The story of the Game of Thrones character, Daenerys Targaryen, is an impressive one and it easy to see why fans watch her on the edge of their seat, because we love an underdog. She goes from a young girl sold into marriage with nothing to winning followers, an army, becoming a queen and conquering cities. To do something like that Daenerys has had to be very persuasive, and over the seasons she’s become a bit of an expert at getting what she wants from others.
The perfect
example can be seen in her speech to the mythical city of Meereen as she is
about to invade it. Daenerys managed to persuade the slaves of Meereen to cut
their chains, kill their masters and open the gates to herself, her terrifying
army and pet dragons – definitely a hard sell!
How does she
do this? Check out the clip and see. She immediately separates her audience,
making the in-group and out-group salient between the masters and slaves. Suddenly
they are no longer one unified city being invaded, they are two distinct
groups:
“Your masters have told you lies about
me, or they may have told you nothing. It does not matter. I have nothing to
say to them. I speak only to you.”
Daenerys makes
it very clear to the slaves that the out-group are the enemy. She follows it up
by reminding them that the out-group are her enemy too and that her army is
made up of freed slaves, both statements effectively joining herself with the
slave in-group. Crucially throughout her
whole speech Daenerys makes the distinction between the groups she’s created
relevant to her request by highlighting the harm the masters have caused and
how agreeing to her request will give them freedom from this.
Back in the
real world, we can see the evidence to support this technique. Wyer (2010) conducted
an experiment showing that individuals are more persuaded by messages from
their in-group, and furthermore that the in-group message would be most persuasive
when the group membership was meaningful or relevant to the attitude or issue.
They divided participants
according to their political party and were then shown either a relevant
persuasive message on legalizing euthanasia or an irrelevant message. They were
told that the message was written either by someone in the same political group
as them or a different political group, making membership salient to their decision. Once read, they rated their attitudes
towards the topic. Participants were most persuaded to believe in an issue if it
came from their own political party than from another party regardless of the
stance, so when the messaged opposed they had more negative attitudes and when
it advocated they had more positive attitudes, as shown in the table below.
Interestingly,
when it came to the irrelevant message of course credit procedures, something
totally unrelated to political stance, the participants were persuaded equally
by in-group and out-group sources whether the message was for or against
changing the college procedures. So if you if you find yourself ever trying to persuade a group, be more like Daenerys:
1. Divide and
Conquer
2. Remember
the importance of relevance!
Wyer, N. A. (2010). Selective self-categorization:
Meaningful categorization and the in-group persuasion effect. The Journal of
social psychology, 150, 452-470.
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