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How to ask for help -- and get a "yes"

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    So, asking for help
    is basically the worst, right?
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    I've actually never seen it
    on one of those top ten lists
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    of things people fear,
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    like public speaking
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    and death,
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    but I'm pretty sure
    it actually belongs there.
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    Even though in many ways it's foolish
    for us to be afraid to admit we need help,
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    whether it's from a loved one
    or a friend or from a coworker
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    or even from a stranger,
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    somehow it always feel just a little bit
    uncomfortable and embarrassing
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    to actually ask for help,
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    which is, of course, why most of us
    try to avoid asking for help
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    whenever humanly possible.
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    My father was one of those
    legions of fathers
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    who, I swear, would rather drive
    through an alligator-infested swamp
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    than actually ask someone for help
    getting back to the road.
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    When I was a kid,
    we took a family vacation.
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    We drove from our home in South Jersey
    to Colonial Williamsburg.
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    And I remember we got really badly lost.
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    My mother and I pleaded with him
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    to please just pull over and ask someone
    for directions back to the highway,
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    and he absolutely refused,
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    and, in fact, assured us
    that we were not lost,
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    he had just always wanted to know
    what was over here.
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    (Laughter)
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    So if we're going to ask for help --
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    and we have to, we all do,
    practically every day --
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    the only way we're going to even begin
    to get comfortable with it
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    is to get good at it,
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    to actually increase the chances
    that when you ask for help from someone,
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    they're actually going to say yes.
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    And not only that, but they're going
    to find it actually satisfying
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    and rewarding to help you,
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    because that way, they'll be motivated
    to continue to help you into the future.
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    So research that I
    and some of my colleagues have done
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    has shed a lot of light on why it is
    that sometimes people say yes
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    to our requests for help
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    and why sometimes they say no.
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    Now let me just start by saying right now:
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    if you need help,
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    you are going to have to ask for it.
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    Out loud.
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    OK?
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    We all, to some extent, suffer
    from something that psychologists call
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    "the illusion of transparency" --
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    basically, the mistaken belief
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    that our thoughts
    and our feelings and our needs
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    are really obvious to other people.
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    This is not true, but we believe it.
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    And so, we just mostly stand around
    waiting for someone to notice our needs
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    and then spontaneously offer
    to help us with it.
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    This is a really, really bad assumption.
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    In fact, not only is it very difficult
    to tell what your needs are,
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    but even the people close to you
    often struggle to understand
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    how they can support you.
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    My partner has actually
    had to adopt a habit
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    of asking me multiple times a day,
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    "Are you OK? Do you need anything?"
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    because I am so, so bad at signaling
    when I need someone's help.
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    Now, he is more patient than I deserve
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    and much more proactive,
    much more, about helping
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    than any of us have any right
    to expect other people to be.
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    So if you need help, you're going
    to have to ask for it.
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    And by the way, even when someone
    can tell that you need help,
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    how do they know that you want it?
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    Did you ever try to give unsolicited help
    to someone who, it turns out,
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    did not actually want your help
    in the first place?
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    They get nasty real quick, don't they?
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    The other day -- true story --
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    my teenage daughter
    was getting dressed for school,
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    and I decided to give her
    some unsolicited help about that.
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    (Laughter)
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    I happen to think she looks amazing
    in brighter colors.
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    She tends to prefer sort of darker,
    more neutral tones.
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    And so I said, very helpfully,
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    that I thought maybe
    she could go back upstairs
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    and try to find something
    a little less somber.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, if looks could kill,
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    I would not be standing here right now.
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    We really can't blame other people for not
    just spontaneously offering to help us
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    when we don't actually know
    that that's what is wanted.
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    In fact, actually, research shows
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    that 90 percent of the help that coworkers
    give one another in the workplace
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    is in response
    to explicit requests for help.
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    So you're going to have to say
    the words "I need your help." Right?
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    There's no getting around it.
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    Now, to be good at it,
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    to make sure that people actually do
    help you when you ask for it,
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    there are a few other things
    that are very helpful to keep in mind.
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    First thing: when you ask for help,
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    be very, very specific
    about the help you want and why.
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    Vague, sort of indirect requests for help
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    actually aren't very helpful
    to the helper, right?
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    We don't actually know
    what it is you want from us,
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    and, just as important,
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    we don't know whether or not
    we can be successful
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    in giving you the help.
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    Nobody wants to give bad help.
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    Like me, you probably get
    some of these requests
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    from perfectly pleasant
    strangers on LinkedIn
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    who want to do things like
    "get together over coffee and connect"
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    or "pick your brain."
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    I ignore these requests
    literally every time.
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    And it's not that I'm not a nice person.
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    It's just that when I don't know
    what it is you want from me,
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    like the kind of help
    you're hoping that can I provide,
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    I'm not interested.
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    Nobody is.
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    I'd have been much more interested
    if they had just come out and said
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    whatever it is was
    they were hoping to get from me,
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    because I'm pretty sure they had
    something specific in mind.
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    So go ahead and say,
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    "I'm hoping to discuss opportunities
    to work in your company,"
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    or, "I'd like to propose
    a joint research project
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    in an area I know you're interested in,"
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    or, "I'd like your advice
    on getting into medical school."
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    Technically, I can't help you
    with that last one
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    because I'm not that kind of doctor,
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    but I could point you in the direction
    of someone who could.
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    OK, second tip.
