Psychotherapy, a discipline intended to help people, is actually a form of marketing.
Does that thought make you uncomfortable? Or even seem a little creepy?
American psychiatrist Jerome Frank put it eloquently over forty years ago: psychotherapy is the art ofPersuasion and Healing.
A good therapist needs to do more than just teach her clients to have more positive feelings.
She actually needs to sell those feelings, in order to get the results her patients want.
In Persuasion and Healing, Frank said:
“[S]uccess in therapy depends in large part on its ability to combat the patient’s demoralization and heighten his hopes of relief. All forms of psychotherapy do this implicitly, regardless of their explicit aims. Progress in therapy, in turn, further shifts the balance toward the ‘welfare emotions’ […] such as love, joy, and pride, so that, with luck, the process becomes self-enhancing.”
So psychotherapists promote these positive or “welfare” emotions.
Why would that be marketing?
Because when your dog pees on your carpet or someone cuts in front of you on the freeway, you need to be sold on why staying cool is more productive than going berserk.
Like any smart marketer, the psychotherapist needs to determine the right time to “sell” the patient on feeling good instead of bad. She needs to be mindful of emotional intelligence literature, which shows that emotional health is dynamic, and that it’s healthy to fluctuate between non-welfare and welfare emotions.
(In other words, as every good copywriter knows, negativity isn’t always a bad thing.)
When you see your psychotherapist, she has to do a lot of persuasive work to convince you that you’ll get over that failed relationship. Your grieving heart has a hard time believing a word of it.
She has to work to persuade you that even though all of your life you were trained to be nice, being assertive is actually okay.
Sometimes marketing propels us to buy stuff, and sometimes it persuades us to adopt ideas and attitudes. The process isn’t actually all that different. And even when we’re selling products, we often need to do the work of selling ideas first.
To market like a psychotherapist, you can start with these five basic steps:
About the Author: Melissa Karnaze writes about the intelligence of emotions on Mindful Construct and Twitter.
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