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openclaw skills install influence-is-your-superpower-the-science-of-winning-hearts-sparking-changeZoe Chance's 'Influence Is Your Superpower: The Science of Winning Hearts, Sparking Change, and Making Good Things Happen' — a fresh, ethical approach to influence from a Yale professor. Chance argues that influence is not about manipulation. It is about becoming someone people want to say yes to. Charisma, framing, asking, deep listening, creative negotiation, and defending against dark arts.
openclaw skills install influence-is-your-superpower-the-science-of-winning-hearts-sparking-changeOn first load, the AI must proactively present this guide.
Welcome to Influence Is Your Superpower! This is Zoe Chance's practical, ethical guide to becoming more influential. Influence is not about tricking people. It is about becoming someone people want to say yes to. When you want to persuade without manipulation, ask for what you want without guilt, negotiate creatively, or protect yourself from dark influence tactics, this book gives you the tools.
Influence Is a Superpower, Not a Trick. Real influence is about building genuine relationships. It is not about manipulating people. It is about becoming the kind of person others naturally want to help.
You Were Born Influential. Babies are masters of influence. They cry, they smile, they connect. Somewhere along the way, society taught you to be small, to not ask, to wait your turn. Unlearn that.
The Best Persuasion Is No Persuasion at All. The most influential people do not persuade. They attract. They are so clear about their vision and values that people want to join them.
Asking Is a Superpower within a Superpower. Most people do not ask for what they want. They assume the answer will be no. The secret: just ask. The worst they can say is no, and no is not fatal.
Charisma Is Learnable. Charisma is not a mysterious gift. It is a set of behaviors: presence, warmth, confidence, and genuine interest in others. Anyone can develop it.
Framing Changes Everything. How you frame a request determines the response. A simple reframe can turn no into yes.
Protect Yourself from Dark Influence. Not everyone uses influence ethically. Learn to recognize manipulative tactics: scarcity, reciprocity, social proof, authority pressure. Knowledge is your defense.
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Zoe Chance: Professor at Yale School of Management. Teaches the most popular course at Yale: "Mastering Influence and Persuasion." Expert on behavioral science, decision-making, and interpersonal influence. Her TED Talk on influence has millions of views.
Key Concepts:
Chapter 1: Becoming Someone People Want to Say Yes To. The foundation. Influence is about who you are, not what you do. People say yes to people they like, trust, and respect.
Chapter 3: Just Ask. The simplest chapter in the book. Most people do not ask. The solution: ask. The worst answer is no, and no is not the end of the world.
Chapter 4: Charisma. Charisma is not a fixed trait. It is a skill. Presence: being fully in the moment. Warmth: caring about the other person. Confidence: knowing your worth.
Chapter 6: Deep Listening. Most people listen to reply, not to understand. Deep listening is a superpower. People feel heard, and they open up.
Chapter 8: Defense Against the Dark Arts. How to recognize and resist manipulation tactics: scarcity, guilt, authority pressure, social proof.
Key Quotes:
[Ask for something today that you have been afraid to ask for. The worst they can say is no.]
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Nine chapters plus half-chapters (interludes with practical exercises) plus tools appendix. Chapters alternate between theory and practice: main chapters explain the concept, half-chapters give you exercises to apply it. The structure mirrors Chance's Yale course, which is the most popular class on campus.
Chance dedicates an entire chapter to the simplest influence tool: asking. She conducted experiments showing that most people dramatically underestimate how likely others are to say yes. We assume no because we project our own fears. The data: people say yes far more often than we expect. Her advice: just ask. You will be surprised how often the answer is yes.
Chance breaks charisma into three components: presence (being fully there), warmth (genuinely caring), and confidence (knowing your worth). Each can be practiced. Presence: put your phone away, make eye contact, listen. Warmth: smile, remember names, express appreciation. Confidence: stand tall, speak clearly, know that you deserve to be heard.
Chance devotes a chapter to ethical defense. She teaches how to recognize manipulation tactics: reciprocity pressure (they give you something so you owe them), scarcity (limited time offers), authority pressure (because I said so), social proof (everyone is doing it). The defense: recognize the tactic, pause, ask yourself what you really want.
Chance includes a candid chapter about how gender affects influence. Women face a double bind: being assertive is seen as bossy, being warm is seen as weak. She offers strategies: frame requests as collaboration, use we-language, acknowledge the bind directly. She does not pretend the bias does not exist — she gives tools to navigate it.
One of Chance's most memorable concepts. Everyone has an inner two-year-old who wants what they want when they want it. When you feel resistance to a request, your inner two-year-old is activated. The solution: name it. "I notice my inner two-year-old is resisting." Naming it defuses it.
The book ends with a practical toolkit: the Ask, the Framing Tool, the Charisma Checklist, the Deep Listening Guide, the Creative Negotiation Template. These are tools you can use in any situation — at work, at home, in relationships.
Chance's "Mastering Influence and Persuasion" is the most popular course at Yale School of Management. Students compete for spots. The course covers the same material as the book: asking, charisma, framing, negotiation, ethics. The book is her way of bringing the course to a wider audience.
The book ends with discussion questions for book clubs and teams. They help apply the concepts to real situations.