I just finished Charles Duhigg’s Supercommunicators. The book teaches a set of techniques for understanding people — listening so they feel heard, matching their conversational mode, building enough trust that real exchange becomes possible. The techniques are real and they work.
What’s missing from the book — and from most communication writing — is a clear picture of what happens when the same techniques get used for different purposes. Because they do, all the time, and the techniques themselves give you no way to tell the difference.
That’s the thing I want to talk about.
Three Modes
There’s a continuum running through almost every important conversation we have:
Communication is when both parties are trying to understand each other. The goal is shared ground. Even when interests differ, the orientation is mutual.
Negotiation is when there’s an outcome being sought, and both parties know it. A salesperson and a customer. Two business partners. A couple deciding where to vacation. The outcome matters, the interests may diverge, but the rules of the game are visible to everyone in the room.
Capitulation is when one party knows the stakes more clearly than the other and uses the asymmetry to move them somewhere they wouldn’t have chosen with full information. The other party doesn’t realize they’re being moved. By the time they figure it out, the conversation is over and they’ve already agreed to something.
The techniques that produce each of these are largely the same. Listening. Reflecting back. Naming emotions. Looking for common values. The variable isn’t the technique. The variable is what you’re trying to do with it.
Intent Is the Variable
Reading someone well is a neutral skill. It can be used to honor them or to operate on them. Two people can run identical techniques and produce opposite ethical outcomes depending on what they’re actually trying to accomplish.
I don’t have a problem with salespeople. If someone has a product they genuinely believe will make my life better, I want them to sell to me. The techniques they use to understand my situation, find what I actually need, and propose a solution are exactly the same techniques a friend might use to recommend a restaurant. The difference isn’t the moves. It’s whether the person across from me is here to enrich my experience or here to take from it.
The hard part is that intent is invisible. You can’t reach across a table and verify what someone is actually trying to do. So how does anyone know?
The most reliable answer is pattern over time. People who’ve been around me long enough have watched me handle situations where I had something to gain and chose not to take it. They’ve seen me update my position when I realized I was wrong. They know what I’ve stood by when it cost me. That track record speaks louder than any single conversation. Intent reveals itself through pattern, and over a long enough timeframe, it can’t really hide.
The Honest Middle
Most real conversations don’t have pure intent. They have mixed intent. You want to help someone and you want them to do what you think is right and you’d prefer the outcome that benefits you. All at once. That’s not a flaw. That’s how human cognition actually works.
Marriage is where I see this most clearly in my own life. After twenty-seven years, I know my intentions toward my wife are fundamentally good. But on a given Tuesday, when I’m pushing for us to go out to dinner, am I doing it because she’s tired and needs a break, or because I’m lazy and don’t feel like cooking? Most of the time it’s both. The discipline isn’t to pretend the selfish part isn’t there. The discipline is to recognize both parts are present and ask which one is driving the conversation.
The same thing happens at work. The same thing happens in friendships. Pure intent is rare. Mixed intent is the human condition. The question isn’t whether you’re free of self-interest. The question is whether you can see it when it’s there and not let it run the show.
Knowing You’re Wrong
There’s a moment in some conversations where I realize, mid-sentence, that I’ve been arguing for the wrong thing. I think out loud, which means sometimes the act of articulating a position is what reveals to me that I no longer hold it. The honest move is to stop and say so. Wait. Hold on. I just realized I’m not thinking about this right. Forgive me — let me back up.
The reader will ask: how do you know whether someone is genuinely updating or just capitulating to pressure? From outside, both look like changing your mind.
There’s a tell. The genuine update has energy. It looks like discovery — oh, I just saw something I hadn’t seen. It’s an aha moment. The capitulation has the opposite shape. It looks like resignation. The person isn’t surprised by what they’re now saying. They’re tired of defending what they were saying before.
It’s not an aha moment. It’s an oh-crap moment.
The two are visibly different if you’re paying attention. Genuine updates make a person more present in the conversation. Capitulation withdraws them.
The Test
Communication is for connection. Negotiation is for honest exchange. Capitulation is what happens when one of us has decided where the conversation ends before it began, and we don’t tell the other person.
The first two are good. The third one corrupts everything it touches — relationships, businesses, marriages, the public square. Most of what passes for “influence” or “persuasion technique” online right now is teaching people to operate on each other while calling it communication.
The techniques aren’t the problem. The intent behind them is.
The test I run on myself is one question: Am I here to enrich the experience of the person across from me, or am I here to take?
If I can’t answer that honestly, I shouldn’t be in the conversation yet.
