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Chapter 2:
Persuasion and Effective
Communication |
Contents:
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2.1
Introductory Note
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2.1
Introductory Note
We live in a world of persuasion. It
is useless nowadays getting people to do what we want them
to. Various tactics are being used by persuaders to
change the attitudes of receivers. Seeing what works, in
what circumstances, with what kinds of people, will be
useful as you prepare to become a persuader.
This part will include:
1-
Definition
of persuasion.
2-
Process
of persuasion.
3-
Attitudes,
its formation, and the component approach to the study of
attitude change which makes use of the communication model.
4-
The persuasive communication model.
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2.2
Persuasion
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2.2 Persuasion
The act of persuasion is as old as man.
In Ancient Greece, persuasion was the main
means of achieving power and winning in the
courts.
Aristotle
was the first to study persuasion in depth. He
linked communication with persuasion. He identified
communication as all available means to reach persuasion.
Aristotle focused on three ways to reach persuasion:
1-
The use of evidence in rational discussion.
2-
The use of personal characteristics.
3-
The use of emotions.
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2.3
Definition of Persuasion
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2.3 Definition
of Persuasion
There are many definitions of persuasion.
Some emphasized on internal motive of the audience more than
using logic. Birembeck and Howell said
“Persuasion is the conscious attempt to modify thought and
action by manipulating the motives of men towards
predetermined ends”.
Fotheringham
affirmed “Persuasion is that body
of effects in receivers that has been caused by persuader’s
message".
Scheidel
began more nearer to the type of
persuasion we are familiar to, he defined persuasion as:
"The activity in which the speaker and the listener are
conjoined and in which the speaker consciously attempts to
influence the behavior of the listener by transmitting
audible and visible symbolic."
Central to this definition is the notions of
conscious internet, message transmission and behavioral
change.
It also includes sender and receiver
which make the components of definition resembling
the components of communication.
Persuasion, from this point of view, depends
upon two main aspects:
1-
Communication.
2-
Intending planning of persuader to affect
audience.
Depending on previous clarification, we can
define persuasion as: “The intended use of communication
to form a desired response from receivers to their social
environment”.
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Elements of
Persuasion
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2.3.1 Elements
of Persuasion
We
can underline five elements of persuasion:
1-
The invention or discovery of evidence
and argument, and their
2-
Organization,
3-
Artistic stylizing,
4-
Memorization,
and
5-
Skillful delivery.
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2.4
Process of Persuasion
Models
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2.4 Process of
Persuasion
2.4.1 Models of The Persuasive Process
The foregoing
theories of the way in which communication content
influences individual conduct, have led numerous attempts
to capitalize on these conceptualizations for the
purpose of deliberately manipulating human behavior by
communicated messages.
In attempting to describe the nature of these
formulations, two things will be
made clear:
1-
These models of the persuasive process are
the extension and utilization of the contemporary
theories of communication.
2-
These models are roughly formulated.
There are a number of other models of the persuasion process
that could be formulated instead.
The first of these two
conceptualizations is called the psychodynamic model of
the persuasion process. The essence of the idea is that
an effective persuasive message is said to be one
which has properties capable of altering the
psychological functioning of the individual in such a
way, that he will respond overly with modes of behavior,
recommended by the communicator. It has been assumed that
effective persuasion is the change of the internal
psychological structure of the individual, so that the
psychodynamic relationship between the latent internal
process and manifest overt behavior, will lead to acts,
intended by the source of the communication.
Extensive use
has been made of persuasive messages aimed at individual
attitudes, under the assumption that there is a close
relationship between a person’s attitudinal structure and
his behavior in social situations, see
Figure 2.1.
In simple
graphic terms, the psychodynamic model of the
persuasive process would be as follow :Figure
2.1.
The psychodynamic model
rests upon an extensive theoretical as well as an
empirical base. Important
theories of motivation, perception, learning and even
psychoanalysis have suggested ways in which, attitudes,
fears, self-conceptions, reinforcement, and many other
variables, are related to persuasion.
