Messengers Audiobook By Stephen Martin, Joseph Marks cover art

Messengers

Who We Listen to, Who We Don't, and Why

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Messengers

By: Stephen Martin, Joseph Marks
Narrated by: Sam Woolf
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

Why are self-confident ignoramuses so often believed?

Why are thoughtful experts so often given the cold shoulder?

And why do apparently irrelevant details such as a person’s height, their relative wealth, or their Facebook photo influence whether or not we trust what they are saying?

When deciding whether or not someone is worth listening to, we think we carefully weigh their words and arguments. But those are far from being the only factors that hold sway with us.

In this groundbreaking new book behavioural experts Stephen Martin and Joseph Marks pinpoint the eight powerful traits that determine who gets heard and who gets ignored. They show how such apparently irrelevant details as a person’s appearance or their financial status influence our response to what they have to say, regardless of its wisdom or foolishness. They explain how trust is won, even when it may not be deserved. They analyse the nature of the charismatic speaker and the verbal and physical cues they employ. And they demonstrate how the tiniest of signals - from the shoes we wear, to the pitch of our voice and the warmth of our smile - can transform how others perceive us and so determine whether they are prepared to pay heed to what we have to say.

Above all, Martin and Marks show how looking and sounding right is often far more persuasive than actually being right.

In a world of ambiguity, uncertainty and fake news they compellingly demonstrate how, increasingly, the Messenger is the Message.

©2019 Stephen Martin (P)2019 Penguin Audio
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Most relevant
Intriguing and interesting way to explain some of the unconscious biases that we have when it comes to listening to people

A great synopsis of human behahior

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The book objectively describes our innate responses and rationale when it comes to the messengers we listen to.
The book doesn’t try to be politically correct but instead puts the facts forward, whether you like it or not.

Insightful lessons on navigating the world.

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