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Altruism, Money And Sex In Our Training Programs

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Have you ever wondered why so many thousands of people do things for others not so much to earn money, but because it gives them satisfaction to be able to talk about what they know or what they've learned? Sometimes they just like to be the first one who turns someone else on to something new or different.

While competition and comparing oneself to others may be good and spurs some people on, collaboration is getting a lot more play as a way to learn to do things and to enjoy more getting better at it - WITH others.

Collaboration seems to be something that tickles our brains right up there with sex. The authors of Naked Conversations report that:

"Dr. Gregory S. Berns, an Emory University professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences...scanned the brains of 36 women playing the behaviorist's game Prisoner's Dilemma...

Berns found these women displayed cooperative behavior even when they knew they would receive greater rewards for not cooperating. The technology revealed that the striatum, a primitive brain sector, grew active during collaboration. In fact, it secreted five times the normal level of dopamine, the chemical that activates during such stimulating activities as sex and gambling. In short, humans are wired to collaborate. Altruism turns people on even more than making money." p. 43

That makes the old adage of "going two by two" even more important in developing the skills sets necessary to make a go of the network marketing business. But not when they both know that one of the pair stands to gain or lose financially from the success or failure of the other.

So often people blame their downline for "not doing anything." I don't deny that.

But who wants to do things alone that they think are hard, like talking to people about the business or product? The upline who pressures the new person often drives the downline away, because both know the upline stands to gain (or not). Too stressful. It's especially hard if the people were friends before. So the new person does nothing or something else instead.

Here's something we've been doing in classes with thousands of people over the last 2-3 years: Up close and personal cross-line collaboration for certain kinds of training. I don't mean going to a hotel room lecture setting. I mean intimate pairing up of 2-3 people who are cross-line, who may or may not know each other, to practice talking to people on the phone, for example.

Folks pair off on the phone, and do, say Cadaver calling, cross-line. Not to make money, but just to PRACTICE talking to people with someone else who just wants to practice too, and not be accountable for any kind of results other than the act of practicing with someone else who has that in mind, also.

That is collaboration. Without pressure, and both people just trying to get better together. Smart people know this is NOT easy and anyone cannot do it. So learning together, as collaborators without pressure, is a good thing. :)

People have done cross-line AND cross company (!!) Cadaver calling to tell persoonal product stories in 3 Scripts classes with great fun and success. We're all in this together, aren't we? What difference does it make what product story is being practiced so long as each has her own and they listen to each other do it over and over and over until they get good?

People report that they feel scared to call at first, but then when they realize after the first five minutes of chatting with their collaborator that the other person feels the same way, they just do it together. It takes the scary right out of it. (Cadaver calls are described on p 186-188 in the "If My Product's So Great How Come I Can't Sell It?")

If it's true that we are indeed wired for collaboration, as the Berns study and our own experience suggests, perhaps this is a way to encourage the shyer folks and those with less time to "do something" - a non pressure-cooker chance to get good at the business by practicing calling with someone else who's trying to learn the same thing.

Collaboration. Good word. Good feelings generated by it. And many women already do it naturally anyway. Think?

Kim Klaver is Harvard & Stanford educated. Her 20 years experience in network marketing have resulted in a popular blog, http://KimKlaverBlogs.com, a podcast, http://YourGreatThing.com and a giant resource site, http://BananaMarketing.com



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