Kotaix, thank you for your reply.
I spent a long time in corporate America as a leader, my job was to engage type A’s, never the easiest thing to do but I was good at it as my career’s success depended upon it.
As a direct consequence of that I took a number of seminars on the subject over the years - think Dale Carnegie and such. Every single successful communicator in the circles I traveled agreed that relationship building requires understanding what peoples motivations are and filling said need.
Still don’t understand what is INORGANIC about it, men of action don’t leave **** to chance, they make **** happen.
or so I thought haha
As a corporate communicator you're trying to solve a problem or establish rapport, trying to build bridges between two parties that
need each other to complete some kind of goal. This is fine in a business world where one party needs the other. But at the end of the day, those two parties don't go home and call each other on the weekend. Friendship and business are usually a really bad mix.
This just doesn't work with personal interactions. People aren't friends or lovers with someone because of what they can do for eachother. Friendship has no goals other than enjoying each other's company. You can't make someone like you, and trying to do so usually comes across as smarmy. Worse, most of the people who can really pull this off are psychopaths so there is good reason for people to be suspicious of try-hards.
If you're not authentic about your interests around people who are interested in that, you will eventually be found out to be either a fraud or a poser.