This is just management advice. This has as much spice as day old oatmeal. It's also not new, it's management training 101.
There's nothing fucked up about this. If anything it's recycled shit from a mall store manager's book of training.
Management training exists so that people don't defer to their own egos and impulses when managing staff. It's a systemic/standardized approach to common behaviors found in employees. If anything it helps mitigate the more toxic behaviors of competitive environments. It's not perfect, but it is funny that tech bros have rediscovered Human Resources departments
We are looking at high-level operant conditioning disguised as standard startup advice. The most fascinating tactical deployment happens at [22:56]—the 'Socratic Trap.' Notice how they advise inducing a micro-stressor (asking the founder why they will fail) to shatter the target's rehearsed 'pitch mask' and force cognitive overload. It’s a textbook elicitation technique to establish a baseline of the founder's true risk tolerance.
Which influence tactic or behavioral shift stood out to you the most in this briefing? Drop your profiling observations below—I’ll be analyzing the best ones.
Why did you copy the same comment you posted on youtube? It feels disingenuous. And idk, the comment kindof just feels like B.S. I guess I should watch the 40 min video before making that conclusion, but I don't want to invest 40 minutes.
It's a pure traffic generation test. Nothing I say not my two accounts answering my initial comment, further down, downvoted is true, pure AI imagination.
The results are good. YC stands strong against BS.
Copy-pasting the comment makes me think that the discussion is less important to them (are they going to check and respond in both places?), and they just want the visibility. Admittedly, this is just how I perceive it, I can also understand somebody thinking “I have something good to say, I’ll say it in multiple places”
You might have a point but I also stand by the point of view of the reply you reply to. It's personal opinion.
In this case, your intuition is right, I threw this around as fast I could to find out if little would go a long way.
It went further than I thought and I appreciate the various views this sparks. Though it's completely irrelevant to the topic at hand, it's rightly so.
Ah, there it is. I'm starting to feel sorry and only got 30 upvotes.
If it's of interest to anyone, I have not used any alternative means of advertising this YC post other than posting it here and using 2 alt accounts to write the first two replies and two upvotes.
The "Strategic Silence" protocol is a powerful elicitation tool.
It forces the target to either confirm or deny a hypothesis to fill the void.
In order to answer your question about handling visibly intimidated founders, the instruction provided at at the [17:05] timestamp are critical to understanding their methodology.
The speaker advises utilizing "tactical rapport building" disguised as genuine empathy.
Intimidation is actually counter-productive for the advisor initially; it triggers the founder's threat-detection system, causing them to maintain their rehearsed pitch...
To get ground-truth data on operational vulnerabilities, the advisor must first lower the founder's defenses.
By "making them feel comfortable" the advisor calms the target's fight-or-flight response, securing a temporary baseline.
Only then do they apply the Socratic stress-induction, catching the founder off guard and securing an unfiltered look at their psychological resilience.
The video description and comment on YouTube are also obviously AI. The fact that I can't find any clearly human creation or interaction with this on YT or HN is why I'm flagging it.
There's nothing fucked up about this. If anything it's recycled shit from a mall store manager's book of training.
Management training exists so that people don't defer to their own egos and impulses when managing staff. It's a systemic/standardized approach to common behaviors found in employees. If anything it helps mitigate the more toxic behaviors of competitive environments. It's not perfect, but it is funny that tech bros have rediscovered Human Resources departments
Everyone involved in YC should be ashamed of themselves, but the are too sociopathic to realize it.
Which influence tactic or behavioral shift stood out to you the most in this briefing? Drop your profiling observations below—I’ll be analyzing the best ones.
The results are good. YC stands strong against BS.
I don't read YT comments - so posting here was helpful.
In this case, your intuition is right, I threw this around as fast I could to find out if little would go a long way.
It went further than I thought and I appreciate the various views this sparks. Though it's completely irrelevant to the topic at hand, it's rightly so.
If it's of interest to anyone, I have not used any alternative means of advertising this YC post other than posting it here and using 2 alt accounts to write the first two replies and two upvotes.
If we are pulling profiling observations, the operational maneuver that really stands out to me is the "Strategic Silence" protocol at 16:13.
Brilliant breakdown on the micro-stressor... What's your read on how they handle the power dynamic when a founder is visibly intimidated?
It forces the target to either confirm or deny a hypothesis to fill the void.
In order to answer your question about handling visibly intimidated founders, the instruction provided at at the [17:05] timestamp are critical to understanding their methodology.
The speaker advises utilizing "tactical rapport building" disguised as genuine empathy.
Intimidation is actually counter-productive for the advisor initially; it triggers the founder's threat-detection system, causing them to maintain their rehearsed pitch...
To get ground-truth data on operational vulnerabilities, the advisor must first lower the founder's defenses.
By "making them feel comfortable" the advisor calms the target's fight-or-flight response, securing a temporary baseline.
Only then do they apply the Socratic stress-induction, catching the founder off guard and securing an unfiltered look at their psychological resilience.
One must learn to walk the walk not merely talk the talk. :-)