Persuasion is when someone helps you believe something or choose to do something, just like a friend might convince you to pick their favorite ice cream flavor.
Imagine you're at an ice cream shop with your friend. Your favorite is chocolate, but they love vanilla. They start telling you how smooth and creamy vanilla is, and maybe even take a big bite in front of you. Soon, you're thinking, maybe vanilla isn't so bad after all! That's persuasion in action: your friend used words and actions to make you see things their way.
Why It Works
Persuasion works like a gentle push, not a shout or a grab. It uses examples, stories, and even tricks (like showing off that delicious vanilla bite). You're not being forced; you’re being guided toward something new, just like how your friend slowly made you think about vanilla instead of chocolate.
How You Can Persuade Others
You can be a persuader too! Next time, try convincing your friend to pick your favorite flavor. Use words, show them how good it tastes, or even make a silly face when they eat something else. That’s the fun part, you’re doing the persuading now!
Examples
- A parent uses a toy as a reward to convince their child to clean up their room.
- A teacher praises a student's work to encourage them to do better next time.
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See also
- Why Do Politicians Always Say 'I'm Just a Simple Man'?
- Why Do Politicians Always Say 'I Understand'?
- Why Do Politicians Always Say 'I'm Not the Enemy'?
- Why Do Politicians Always Say 'We'?
- What are rhetorical strategies?