The present paper shows that people’s compliance with a request can be substantially increased if the requester first gets them to agree with a series of statements unrelated to the request, but selected to induce agreement. We label this effect the ‘mere agreement effect’, and present a two-step similarity-based mechanism to explain it. Across five studies, we show that induced mere agreement subtly causes respondents to view the presenter of the statements as similar to themselves, which in turn increases compliance with a request from that same person. We support the similarity explanation by showing that the effect of agreement on compliance is suppressed when agreement is induced to indicate dissimilarity with the interviewer, when t...
Would you like a stranger more who shifts his/her attitudes to more closely align with yours? How wo...
Seven experiments were conducted to demonstrate and explain the effectiveness of a compliance proced...
Item does not contain fulltextAdvertisers on social network sites often use recommendations by other...
The present paper shows that the frequency of people's compliance with a request can be substantiall...
Respondents in four studies were more willing to comply with a help request if they previously agree...
Respondents in four studies were more willing to comply with a help request if they previously agree...
Respondents in four studies were more willing to comply with a help request if they previously agree...
Four studies examined the effect of an incidental similarity on compliance to a request. Undergradua...
On the basis of the approach–avoid dynamics assumed by reactance theory (S. S. Brehm & J. W. Bre...
Prior literature has proposed two process explanations for the positive effect of source similarity ...
Salesperson-customer similarity can positively or negatively affect persuasiveness. Consumers more l...
Three studies examined the effects of fleeting attraction on com-pliance to a request. Participants ...
On the basis of the approach–avoid dynamics assumed by reactance theory (S. S. Brehm & J. W. Bre...
This study examines the effects of incidental similarity shared between a salesperson and a potentia...
The paper examines the underlying theoretical explanation for a common persuasion technique commonly...
Would you like a stranger more who shifts his/her attitudes to more closely align with yours? How wo...
Seven experiments were conducted to demonstrate and explain the effectiveness of a compliance proced...
Item does not contain fulltextAdvertisers on social network sites often use recommendations by other...
The present paper shows that the frequency of people's compliance with a request can be substantiall...
Respondents in four studies were more willing to comply with a help request if they previously agree...
Respondents in four studies were more willing to comply with a help request if they previously agree...
Respondents in four studies were more willing to comply with a help request if they previously agree...
Four studies examined the effect of an incidental similarity on compliance to a request. Undergradua...
On the basis of the approach–avoid dynamics assumed by reactance theory (S. S. Brehm & J. W. Bre...
Prior literature has proposed two process explanations for the positive effect of source similarity ...
Salesperson-customer similarity can positively or negatively affect persuasiveness. Consumers more l...
Three studies examined the effects of fleeting attraction on com-pliance to a request. Participants ...
On the basis of the approach–avoid dynamics assumed by reactance theory (S. S. Brehm & J. W. Bre...
This study examines the effects of incidental similarity shared between a salesperson and a potentia...
The paper examines the underlying theoretical explanation for a common persuasion technique commonly...
Would you like a stranger more who shifts his/her attitudes to more closely align with yours? How wo...
Seven experiments were conducted to demonstrate and explain the effectiveness of a compliance proced...
Item does not contain fulltextAdvertisers on social network sites often use recommendations by other...