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How Audiences Decide

A Cognitive Approach to Business Communication

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  • 416pages
  • 15 heures de lecture

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How Audiences Decide: A Cognitive Approach to Business Communication is a comprehensive introduction to persuasive communication in the context of business. It summarizes relevant theories and findings from the fields of cognitive science, social cognition, leadership, team cognition, psycholinguistics, and behavioral economics. By illuminating the thought processes of many different audiences, from consumers to Wall Street analysts to CEOs, it helps communicators better understand why audiences make the decisions they make and how to influence them. The book covers a broad range of communication techniques-including those concerning persuasive speaking and writing, interviews and group meetings, content and style, typography and nonverbal behaviors, charts and images, rational arguments and emotional appeals-and examines the empirical evidence supporting each of them.

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How Audiences Decide, Richard O. Young

Langue
Année de publication
2010
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(rigide),
État du livre
Abîmé
Prix
79,70 €

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Titre
How Audiences Decide
Sous-titre
A Cognitive Approach to Business Communication
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
Routledge
Publié
2010
Format
rigide
Pages
416
ISBN10
0415878993
ISBN13
9780415878999
Séries
Description
How Audiences Decide: A Cognitive Approach to Business Communication is a comprehensive introduction to persuasive communication in the context of business. It summarizes relevant theories and findings from the fields of cognitive science, social cognition, leadership, team cognition, psycholinguistics, and behavioral economics. By illuminating the thought processes of many different audiences, from consumers to Wall Street analysts to CEOs, it helps communicators better understand why audiences make the decisions they make and how to influence them. The book covers a broad range of communication techniques-including those concerning persuasive speaking and writing, interviews and group meetings, content and style, typography and nonverbal behaviors, charts and images, rational arguments and emotional appeals-and examines the empirical evidence supporting each of them.