The psychodynamic
model of the persuasion process are attempts to
use the theory for practical purposes, this mode has by
no means been the only one, that has been tried. A
somewhat more complicated alternative stems from a
combination of the social relationship perspective and the
cultural norm theory. For the lack of a better term, we
will refer to this as the sociocultural model of the
persuasion process.
Social and cultural variables
have been widely recognized by communication researchers
and other social scientists, as playing an important
part in determining the way, in which people adopt new ideas
and things. However, sociocultural variables have been used
as a basis for appeals in persuasive communication.
The sociocultural variables from which
the individual derives interpretation of reality as well as
being significant forms of social control are important
sources determining the direction
of the individual’s attitude.
Asch & Sheriff
show how the influence of norms plays a powerful role in
guiding, defining and modifying the behavior of the
individual, somewhat independently of the state of his
internal predisposition. Sociological studies have
supported this generalization. The work of Lohman and
Reilzes, Merton, Kit, Mead, De Fleur and Westic, Minared and
Newcomb, indicate the way in which such variable as
organizational membership, work roles, reference groups,
cultural norms, and primary group norms can play a part in
channeling overt action, in ways that are, to some
extent uninfluenced by internal psychological
predispositions. It must be recognized, however, that the
behavioral patterns of the individual can not be interpreted
on the basis of psychological predispositions. It must be
recognized, however, that the behavioral patterns of the
individual can not be interpreted on the basis of
psychological factors only, especially when the individual
is acting within special social setting. Reference must be
made to the variables that surround the action, in order to
predict, explain and manipulate such a behavior effectively.
The sociocultural factors existing in
an individual setting are important determiners of the
direction the individual’s behavior that will take. This
behavior can be contrary to that intended since he may find
certain social and cultural constraints, which will make him
compelled to conform under condition. This situation would
cause the individual a social and psychological conflict in
following the behavior prescribed by the communicator.
Represented schematically, such a model of the persuasive
process is
Figure 2.2.
These two concepts suggest that the
persuasive messages presented via the mass media may
provide the appearance of consensus with respect to a given
object, or goal of persuasion.
The communicator can also show how the
non-adopter is a deviant and a non-conformist. He may also
show simultaneously, the way in which social rewards,
group integration, and social approval, are bestowed upon
the individual for obeying the communicator’s goal.
There are undoubtedly numerous ways in
which persuasion process could be conceptualized.
The psychodynamic and the sociocultural strategies,
however, seem to be rather clear links to the attitudes and
their formation.
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2.5
Definition of Attitude
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2.5 Definition
of Attitude
The concept of “attitude” has been
variously defined by social scientists so that there
has been a good deal of ambiguity regarding the concept.
But, perhaps, the most acceptable is that of Rokeach:
“An attitude is a relatively enduring
organization of beliefs around an object or situation
predisposing one to respond in some preferential manner."
This definition of attitude specifies at
least five factors or meets five conditions:
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1. An attitude is relatively enduring over time |
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1. An attitude
is relatively enduring over time:
The concept of
attitude is reserved for enduring persistent organizations
of predispositions round a central belief. Attitudes are
formed by past experiences and are learned responses to
particular objects, things or processes.
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2. An attitude is an organization of beliefs |
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2. An Attitude
is an organization of beliefs:
It represents
a cluster or syndrome of two or more interrelated beliefs. A
belief is any simple proposition, conscious or unconscious
inferred from what a person says or does. Each belief has
three components: a cognitive component (person’s
knowledge), an affective, component (capable of, leads to
some action when suitably activated).
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3. An attitude is organized bound an object or a situation |
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3. An attitude
is organized bound an object or a situation:
An attitude
object may be concrete or abstract while an attitude
situation is a dynamic event around which a person organizes
a set of interrelated beliefs about how to behave.
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4. An attitude is a set of interrelated predisposition to
respond |
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4. An attitude
is a set of interrelated predisposition to respond:
A response
may be either a verbal expression or a non-verbal behavior,
an attitude is an “agenda for action” that is, it specifies
the response a person will make to a given object within a
given situation.
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5. An attitude to a preferential response |
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5. An attitude
leads to a preferential response:
An attitude
predisposes one to respond in a preferential manner to
individuals or groups who agree with or oppose us with
respect to that particular attitude.
