Marketing class learns through laughter
On Thursday in Rhett Eplerās Professional Selling class at ±¬ĮϹĻās Strome College of Business, students learned two words that can help them close deals, win negotiations and make money.
No, those two words arenāt āHow much?ā or ābottom line.ā
Those two words are, āyes, and.ā
The āyes, and,ā response, a foundational concept in improv comedy, is designed to extend conversations, find common ground among participants and reduce conflict. Eplerās students applied this concept in real time during a recent improv training with Norfolkās Push Comedy Theater.
Ultimately, the skills and strategies learned in improv help communication and can translate to the business world and beyond, said Brad McMurran, co-creator of the Push Comedy Theater. He facilitated Thursdayās training with Eplerās students.
āItās about listening like thieves and responding in the moment,ā he said. āThis is all about communications and establishing rapport.ā
McMurran, an ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ alumnus, trained in improv at the Upright Citizenās Brigade Theater in New York City. He has also trained with members of the Second City, Improv Olympic and Annoyance Theaters. Now, in addition to work as a film producer and writer, McMurran leads the Push Comedy Theaterās Corporate Improv Training Program.
McMurran organized Eplerās students into pairs and encouraged participants to establish imagined backstories for their characters. The task? Start each of your responses with āYes, and.ā
Yes. And itās a lot harder than you may think.
Some students tended toward the negative, shutting down their partnerās response with a āNo.ā Others asked questions instead of saying yes. Some were stumped completely on how to respond. McMurran quickly redirected these common missteps with reminders about how the strategy can be applied to business.
āTraining the brain in, āyes, and,ā helps the conversation tend toward the positive,ā McMurran said. āIf you donāt know what to say, throw a āyes, and,ā in there. This is going to keep you in the moment and increase the chances of developing a relationship.ā
The same strategy can be applied to sales pitches or intense negotiations, for example.
McMurran told students that shutting down a potential client with a quick, āNo,ā ends the conversation immediately. But extending the dialogue can help to prolong the conversation and ultimately result in a more favorable outcome for everyone.
Improv training is certainly a departure from a traditional lecture, but a departure that Epler, an assistant professor in the Marketing Department, saw as applicable to his class and his studentsā sales skills.
Epler attended a conference where others spoke about the benefits of improv training in corporate and classroom settings. This sparked the idea to bring improv training back to his students, and Epler contacted McMurran to make it happen.
āThe students can take this with them after they leave class,ā Epler said. āTheyāre hungry to learn, and this is a fun way to do it. Weāre getting them in the mindset of trying new things.ā
By the end of class, students had adopted numerous personas, from birds flying south for the winter to a couple on a ferry for their first date. And while many appeared uncertain at first, they finished the training laughing.
āThis training showed how you can continue a conversation,ā said senior Amiri Sanders, a Maritime and Supply Chain Management major. ā(McMurran) made it comfortable for everyone.ā
This training was supported by the Thurmond School of Professional Sales and Negotiations at ±¬ĮϹĻās Strome College of Business.