Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Social Influence is Super Powerful.......IF You Let It Be

Here's a nice article on the extent to which Social Influence Impacts Us.

If your best buddy jumped off a bridge, would you jump too? Too often, the answer is yes.

Patients die because nurses and doctors who know better go along with bad decisions. Planes crash because crew members go along with plans they know could kill them. Organizations fail because employees sit on their hands in meetings—going along to get along. Social influence can turn geniuses into fools. However, there’s an easy way out of this trap.

                          

This was demonstrated through a classic conformity study : They had seven teenagers sit around a table and asked each in turn to answer a very simple question.

“Which of the three lines on this poster—Line A, B, or C—matches the line on the other poster?” The answer was very obviously Line C. It was the only line that was even close.

But here’s the trick—the first teenagers to respond to the question were confederates. They were planted there by the researchers . . . and were told to give the wrong answer. They all picked Line B.

This answer was obviously wrong, but the purpose was to see how the group’s answer would affect the final person. The actual subject was not in on the trick. What would the subject say?

Nearly two out of three subjects went along with the crowd. They picked the obviously wrong answer. Afterward, they were asked whether they knew they were picking the wrong answer and they said, “Yes.” They knew the answer was wrong, but they went along anyway, “because everyone else was.”

This is not dissimilar to what Solomon Asch found with adults; we tend to go along with the group—even when we’re confident that the group is wrong and even if we’re fairly certain that our conformity will come back to hurt us! Social influence is tough to buck.

In the next round the confederates were asked to express polite doubt about the group’s answer. The confederate said something similar to, “I might have seen it differently. I think it’s C.”

This polite doubt had an astounding impact on the results. In this condition, nineteen out of twenty subjects gave their actual opinion—they were honest!

We have an innate fear of being shunned by valued groups. But it turns out that even small dissent can provide powerful permission to the silent concerns of others.

You don’t have to risk being an outcast in order to test your concern. You don’t have to scream and yell. You don’t have to call others names.

The quiet, polite expression of doubt can turn the rest of the group from zombies into thinkers.

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