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    This is really important:
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    please avoid disclaimers,
    apologies and bribes.
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    Really, really important.
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    Do any of these sound familiar?
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    (Clears throat)
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    'I'm so, so sorry
    that I have to ask you for this."
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    "I really hate bothering you with this."
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    "If I had any way of doing this
    without your help, I would."
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    (Laughter)
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    Sometimes it feels like people
    are so eager to prove
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    that they're not weak and greedy
    when they ask your for help,
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    they're completely missing out
    on how uncomfortable
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    they're making you feel.
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    And by the way -- how am I supposed
    to find it satisfying to help you
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    if you really hated
    having to ask me for help?
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    And while it is perfectly,
    perfectly acceptable
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    to pay strangers to do things for you,
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    you need to be very, very careful
    when it comes to incentivizing
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    your friends and coworkers.
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    When you have a relationship with someone,
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    helping one another is actually
    a natural part of that relationship.
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    It's how we show one another that we care.
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    If you introduce incentives
    or payments into that,
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    what can happen is, it starts to feel
    like it isn't a relationship,
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    it's a transaction.
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    And that actually
    is experienced as distancing,
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    which, ironically, makes people
    less likely to help you.
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    So a spontaneous gift
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    after someone gives you some help
    to show your appreciation and gratitude --
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    perfectly fine.
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    An offer to pay your best friend
    to help you move into your new apartment
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    is not.
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    OK, third rule,
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    and I really mean this one:
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    please do not ask for help
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    over email or text.
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    Really, seriously, please don't.
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    Email and text are impersonal.
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    I realize sometimes
    there's no alternative,
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    but mostly what happens is,
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    we like to ask for help
    over email and text
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    because it feels less awkward
    for us to do so.
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    You know what else feels
    less awkward over email and text?
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    Telling you no.
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    And it turns out, there's
    research to support this.
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    In-person requests for help
    are 30 times more likely to get a yes
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    than a request made by email.
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    So when something is really important
    and you really need someone's help,
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    make face time to make the request,
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    or use your phone as a phone --
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    (Laughter)
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    to ask for the help that you need.
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    OK.
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    Last one, and this is actually
    a really, really important one
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    and probably the one
    that is most overlooked
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    when it comes to asking for help:
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    when you ask someone
    for their help and they say yes,
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    follow up with them afterward.
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    There's a common misconception
    that what's rewarding about helping
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    is the act of helping itself.
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    This is not true.
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    What is rewarding about helping
    is knowing that your help landed,
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    that it had impact,
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    that you were effective.
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    If I have no idea
    how my help affected you,
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    how am I supposed to feel about it?
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    This happened; I was a university
    professor for many years,
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    I wrote lots and lots
    of letters of recommendation
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    for people to get jobs
    or to go into graduate school.
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    And probably about 95 percent of them,
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    I have no idea what happened.
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    Now, how do I feel about the time
    and effort I took to do that,
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    when I really have no idea
    if I helped you,
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    if it actually helped you
    get the thing that you wanted?
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    In fact, this idea of feeling effective
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    is part of why certain kinds
    of donor appeals are so, so persuasive --
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    because they allow you
    to really vividly imagine
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    the effect that your help
    is going to have.
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    Take something like DonorsChoose.
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    You go online, you can choose
    the individual teacher by name
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    whose classroom you're going
    to be able to help
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    by literally buying the specific
    items they've requested,
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    like microscopes or laptops
    or flexible seating.
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    An appeal like that makes it
    so easy for me to imagine
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    the good that my money will do,
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    that I actually get
    an immediate sense of effectiveness
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    the minute I commit to giving.
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    But you know what else they do?
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    They follow up.
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    Donors actually get letters
    from the kids in the classroom.
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    They get pictures.
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    They get to know
    that they made a difference.
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    And this is something we need
    to all be doing in our everyday lives,
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    especially if we want people
    to continue to give us help
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    over the long term.
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    Take time to tell your colleague
    that the help that they gave you
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    really helped you land that big sale,
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    or helped you get that interview
    that you were really hoping to get.
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    Take time to tell your partner
    that the support they gave you
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    really made it possible for you
    to get through a tough time.
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    Take time to tell your catsitter
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    that you're super happy
    that for some reason,
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    this time the cats didn't break
    anything while you were away,
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    and so they must have done
    a really good job.
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    The bottom line is:
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    I know -- believe me, I know --
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    that it is not easy to ask for help.
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    We are all a little bit afraid to do it.
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    It makes us feel vulnerable.
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    But the reality of modern work
    and modern life
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    is that nobody does it alone.
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    Nobody succeeds in a vacuum.
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    More than ever, we actually do
    have to rely on other people,
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    on their support and collaboration,
    in order to be successful.
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    So when you need help,
    ask for it out loud.
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    And when you do, do it in a way
    that increases your chances
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    that you'll get a yes
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    and makes the other person
    feel awesome for having helped you,
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    because you both deserve it.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How to ask for help -- and get a "yes"
Speaker:
Heidi Grant
Description:

Asking for help is tough. But to get through life, you have to do it all the time. So how do you get comfortable asking? In this actionable talk, social psychologist Heidi Grant shares four simple rules for asking for help and getting it -- while making the process more rewarding for your helper, too.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:53

English subtitles

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