal data of 15 years
about of professors teaching evaluations. So they would have the same person like
me who's taught for 20 years show up multiple times. They've taught years and
years and years and they would compare each individual to themselves to say
okay how did your evaluations change over time? And you might think oh
evaluations are gonna get better for the people who succeed and stay, because they'll become more experienced professors.
And then, I don't know, maybe at the end of their career, they tail off and they get worse.
But what she and her colleagues found was this curve for female professors only.
When they were younger, they would get high evaluations.
As they went into middle age, their evaluations would drop.
And as they got older, their evaluations would rise again.
And that pattern was only observed for women, and it was not observed for the male faculty.
And they did some digging to find support for their theory, which relates to these dimensions
of assertiveness and warmth, which is that
the women who got the lowest teaching evaluations, which remember the women at the middle age,
middle stage of their career, those women were perceived as the most assertive and the
least warm. And that pattern of your assertive and cold was the unique perception of the middle-aged women in
the faculty, but not for the men. And that research is very consistent with the
work that I've done, which is that when are women gonna be at their highest
power in their academic career? Generally at that midpoint. That's when you are
tenured, you're serving in major administrative
roles, etc. And so the story that I could tell from that study is, okay, if your power increases
and your status doesn't, guess where you end up? In the low status powerholder cell, which is very
assertive and very cold. And guess what? People don't like it and they don't treat you very well.
And in this case, the mistreatment came in the form of the lower teaching
evaluations, the lower performance evaluations that the female faculty got.
When women acquire power in the workplace, a number of studies have found
they are less likely to be perceived as warm and nice.
They are seen as powerful, but cruel.
Allison says that combination makes us afraid.
Because if someone's going to have control over me, I care a lot about the fact that they are going to do good things with it, not just to help me, but to make sure they're going to use it responsibly.
If I don't respect somebody, I could be concerned, wait a second, you're going to have all this
control and you're just going to mess it up.
From friendships to job promotions, there are many consequences to how we go about interacting
with others.
Despite the great deal of time and effort we spend in managing how others see us, our
efforts often backfire and people don't come away thinking of us as warm, competent
and humble people.
When we come back, better ways to win friends and influence people.
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedant. This is Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
We spend a lot of time and effort trying to paint a certain picture of ourselves in other
people's eyes.
Organizational psychologist Alison Alison Fregail,
is the author of Likeable Badass,
How Women Get the Success They Deserve.
She says that when we try to burnish our status,
many of us use the wrong brush.
Alison, we've been talking about status,
how much we are respected, admired,
and valued in the eyes of others,
and the wrong ways we often go about trying to build our status.
A lot of people believe that you have this trade-off.
Either I come across as assertive, or I come across as warm,
or I come across as really likable, but then I sacrifice being seen as competent.
You say that being successful involves eliminating this trade-off
and coming across as both assertive and worn?
That's right. So status is how much we're respected and regarded
It's critically important to our life satisfaction and our career success. It's a fundamental human need
Lacking status is physically and psychologically as damaging as living a life without friends. So building status is critical. How do we do it? We do it by showing up as assertive and warm.
There's no doubt that for some people, women included, that getting to that quadrant feels
elusive. But what I help people think about is it doesn't have to be elusive. And the first step in making it work
and getting to that quadrant
is not unintentionally doing things
that are going to keep,
put you somewhere else in that two dimensional space.
And there's a phenomenon in psychology
known as compensatory impression management.
And that's the tendency that human beings have,
not just women, but human beings,
that when you wanna show up as really strong on one of those dimensions, you do it in a bad way.
You do it by making yourself look worse on the other.
You want to show up as really assertive, you do it by showing up as less warm, which makes
no sense.
If you want to show up as assertive, you should show up as assertive.
That's not what people do.
They say, I want to be really assertive, so I'm going to be less warm.
I want to be really warm, so now I'm going to be less assertive. And that we compensate when we don't have to. So that quadrant, assertive and warm,
it's possible to get there. It can be harder for some people, but we also make it harder on ourselves
than it has to be by engaging in behaviors where we're deliberately only showcasing one and not the
other when that is a false choice that doesn't have to be made.
And so one of the things I help people think about when they're
thinking about how can I show up in this assertive and warm cell is I say
start with what who you naturally are and then add don't subtract.