Many persons
tend to use the terms attitude and opinion interchangeably
as if there were no distinction between them. Opinion is
the overt expression (verbal or non-verbal) of an attitude
which is only internal to the individual. Thus when we
measure opinions, we only infer that they refer to an
internal attitude of the individual.
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2.6
Formation of Attitude
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2.6 Formation of
Attitude
One of the most important matters to be
discussed is how attitudes are formed. More than
ever before it is now necessary to know why people hold the
views they do. In other words, how their attitudes have
been formed? First, let us consider how attitudes arise
and where do their origins lie. One can trace three
sources:
1-
In the child rearing experience of
the first five or six years of life from the
parent-child relationship.
2-
By association between individuals or the
formal and informal groups met with in later life.
3-
From unique and isolated experiences
or similar experiences repeated throughout life.
But those three sources must be considered
within the framework of society and its culture or way
of life to which the individual belongs. In the earlier
years a parent tries to plant this culture into the child
and this process is known as mediated social-cultural
influence. Later on, the process becomes
self-incubated and this is known as direct
social-cultural influence.
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2.7
Functions of Attitudes
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2.7 Functions of
Attitudes
This is a point that has been subject to a
great deal of arguments, and consequently contradictions.
One of the main questions asked is this “does an attitude
possess drive-producing properties or do motives come from
sources other than the attitude itself?" To answer this
question one must develop a more comprehensive formulation
of the functions of an attitude. A certain line of
thinkers, Lasswell, Formm, Maslow and others believe that
attitudes serve mainly irrational, ego-defensive functions.
Another group of thinkers, students of culture and sociology
went further to say that attitudes have an adjustive
function, meaning by this the adjustment of primitive
and modern man to their specific cultures and subcultures.
This gives attitudes positive functions which were
formulated by Katz as follows:
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1-The
instrumental adjustive function |
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The instrumental adjustive function
involves such values as security, achievement, competence,
success and loyalty in group. It is served when people
strive to maximize the rewards and to minimize the penalties
of their external environment. |
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2-The
ego-defensive function |
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2-
The ego-defensive function: in which a
person protects himself from acknowledging the basic truth
about himself or the harsh realities in his external world.
It may be reflected in positive values as, honor, chivalry,
racial purity or the extensive condemnation of such negative
values as lust, intemperance.
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3-The
value expressive function |
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3-
The value expressive function: in
which the individual derives satisfactions from expressing
attitudes appropriate to his personal values and his concept
of himself. This function is central to doctrines of ego
psychology which stress the importance of self-expression,
self-development and self-realization.
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4-The
knowledge function |
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4- The
knowledge function: based upon the individual’s need
to give adequate structure to his universe. It refers to a
person’s central values concerning truth, understanding and
the search of meaning, also serving self-expression,
self-development and self-realization.
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Determinant of Attitude Formation, Arousal
and Change in Relation to Type of Function
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2.7.1
Determinants of Attitude Formation, Arousal and Change in
Relation to Type of Function
Function |
Origin and dynamics |
Arousal conditions |
Change conditions |
Adjustment |
Utility of attitudinal object in need
satisfaction maximizing external rewards and
minimizing punishments |
1- Activation of needs.
2- Salience of need satisfaction. |
1- Need deprivation.
2- Creation of new needs of aspiration.
3- Shifting rewards and punishments.
4- Emphasis on new and better paths to need
satisfaction. |
Ego defense |
Protecting against internal conflicts and
external dangers |
1- Posing of threats.
2- Appeals to hatred and repressed impulses.
3- Rise in frustration.
4- Use of authoritarian suggestion. |
1- Removal of threats.
2- Catharsis.
3- Development of self-insight.
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Value expression |
Maintaining self-identity-enhancing favorable
self- expression and self- determination. |
1- Salience of cues associated with values.
2- Appeals to individuals to reassert
self-image |
1- Some degree of dissatisfaction with self.
2- Greater appropriateness of new attitude for
the self.
3- Control of all environmental support to
undermine old values. |
Knowledge |
Need for under-standing meaningful cognitive
organization and consistency and clarity |
1- Reinstatement of cues associated with old problem or of old
problem itself. |
1- Ambiguity created by knowledge of change in
environment.
