Positively Devious

Bring someone in

Where you are

You are part of something, and you know someone who is not: someone who cares about things but stays on the couch. This page is how you prepare one personal invitation. It matters more than it looks, because the way in is nearly always the same: somebody asked.

What you're building

One more person in the room. That sounds small. It is not: every climb starts with someone getting in the room, and at this first step the personal invitation has the strongest evidence there is. You will meet this skill again on the rungs above. Development runs both ways.

How to ask someone in

1. Why the ask beats the poster

Posters mostly do not move people. Group messages and announcements from the front mostly do not either. What carries the strongest evidence at this first step: a person they know, asking them personally, face to face. And it is free.

So stop waiting for them to see the flyer. You are the flyer.

2. Pick your person

Think of one person who cares about something but does nothing with it yet. The one who always has opinions about the estate, the team, the school, the news. Caring that has nowhere to go: that is exactly who this page is for.

Do not pick the person easiest to convince. Pick the person you actually believe belongs in the room.

3. Make the ask

Three parts, in your own words:

  1. Why them. Something true you have noticed. "You care more about this park than anyone I know."
  2. Something specific. Not "you should get involved". One thing, one day, one time: "Saturday morning, ten till twelve, we're clearing the far end."
  3. Go together. "I'll be there. Come with me: we'll walk down together."

Face to face carries the strongest evidence. If you cannot manage that, ask in the most personal way you can, and if it has to be a text, make it personal: their name, your reason, one specific thing.

4. Lower the first step

If the ask feels too big for them, the ask is too big. Shrink it until saying yes is easy:

You are not recruiting them for life. You are inviting them into one room, once. Then it is their call, and if the room is not for them, that is fine too.

5. Follow up without pestering

"Maybe" is not a yes. If they said yes, one warm reminder the day before is fine: "Still on for tomorrow? I'll knock for you at half nine." If it is a no, or silence after that reminder, stop, gracefully, and leave the door open: "No worries. If you ever fancy it, tell me."

An invitation only stays an invitation while they are free to refuse it. Pushing past a no is pressure, and pressure loses people for good.

6. When they show up

Your job is not finished when they arrive. It is finished when they belong:

Practise this week

Fill in the blanks with real names and real days: a plan written in this shape is far more likely to happen than a good intention.

  1. Pick your person. Today I will tell (space to write in) (someone already in my group) who I am going to invite: (space to write in).
  2. Make the ask. When I next see (space to write in) (by (space to write in) at the latest), I will make the three-part ask: why them, one specific thing, go together.
  3. Book the follow-up. If they say yes: the day before, I will send one warm reminder, and on the day I will meet them at (space to write in) so they do not walk in alone.

Pass it on

This move multiplies. Send this page to one other person in your group with one line: "Who's your one person? Let's each invite someone this month." They are free to say no: the asking is the part you control. And rooms where nobody asks slowly empty.

The evidence

Grades: A = strong controlled studies · B = good studies with limits · C = practitioner craft and history · D = opinion.

Where next

Before you open anything else: make the ask.