So if you have something that's very natural and authentic to you, even if it's more submissive, like your speech style, or maybe if it's not as friendly, like you're not a great smiler,
OK, fine, it is what it is.
But what are the things that you can add in
that are going to get you more recognition
on the other dimension where you think you might be lacking?
So, Alison, you say that one of the ways we can try and get
the best of both these worlds
is to try and offer help to other people.
What do you mean by this?
Well, helping another person is definitely a warm act, it's a giving act, it's in service
to somebody else.
And if the help that you're offering also showcases that you are highly capable, then
you can, in the act of of helping get credit for assertiveness
as well. So if a friend needs a ride to the airport and I drive them, very warm thing to do,
not particularly assertive, everybody else can drive to the airport as well. It doesn't help me
show up as very unique or talented in any way. But if I have something that I do have a unique
contribution, I always pride myself on being a good child care
evaluator and hire. I could not do my work without the support of a lot of
people in my life who take great care of my kids. And I feel over the years I've
gotten really good at finding great people, setting up the expectations of
the relationship very well,
and creating a good environment for them to work in
that has really been very successful.
And when I see other people struggling, other parents,
I'm quick to jump in and offer some advice or help
because it's unique.
It's something that I can offer
that another person couldn't easily offer
just at that moment.
And so when we help in big or small ways that showcase our talents and give
assistance to other people,
that's an example of something that gets you credit for the assertiveness and
credit for the warmth.
Alison says another way to come across as both assertive and warm has to do with
how we respond to praise and how we engage in
self-promotion. A lot of information that people know about you, it ultimately
originates with you. It's either interactions they've had with you, it's
information you've put out into social media or on a website, something like
that. And so we control a lot of the information that people get about us. So
we want to make that information certainly as positive as possible,
on both dimensions, right, on assertive and warm.
So there was some research that I thought was great
that supported a technique that I had adopted myself
years and years ago.
And I call it brag and thank,
and the psychologist who looked at it
called it dual promotion,
or promoting self and other people at the same time.
So when we promote ourselves and we say something good,
we can imagine we're gonna get an assertiveness bump,
but oh, maybe it's not so modest.
So now we get a warm hit.
Well, what if you also at the same time
are offering sincere promotion and praise
for somebody else who did something great in the process
without diminishing yourself, deprecating what you did,
but to say, hey, I had this great success, right?
I got to achieve something.
And special thanks go to people A, B, and C,
without whom this could never happen.
So you're telling your story,
but you're at the same time saying something positive
about other people.
That's an example of where you could use something
that we've been told to do, self-promote, and tweak it, just add to it, in a way that's promoting about other people. That's an example of where you could use something that we've been told to do, self-promote,
and tweak it, just add to it,
in a way that's promoting the other people,
you get more credit for the warmth.
You talk about another idea called humor bragging
that could help us in some ways resolve this tension
between coming across as assertive
and coming across as warm.
What is humor bragging, Allison?
So humor bragging is saying something positive
about yourself while also using humor
that is not self-deprecating.
And this is one of my favorite findings
that just recently came out, and I think it's brilliant.
And what the research team found was that when people
in a context where you might need to self promote or brag,
like searching for a job, where somebody said something positive and then added in something humorous,
those people were granted more status and were more likely to be seen as viable candidates in a job selection process, for example,
than for people who simply said something self promoting.
What are the examples of self-promoting. One of the examples they had in the study was a job applicant who wrote a purely self-promoting
statement that said, I'm highly motivated and detail-oriented sales representative with
experience and a proven track record of people skills.
I look forward to supporting your company's goals dedicatedly.
And then in another version offered a humor bragging
statement. I'm a driven sales representative who's detail
oriented and passionate about serving your company's goals. I
have a proven track record of turning caffeine input into
productivity output. More coffee you can provide the more output I
will produce. And they found that when it was again, a
positive statement combined with some humor,
there was more interest in the candidate.
The candidate did a better job building their status and being able to be seen as a viable
candidate for the job.
That's what humor bragging is.
So you've talked about how we sometimes hide our successes in order to come across as more
warm and more likeable. So when we think our accomplishments will intimidate someone
else, we sometimes mistakenly downplay them. You say that if someone is worried
about coming across as intimidating, one way to buffer against that is to
highlight their similarities with others. And you have a friend named Greg who
exemplifies this strategy. What does Greg
do?
