The Art of the Con 1 | The Confidence Game cover art

The Art of the Con 1 | The Confidence Game

The Art of the Con 1 | The Confidence Game

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Let me start with a question, and I want you to actually answer it in your head before we go on. Have you ever met someone — a stranger, total stranger — and within about ten seconds decided you’d follow them anywhere? Or the exact opposite: shaken a hand and thought, quietly, I will never turn my back on this person. You didn’t reason your way there. You didn’t weigh the evidence. You just knew. The verdict arrived before you’d heard a complete sentence.That snap judgment — that instant, unearned, almost helpless decision your brain makes about whether to trust a stranger — is the oldest game in the world. And for the next five conversations, I’m going to teach you how it works from the inside. Because I used to play it for a living.Welcome to the apprenticeship. I won’t tell you my real name, and you wouldn’t believe most of the ones I’ve used. What matters is that I spent a long time in a trade that runs entirely on trust, and I’m retired now, and I’m finally in the mood to tell someone how it’s done. You’re going to be my apprentice. We have five jobs ahead of us. Today is your first.But before you touch a single technique, you need to understand what you’re actually working with. So let’s start with the word itself. Con. Where do you think it comes from? People assume it’s something dark — a cousin of “contra,” against, like the con is the thing standing against you. It isn’t. The con comes from confidence. Back in the eighteen-hundreds, the newspapers wrote about a polite, well-dressed man who would walk up to strangers on the street and ask them a strange question: “Have you confidence in me to trust me with your watch until tomorrow?” And people — grown, sensible people — handed over their watches. They called him the confidence man. We shortened it to con man, and then to con.Sit with that for a second, because it’s the whole foundation. The con artist’s product was never the lie. The lie is just the delivery truck. The product was always confidence — the trust itself. A swindler doesn’t sell you a fake gold mine. A swindler sells you the feeling that they’re exactly the kind of person who’d let you in on a real one. The gold mine is a prop. You is the trust.And here’s why that matters for you, today, even though you have no intention of taking anyone’s watch. The skills are identical to the skills of every warm, persuasive, magnetic person you’ve ever met. The teacher who made you love a subject. The friend who can talk their way into any room. The colleague who somehow gets everyone to say yes. They are running the confidence game. They just happen to be running it for good. By the end of these five jobs, so will you.So let’s talk about those first ten seconds. Researchers have timed this, and the numbers are almost insulting to our sense of free will. People form a first impression of a face in about a tenth of a second — faster than you can choose to. And give them a few seconds more and that impression hardens into something they’ll defend. The science says your brain is asking two questions about every stranger it meets, in this order. First: Can I trust this person? And only second: Can I respect this person? Warmth first. Competence second.We get this backwards constantly. You walk into the interview, the date, the meeting, and you lead with competence — here’s what I know, here’s what I’ve done, here’s why I’m impressive. And the other person’s brain, which is still stuck on question one, hears all of it through a fog of but do I trust you yet? The con artist never makes this mistake. The con artist answers the warmth question first and lets the respect take care of itself. Warm, then impressive. In that order. Always.Now I’m going to give you your first real word, and I want you to keep it. The word is rapport. Rapport is that sense of easy connection between two people — the feeling that you’re somehow on the same side, that the conversation has a rhythm, that this is going well. Notice it’s a feeling, not a fact. You can’t prove rapport. You can only sense it. And the entire confidence game is the art of manufacturing that sense quickly. We say you build rapport, you establish rapport. And when two strangers fall into it fast, we say they hit it off. “We just hit it off.” Lovely phrase. Keep it.So how do you build it? Let me give you the unglamorous truth first, because it’s the most important thing I’ll say all series. You do not build rapport by being interesting. You build it by being interested. The amateur walks into a room thinking, how do I seem impressive? The professional walks in thinking, what is going on in here, and who in this room is interesting to me? That shift — from being watched to watching — changes your whole demeanor. That’s your second word. Your demeanor is the way you carry yourself, the manner you give off. And the demeanor ...
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