2- More meaningful information about problems |
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2.8
Measuring Attitudes
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2.8 Measuring
Attitudes
Attitude measurement is a process whereby
one assesses an individual’s response to a set of social
objects of situations. This is done by observing a
sample of behavior from an attitude universe. Each
behavioral element in the attitude universe in the response
to a particular situation or object that evokes the response
together with a specified set of response categories is
called an item. The set of behavior comprising an
attitude is called an attitude universe. There are several
methods available for measuring attitudes among them.
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1. Judgment
methods |
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1. Judgment methods:
There are two major aspects of this method.
Firstly, each item is scaled to give its degree of
favorableness towards the issue. Secondly, the
respondents must be scored on the basis of their responses
to the items.
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2. The method
of summated ratings |
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2. The method of summated ratings:
Techniques similar to techniques used in the
mental-testing field. In this method, five categories of
responses are provided for each item: strongly disapprove,
with scores 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, respectively. An
individual’s scale score is the sum of his scores on the
items.
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3. Scalogram
analysis |
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3. Scalogram analysis:
In 1944 Guttmann proposed a
nonmetric method for scaling monotone attitude items.
In a Guttmann scale, the items have a special
cumulative property. For example, a person who responds
positively to the third item on the scale is almost sure to
have responded positively to the first and second items.
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The basic idea of the scalogram is that
items can be arranged in an order so that an individual
who agrees with, or responds positively to, any particular
item also responds positively to all items of lower value
order. The rank order of the items is the scale of items;
the scale of persons is very similar, people being arranged
in order according to the highest rank order of items
checked, which is equivalent to the number of positive
responses in a perfect scale. |
2.8.1 Conclusion
Attitudes can be formed toward “objects”
and “situations”, and in many cases the two are not
compatible which creates the problem of correspondence.
Persuaders are always trying to appeal to
attitudes
that we hold or values that we have. Though not clearly
linked to behavioral change, attitudes and opinions are
important to persuaders. Whether attitudes affect behavior
or not, persuaders think that they do and build their
messages accordingly.
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2.9
Persuasive Communication |
2.9 Persuasive
Communication
The question that rises here is: "how
can we effectively communicate and reach persuasion?"
We can identify persuasive communication as
“The communication process where the communicator uses
his tactics to affect a group of target audience
attitudes and their behavior."
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1 The Persuasive
Communication Model
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A. Factors related to the source |
2.9.1 The
Persuasive Communication Model
Carrel Hovland and his colleagues
were the first to make a persuasive communication model.
This model depends upon three sets of factors in
order to reach the intended attitudes and behavior. These
factors are:
1. Factors Related to The Communication
Process
These factors include the three main key
factors in the communication process which are:
A. Factors related to the source:
They include:
Source specialization
Source credibility
Source status
Audience love to the source
The source plays the key role in the
persuasive communication process. He can easily
transfer his ideas when he is specialized in the topic he is
talking about. David Berlo said that the
communication skills such as talking, writing, reading,
listening, thinking and level of knowledge
are variables behind the success of
communication process.
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Source Credibility |
Source Credibility
Is the experience and trustworthiness that
receivers give to the source. Many communication
researches demonstrated that an individual response to new
ideas and information depended, at least in part on “who
said it": social scientists, point out the
characteristics of a message source enhance his
communication effectiveness. Though Hovland & others
calculated that source credibility whether high or
low do not affect the amount of information transferred
to the audience, yet the high
credible source is more effective in changing attitudes than
low credibility sources.
Other factors such as the sources
demographic characteristics and to what extent do they
match the audience, also the audience love to the source
affect the process. This why sometimes, actors are chosen
for certain persuasive messages. |
B. Factors related to the message |
B. Factors related to the message:
Hovland
pointed out some factors that must be
included in the message in order to be effective. He
focused on factors such as; the way ideas, evidence are
arranged, the organization of the arguments used in support
of the position advocated. In addition to the meaning
contained there in, the organization of the message may vary
along many dimensions.