So Greg Northcraft, co-author of mine, former colleague, long-time professor at the University
of Illinois, who is now retired. And what I think Greg does now the most is play a tremendous
amount of golf after he moved to California. So he's an incredibly avid golfer and everyone
who knows him knows that. In fact, his strategy for showing up as assertive
and warm really relied on golf. And what he understood as a psychologist was he understood
similarity attraction. The greatest basis of liking an attraction that psychology has ever
documented is similarity. We like people who are like us. And because we think positive things about ourselves, someone who's like us is very likely to get respect because what a brilliant
and loving person that person is. So what Greg always told me is, he said, the first
thing I always try to do whenever I'm talking to a new person is figure out if there's any
chance they like golf. Does that logo on their shirt represent a golf course? I wouldn't
know because I don't golf, but Greg did. And if he saw any opportunity to bring golf
into the conversation, he would. And he told me a story once about his biggest
win, which was talking to somebody else at the university. They didn't know each
other, and the subject of the conversation was probably money, but some
scarce resource where you have every reason to think it's gonna be a bit of a
territorial battle. But he did something deliberate. He said, I had the status to ask this person to come to my office.
Like I had, I was the senior person in this in exchange, but I didn't do that. I specifically
offered to go to the other guy's office for one reason only was I wanted to see his physical space.
And so I could figure out what does this guy like? What does he do? How could I make a connection with him and
He went into the office and he said I couldn't believe my luck
I go in and what is behind this guy's desk
He tells a story like he's shaking his hand and as he does it he's kind of peering over his shoulder trying to see what's there
He says behind the desk. You're not gonna believe it. There's a hole in one trophy
He said if you're a golfer and you ever see a hole in one trophy, you're not going to believe it. There's a hole in one trophy. And he said, if you're a golfer and you ever see a hole in one trophy, you know, two things are absolutely true.
There has to be a heck of a story behind the trophy. And the person behind the desk is
just dying to tell you what it is. So he asks with genuine sincerity and interest,
Oh my God, you have a hole in one. You need to tell me this story. And the guy does. And
Greg had had one hole in one in his life up until that point. He shares his hole in one, you need to tell me this story." And the guy does. And Greg had had one hole in one in his
life up until that point. He shares his hole in one story. And you know exactly how this goes,
because we've all been in these situations at times too. Maybe not about golf, but if 60 minutes are
on the calendar for that meeting, 55 minutes are spent talking golf. And by the end, they're friends.
And so I always say there's a tremendous amount of luck in that
story. He did not know when he walked into the office that day he was going to get an avid golfer.
But the part that's not luck is that Greg spent his 30-year career always looking to find genuine
points of commonality with people and bringing them up. And that's the, you know, the scientist
in him was able to say, I know that that really is
how we influence people and how we can build our status.
And so the golf had nothing to do
with whatever money discussion they were gonna have,
but it built that rapport.
And that's the part where we could be more intentional
about saying to somebody, like, I see you
and we have something in common,
and that is an easy tool we can all use,
start to build the relationship and build status.
So your point here, Alison, is that in some ways, maybe if you're a woman, maybe if you're
a person of color, maybe if you're an elderly person, you might be seen as different from
the get-go.
And so the importance of finding similarities in some ways becomes more important because you actually want to show the other person
you have a point of connection.
There's an element of this that also sounds really unfair because you're asking the person
who is being unfairly perceived as being different, different because she's a woman, different
because you're old, different because of something that's outside of your own power to change.
You're asking them to do the heavy lifting
and the hard work to establish similarity
in some ways to compensate for the stereotypes
that might be in the mind of the other person.
Yeah, thank you for asking that.
Because something I think about in my work a lot,
because I do spend a lot of time counseling women
and helping them excel, essentially figuring out
how to take the rules of an unfair game and succeed anyway. And so I admit there's many things in all of this that are
incredibly unfair. But I look at Greg's example, right? Human beings like people who are like them.
That's not a standard that only applies to women, people of color, somebody who lacks an ascribed status characteristic.
Greg is a white man. He still benefited tremendously in his career from establishing real relationships
that started by people saying, we have something really in common. But what he did was he went
looking for it. So one of the ways that I feel really good about working with women in particular and
counseling them on things they can do is that I would give the exact same advice to everybody
because these are the things we see in psychology are the good things.
