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-
- How to talk to People
- By SimonT
-
-
- So you're stuck for something to say - a complete stranger and you've got to
- make conversation. The weather's completely exhausted as a topic, so is "What
- do you do?" and "Where is that?", "Live over here?" and everything else you
- can possibly think of short of the important questions "Would you like to have
- a brief but memorable sexual encounter with my good self?", or, for the more
- casual of persons: "Wanna ROOT?". You need something to bridge the gap from
- point A. "Questions that you don't care about the answers to" and point B. "Oh
- PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE say YES!"
-
- So what do you say?
-
- In communication, professional conversationalists (Insurance Agents,
- Professional Salespeople, etc, etc) use a technique called OPEN ENDED QUESTIONS;
- that is, questions that cannot be answered with "Yes" or "No". For instance,
- "Have you thought about life insurance?" is a close-ended question, whereas
- "Where do you think the greatest risk to your livelihood resides?" is open
- ended, and forces the other person into speaking for a time, giving you some
- more information about themselves and what they're interested in. The next
- step is then to head for the common ground - a topic you both know about, and
- from the the conversation will bloom!
-
- For instance, here's an example of my after dinner chat when I'm trying to pick
- up that special someone for a deep and meaningful 5 minutes of sexual encounter.
-
- Me: How was the meal?
- She: It was fine.
-
- [I go in with my open ended question:]
-
- Me: Where do you think the greatest risk to your livelihood resides?
- She: Sod off Jerk!
-
- This happens several times a night, and I'm seriously thinking of studying my
- Insurance salesperson more, because his conversations always seem to last a
- little longer...
-
- Anyway, say you want to be creative and think up your own questions.
-
- Well, a general guideline is to start your sentence with a W word. These are:
- WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, HOW and WHY. The more sophisticated amongst you are
- probably already aware that one of the words mentioned above is not a "W" word
- and are nudging each other in a rich, protestant way and making "tsk" noises,
- which is an easier word to type than say. For you I will demonstrate a
- further example of an open ended "W" question:
-
- "Why don't you go and stick your head in a pig?"
-
-
- Ok! Now back to the conversation skills again. Think about them and practice
- them where-ever possible, except on the bus with a person who smells of rotten
- vegetables and leaky bladder infections - Practise on people who you WISH to
- talk to. If, however, you wish to "pick up" a person with a leaky bladder
- infection, disregard this last sentence and advance straight to GO; there is
- nothing further I can do for you.
-
- For you other 5 people, here's a vague list of open ended questions to avoid:
-
- Exactly What is that fungus growing on your teeth?
- Which STD's do you think I've personally experienced?
- Where did you get such an ugly face?
- How would someone go about picking up a social retard like yourself?
-
- Anyway, you can play around with it for a while, and then when you've finished,
- practice some questions as well.
-
- But for now, I'm off like the social butterfly I am, to pick up a nice tasty
- one night stand. My lines are perfect:
-
- Me: Hi there, is this seat taken? (close-ended and non-threatening)
- She: It's my friend's; at the bar...
- Me: Thanks (sitting down)
- She: {Nothing}
- Me: So, Why exactly do you feel you need insurance policy?
-
- She: Goodbye. >Thwack<
- Me: >thud!<
- Ambulance: >Wee Waa Wee Waa Wee Waa...<
-
- spt@waikato.ac.nz.
-
- *** EOF
-