- A new study finds that people tend to overestimate the power of their persuasiveness via text-based communication, and underestimate the power of their persuasiveness via face-to-face communication
- Participants who made requests over email felt just as confident about the effectiveness of their requests as those who made their requests face-to-face
- But the face-to-face requests were 34 times more effective than the emailed ones
- Here is the full research from published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
- If your office runs on email and text-based communication, it’s worth considering whether you could be a more effective communicator by having conversations in person
- It is often more convenient and comfortable to use text-based communication than to approach someone in-person, but if you overestimate the effectiveness of such media, you may regularly—and unknowingly—choose inferior means of influence.
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