Her point: Liking isn’t a leadership tool—it’s a cognitive bias. And when you don’t name it, it runs the table.
Influence, Chapter 2, Part 4: The Uncomfortable Truth About "Liking" (And Why It’s Not About Being Nice)
Here’s what she wants you to understand. influence 2 part 4 emily
The danger isn’t malice. It’s automation. Your brain shortcuts: “I like them → I trust them → I say yes.”
Your integrity isn’t in your warmth. It’s in your awareness. Her point: Liking isn’t a leadership tool—it’s a
It sounds warm, fuzzy, and harmless. But in Influence, Chapter 2, Part 4 , Emily pulls back the curtain on the Liking principle—and her take is sharper, darker, and more useful than the typical “just be friendly” advice.
We’ve all heard it: “People buy from people they like.” The danger isn’t malice
Emily argues that we rarely notice when we’re agreeing with someone because we like them, rather than because their logic is sound. That charismatic coworker? That charming salesperson? That influencer who feels like a friend? You’re not just being social—you’re being influenced.
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