The humor bragging as an example, it could be a great tool to overcome a status disadvantage
that you don't deserve, but it's just as good if you already were born with a status privilege. So the same science and solutions are universal and they apply to
everybody. It's just that people who have been handed disadvantage that they don't deserve
could really benefit from them.
So Alison, in 2021, the former Georgia State Representative Stacey Abrams was on CBS Sunday morning when
she was asked the question, do you want to be president?
Now this was a very tricky question for her.
She had just lost her bid for governor a couple of years before.
So it might have been seen as overly ambitious to answer yes.
And her critics might have even said it would be delusional.
I want to play you a clip of her response. have even said it would be delusional. I want to play
you a clip of her response.
Do I hold it as an ambition? Absolutely. And even more importantly, when someone asks me
if that's my ambition, I have a responsibility to say yes for every young woman, every person
of color, every young person of color who sees me and decides what they're capable of based
on what I think I'm capable of.
So, Alison, you say that this response is a masterclass
in how to think about warmth and assertiveness.
How so?
So she's asked a direct question.
And in situations like this,
many people might feel like they wanna deflect.
They don't wanna self-promote.
They don't wanna come across as being overly ambitious or self aggrandizing. But she essentially has a two sentence response. It
is not long, but the first sentence hits on assertiveness and the second sentence hits on
warmth. Is this my ambition to be the president of the United States? Absolutely. Sounds pretty assertive. The second one, I have a responsibility
to answer that question
because I'm a role model for other people.
And in that, she is saying I care about other people.
So what I think about this that is brilliant
is that she didn't lead with this information.
She was asked a question,
but when she had an opportunity
to put something out into the
world that originated with her, she had a two sentence response that put out, I am assertive
and I am warm.
People like Stacey, I've become more aware of thinking about at any given moment there
are multiple truths.
And what's my goal in this interaction?
You may not want to run for the president of the United States.
You may never end up on a CBS national show, but you get a million opportunities
to be interviewed every single day. Every time someone says, how are you? How's work? What's up?
Those are opportunities to tell a story. And I think what's a good example of what she did is
someone gave her an opportunity and she didn't waste it. Alison Fregale is an organizational psychologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.
She's the author of Likeable Badass, How Women Get the Success They Deserve.
Allison, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
It is such a pleasure.
So happy to be here. HIDDEN BRAIN is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura Quarell, Ryan Katz, Autumn
Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brains executive editor.
We end today with a story from our sister podcast, My Unsung Hero.
This My Unsung Hero segment is brought to you by T-Mobile for Business.
Today's story comes from Molly Baker.
In March of 2018, Molly lost her husband Marlin
in a skiing accident. In the first few weeks after his death, her community provided a lot of support,
but after a while, the cards and meals started to slow down.
People have, you know, families come into town and families left, people have to get back to their
jobs, people have to get back to their normal life,
and so things kind of drop off.
I had a dear friend of mine, Carla Vale,
who came up with this idea
that maybe she could set up a calendar of sorts
that would assign people a particular day.
And what that looked like for them was that on that day,
they would reach out to me in some tangible way,
maybe via text, maybe a phone call, maybe a card,
they would drop off a card, maybe they would drop some chocolates
or something off of my door.
It didn't have to be anything big.
And then also for me, I could look at the calendar.
I was given the names, and so I could look at the calendar and be like,
oh, it's the sixth today and so-and-so's assigned.
And I could reach out to them as well
if I needed some emotional support or just needed something.
Like maybe I needed them to run an errand for me,
or if that was possible.
So it worked both ways. A lot of people are really,
really uncomfortable around grief and loss and so what they do is instead of doing something they
just do nothing and they don't say anything and that's the worst. I mean I remember going to the
grocery store and I would see someone the distance they would know me and they would literally turn
around and walk the other direction because they were so uncomfortable. They were so uncomfortable
with my loss that they didn't know what to say to me.
So that's why it was nice to have that Cow and Girls set up
so that that was tangible, like,
oh, you could send a text, you could do this, you could do that.
Some ideas of tangible ways was very helpful.
I love that Carla did this,
and it was a way that she was able to use her unique gifts
to help other people love on me.
And I will always be grateful, forever grateful for that year in my life.
Molly Baker lives in Sammamish, Washington.
This segment of My Unsung Hero was brought to you by T-Mobile for Business.
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I'm Shankar V. Dantam.
See you soon.