Also the message can present the favorable
arguments that the source is advocating or it can recognize
the opposing positions as well. If both sides are presented,
it has to be decided which argument should precede the
other, should a conclusion be presented or should it be left
to the receivers to draw their own conclusion, what kind of
appeals should be used. Such questions have generated
interesting studies on the role of the message component in
changing attitudes. The answers will be discussed in detail
in the chapter dealing with written communication.
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C. Factors related to the audience |
C. Factors related to the audience:
Individuals vary greatly in their personal
psychological organization. This will be discussed later,
but this model focuses on variables in the audience that
affect their readiness to be persuaded. The model figured
out personality characteristics and other predisposition
factors that enable communicators to predict which type
of persons or audience members will respond to new
information or emotions appeals. These characteristics are: |
An individual’s readiness |
1- An
individual’s readiness to accept a favorable or
unfavorable position on the particular topic that is being
discussed. This category deals with personalities who show
anxiety from deviating from accepted norms. |
An individual’s susceptibility |
2-An
individual’s susceptibility
to particular types of arguments and persuasive appeals.
This category refers to the predisposition factor which
takes into account that audience are exposed to different
types of communication that makes them respond to some
appeals and neglect others. |
An individual’s overall level of
susceptibility |
3- An
individual’s overall level of susceptibility
to any form of persuasion or social influence. |
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This category includes those
personality characteristics of people, who are most
resistant to all forms of persuasion, as well as those who
are moderately responsive and those who are highly
persuasible.
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A number of personality factors have been
suggested as affecting persuasibility.
Overt Hostility |
a) Overt Hostility:
People who display overt aggressiveness or
overt anti-social behavior are considered very
difficult to react to any form of persuasion. |
Social Withdrawa |
b) Social Withdrawal:
People under this category have a tendency to
remain aloof with a marked preference for
seclusive activities. They are considered
to be resistant to any form of persuasion. |
Richness of Fantasy |
c) Richness of Fantasy:
It is believed that people with a rich
fantasy tend to be more receptive to persuasive
communication. |
Self Esteem |
d) Self Esteem:
Men with low self esteem are more responsive to
persuasive communication than others. These
persons are passive dependant and can adopt at
least temporarily, whatever ideas are being
promoted. |
Other Directness |
e) Other Directness:
This refers to people with others directed.
They are likely to be influenced by an
educational or promotional campaign designed to
change any type of belief or attitude.
However, their change is likely to be short
lived if exposed to counter propaganda. |
Sex Differences |
f) Sex Differences:
It is assumed that women in impersonal
matters are more persuasible than men. Thus,
women are more responsive to attitudes change
than men in matters related to political or
social issues. |
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Factors Related to Cognitive and
Psychological Reaction
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2. Factors Related to Cognitive and
Psychological Reaction
These set of factors indicates the status of
reaction and feedback either in the inner perception or an
overt behavior. It is the middle stage that leads to types
of effect including attention, understanding and persuasion.
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Factors related to Effect on the Receiver
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3. Factors Related to Effect on The Receiver
These factors are the goal of the
persuasive communication. It is what we call the
K.A.P. scale where we know to what extent did we
affected our audience. Did we reach the “K” goal; “K”
refers to knowledge.
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This simply notifies that we affected the
receiver’s knowledge by giving him information that might
help him to form an opinion on the issue we are talking
about. The second point on the scale is forming or
changing attitudes. This is where the “A” stands.
The third on the scale is the “P” that refers to
practice which means succeeding in changing the
receiver’s behavior and helping him to adopt our desired
behavior.
The Persuasive Communication Model
Factors related to source:
Source specialization
Source credibility
Source status
Audience love to the source |
Attention
Understanding |
Knowledge
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Factors related to message:
Arrangement of ideas
Organization of arguments
One-side or both sided
Stating conclusion |
Emotional acceptance |
Attitudes |
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Factors related to audience:
Audience characteristics
Hostility
Social withdrawal
Richness of fantasy
Self-esteem |
Persuasion |
Practice |
There are many barriers to persuasive communication
such as language, defense mechanism, misinterpretation,
inconsistency with beliefs educational barrier, status
barrier and lack of trust. How to overcome these
barriers? We are going to discuss in the next chapters
concerning communication skills. |