Site icon THOM GIBSON

An Educator’s Perspective on ‘To Sell Is Human’

I took the Myers-Briggs personality test in college (or at least a free online version so who knows how reliable the results really were) and I got ENFJ.  I read that this personality type is pretty good at getting others to do what they want (for better or for worse). Naturally, moving people has always been something I’ve been very interested in; how to get people to understand an adopt your perspective.  As an educator, I’m always trying to sell the students on the idea of working hard, being respectful, helping each other, and taking charge of their own learning.  I am a salesmen…I am in the business of moving others.

This is the focus of Dan Pink‘s book ‘To Sell is Human.’  He redefines who’s in sales by saying if you’re a mover of people, you’re in sales.  He also breaks down the traditional idea of what sales is and how it’s changing thanks to the information age.  The book contains a ton of research-based ideas and methods on how to be and what to do when moving others.


HOW TO BE

In developing the right mindset to move others, Pink proposes the new ABC’s of selling – attunement, buoyancy, and clarity.  Here’s a few things that stuck with me.

ATTUNEMENT

Attunement is getting yourself in tune with those you’re trying to move.  You have to be a social cartographer in a sense.  He discusses how conversation is a primary way we attune ourselves with others.  Pink recommends the question ‘where are you from’ as a great conversation starter; people can answer that question in a myriad of ways.

I remember in college, I got sick of just asking people (and being asked) the exact same question- ‘what’s your major?’  I came up with a list of more interesting questions to ask (what’s your favorite part of the face, what’s your favorite word, what’s the closest you’ve ever been to a physical fight, etc.).  It usually lightened things up and made for a more interesting conversation.  It took attunement skills to know which types of questions would go over well with different people.

Attunement In the Classroom

BUOYANCY

Buoyancy is about focusing on being optimistic; not letting failure or rejection ‘drown you.’  Pink really tried to convey that he wasn’t talking about blind optimism, which just hopes everything will turn out OK.  He quoted Martin Seligman (guy who started ‘positive psychology’) by saying we should have flexible optimism, which is “optimism with it’s eyes open.”  It’s the balance of being a realist and optimist; they are not at odds.

Buoyancy In the Classroom

CLARITY

Clarity is pretty self explanatory- to have those you’re trying to move clearly see what your message is.  This video demonstrates it well:

Clarity In the Classroom

That second question is genius.  It forces the person to really clarify for themselves where they are really at.  It makes them actually defend why they’re a 6 all the while recognizing they’re not a 10, setting their own goals in the process.  Hear Pink explain it in his own words.


WHAT TO DO

Pink starts getting into the practical applications of these ideas in the third section; what to do when you’ve attuned yourself, remained buoyant, and have a clear message.

Pitch

He gave six different types of pitches but what stuck with me was a unique presentation style called pecha-kucha. It’s 20 slides and each slide lasts only 20 seconds. Talk about clarity and getting to the point!

Pitch In the Classroom

Improvise

Pink shared things he learned from an improv class, which I still have a hard time taking seriously after watching The Office.  The point was that moving people is less about a script and more about reading a situation and improvising the best course of action to move others.

Improvising In the Classroom

‘Let’s do our yearly field trip to the Fort Worth Zoo.’
‘Yeah but that’s going to interfere with our science state testing preparation.’

INSTEAD

‘Let’s do our yearly field trip to the Fort Worth Zoo.’
‘Yeah and since it’s a science-based field trip, it will help the students prepare for their science state test.’

It forces you to move into a problem solving mode to keep the conversation going instead of just killing the idea, as well as killing the vibe of the room. This can be challenging when someone else is dolling out the ‘yeah, but…’


Serve

This final part was on how we should view our work as a way to serve the people we’re trying to move.  It really tied in with his previous book where he stated that having a sense of purpose in what you’re doing will drive intrinsic motivation.  I think he even gave some of the same examples.

Serving In the Classroom


It’s a good read.  Check it out for yourself.

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