How to Find Commonality to Influence Employees

Shawn Casemore • No Comment
Posted: August 3, 2017

During a talk for CAFE (the Canadian Association of Family Enterprises) I made the comment that if you’re finding it difficult to motivate those around you to have the same ambition and energy you do, there’s certainly a chance that it’s not them, it’s you.

Finding Commonality to Influence Employees:

The most successful entrepreneurs and business leaders are influential. They become influential by practicing the achievement of commonality based on adapting to individuality.

Sound complex? It’s not and here’s why.

[Tweet “How you react and respond to the people and events around you are influenced by your perceptions.”]

Today and everyday, how you react and respond to the people and events around you are influenced by your perceptions. So, your perceptions are in turn unique to you, which means that it is rare that your perceptions (and in turn your responses and reactions to events around you) will align completely with others you interact with.

Most importantly, the greater your ability to find commonality by adapting to individuality, the greater your chances of influencing people and the environment that surrounds you.

For instance, if you’ve ever observed a good politician (I know, it’s a stretch), or a likeable car salesman (another stretch!), what you will find is that they are highly flexible in how they listen to, approach and respond to those they interact with. That is to say they place intense focus on understanding the individuality of those they interact with in order to find commonality and they adapt to it.

Assessing Five Separate Components:

Finding commonality is based on assessing five separate components which is done in the form of questions that you can consider during (or prior to) an interaction with someone.

Here are the questions:

1. Life Experiences: What life experiences have influenced their perceptions of the world around them?

2. Generational Differences: Based on their generation, what are their likes, dislikes and preferences?

3. Behavioral Preferences: What behavioral patterns can you spot and how might these influence their perceptions?

4. Thought Patterns: What are their sensory experiences? How do they tend to filter their thoughts?

5. Social Environment: What are the attributes of the social environment that they exist in today?

Sound overwhelming? It’s not. Take it from someone who started their own business at the age of fourteen and sold cars at the age of twenty-one!

Question: Consider an employee or customer that you work with frequently and answer the five questions below. In conclusion, based on your responses, how might you change your approach, conversations and interactions to create a more valuable interaction and in turn increase your influence?

To learn more about how to apply these strategies throughout your business, click here.

© Shawn Casemore 2017. All rights reserved.

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