Do you think by any chance you could give a percentage estimation on how many people respond well, poorly, and neutrally to this strategy? (Or something along those lines.) This is interesting to me.
It’s most relevant at parties and large social gatherings where I don’t know anyone, and I don’t really think in terms of percentages-of-people in such situations so much as how quickly I find someone worth talking to.
Over 95% of the time, I’d say the result is a little bit of chitchat followed by the person and I both talking to someone else. Whether that’s responding well, poorly, or neutrally I don’t know; that seems to be the default condition at parties.
Less than 1% of the time, the result is the other person’s eyes lighting up in what I’ve come to label the “oh look, one of my people!” expression, and I make a new friend. Probably not much less than 1%, though.
(By way of establishing scale, I’d say I try this ~50 times in a given year… I’m not a terribly outgoing guy, and generally prefer to hang out in smaller groups or just stay home with my husband, but I’m reasonably socially ept when I do go out.)
That said, I also have a reputation in my social circle for being kind of intense and a little out there, but interesting to talk to if you’re interested in, well, talking. Which also creates a second-order effect, where friends introduce me to friends of theirs who share this trait because we’d really enjoy each other, and more generally where my social environment self-selects.
Do you think by any chance you could give a percentage estimation on how many people respond well, poorly, and neutrally to this strategy? (Or something along those lines.) This is interesting to me.
Offhand, I don’t know.
It’s most relevant at parties and large social gatherings where I don’t know anyone, and I don’t really think in terms of percentages-of-people in such situations so much as how quickly I find someone worth talking to.
Over 95% of the time, I’d say the result is a little bit of chitchat followed by the person and I both talking to someone else. Whether that’s responding well, poorly, or neutrally I don’t know; that seems to be the default condition at parties.
Less than 1% of the time, the result is the other person’s eyes lighting up in what I’ve come to label the “oh look, one of my people!” expression, and I make a new friend. Probably not much less than 1%, though.
(By way of establishing scale, I’d say I try this ~50 times in a given year… I’m not a terribly outgoing guy, and generally prefer to hang out in smaller groups or just stay home with my husband, but I’m reasonably socially ept when I do go out.)
That said, I also have a reputation in my social circle for being kind of intense and a little out there, but interesting to talk to if you’re interested in, well, talking. Which also creates a second-order effect, where friends introduce me to friends of theirs who share this trait because we’d really enjoy each other, and more generally where my social environment self-selects.