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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)