PODCAST · business
Masters in Public Affairs
by Joseph Lavoie
Each episode goes deep on one book that belongs in a modern public affairs canon—extracting the core idea, the mental models, and how it connects to real wins and failures today. Built for practitioners who never stop working the fundamentals.
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Good Strategy Bad Strategy, by Richard Rumelt
Most documents called "strategy" aren't strategies at all. They're political artifacts produced when no one in the room was willing to inflict the pain of choice.Richard Rumelt's Good Strategy Bad Strategy (2011) takes a structural question seriously that almost no other strategy book takes seriously: what makes something a strategy at all.This episode walks through Rumelt's diagnosis of bad strategy as a political artifact, the three-part structure underneath every real strategy (the kernel), and the four mechanisms that translate most directly to public affairs work. We close with the move that goes beyond what Rumelt wrote about: that for audiences drowning in information, simplicity is the biggest gift you can give them, and articulating thinking with simplicity is harder than producing the wall of appendices.IN THIS EPISODE• Why Rumelt wrote the book — four decades watching organisations produce political artifacts dressed up in strategy language• DEC's one-sentence consensus statement and what it cost the company• The core idea — a coherent response to an important challenge — and Schwarzkopf's left hook as the worked case• The kernel: diagnosis, guiding policy, coherent actions• Concentration, the threshold effect, and why pulsing beats spreading• The proximate objective and Rumelt's counter-intuitive case for SHORTER planning horizons under high uncertainty• The asymmetry move — Andy Marshall and James Roche's 1976 Pentagon memo — and how it applies to industry-vs-NGO regulatory fights today• Four mental models: the kernel, the pivot point, the long clock, the dog's dinner• Four common misreadings of the book — the most consequential being that bad strategy is a failure of effort, when it's actually active avoidance• Four modern applications including the consultant's dog's dinner (Joseph's own confession), pulsing in regulatory work, proximate objectives in the legislative cycle, and the asymmetry move under the long clock• The mastery lesson: a strategy is a hypothesis, not a destinationIf you've ever sat through a coalition session that drifted toward a document everyone could sign and that committed to nothing, this episode names what was happening.ABOUT THE SHOWMasters in Public Affairs goes back to the foundational books in this field and extracts the principles the best practitioners return to again and again. The best performers work the fundamentals — in sports, in music, in every craft. It's true in public affairs too. One book at a time.BOOKRichard Rumelt, Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters (Crown Business, 2011).
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Influence, by Robert Cialdini
Robert Cialdini's Influence was published in 1984. Forty years later, it remains by some distance the cleanest taxonomy ever written of how ordinary people get moved to say yes—and why, most of the time, they're not being persuaded. They're being triggered.Cialdini's word for it is click-run. Press a button, the cassette plays. Expensive—click, must be good. Expert said so—click, must be right. Everyone's doing it—click, must be the thing to do. The shortcuts are adaptive most of the time: expensive things usually are better, experts usually are expert, crowds usually know something. The problem is the counterfeits. Any trigger that reliably maps to something good can be faked. Once you know how the machinery works, you can fire the click without providing the run.The book identifies seven of these triggers—reciprocity, commitment and consistency, social proof, liking, authority, scarcity, and unity. This episode goes deep on four, extracts three mental models, names three common misreadings, and lands four applications for public affairs today.Influence is the companion to Episode 5 on Pre-Suasion. Same author, same research program, adjacent questions. Pre-Suasion is about what should happen before the ask. Influence is about what makes the ask land. In public affairs, you need both.In this episodeWhy Cialdini wrote the book (three years undercover inside compliance industries)The core idea: most influence works by pulling a trigger, not by winning an argumentThe four principles this episode goes deep on—reciprocity, commitment, social proof, and scarcityThree mental models: the ledger, the granted freedom, and the authority shortcutThree ways Influence gets misread by practitioners—and why treating it as a playbook is the worst of themFour modern applications: the modern lobbyist problem, signatory inflation, the dashboard problem, and the politics of withdrawn benefitsThe mastery lesson: why you don't graduate out of this bookKey QuotesAlthough there are thousands of different tactics that compliance practitioners employ to produce yes, the majority fall within seven basic categories. Each of these categories is governed by a fundamental psychological principle that directs human behavior and in so doing gives the tactics their power.Although an obligation to repay constitutes the essence of the reciprocity rule, it's the obligation to receive that makes the rule so easy to exploit.Other studies have documented the unintended negative consequences of trying to move people away from a detrimental action by lamenting its frequency.People see a thing as more desirable when it recently has become less available to them than when it has been scarce all along.About this showMasters in Public Affairs goes back to the foundational books in this field and extracts the principles that the best practitioners return to again and again.The best performers work the fundamentals. That's true in sports, in music, in every craft. It's true in public affairs too. This show is about identifying those fundamentals—the mental models and first principles that remain true even as tactics and technology change.One book at a time.BookRobert Cialdini, Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (revised and expanded edition, 2021; original 1984)
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Positioning, by Al Ries and Jack Trout
Most people file Positioning under marketing. I think that's a mistake.So much of what we do in public affairs is positioning — positioning an issue, positioning your organisation as a stakeholder, positioning a specific policy ask. The discipline that Ries and Trout describe is core to what we do. But it's a discipline most practitioners have never been formally trained in.In this episode, I break down the 1981 book that changed how we think about communication. We cover:Why communication itself became the communication problemOutside-in vs. inside-out thinking — and why practitioners default to the wrong oneHow the mind filters, ranks, and anchors informationFour mental models: The Ladder, The Créneau, The Teeter-Totter, and SacrificeWhy leading with your cognitive argument is the most common mistake in the fieldNaming as a strategic weapon — lessons from the PMOThe coalition dilution trapWhy audiences filter your issues through their own self-identityConnections to Lippmann, McRaney, Luntz, and CentolaKey quote from the book: "Positioning is not what you do to a product. Positioning is what you do to the mind of the prospect."Book: Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind by Al Ries and Jack Trout (McGraw-Hill, 1981)The Canon So Far:Walter Lippmann — Public OpinionDavid McRaney — How Minds ChangeFrank Luntz — Words That WorkDamon Centola — ChangeRobert Cialdini —Pre-suasionAl Ries & Jack Trout — PositioningMasters in Public Affairs is a podcast about the fundamentals of public affairs — one book at a time. Hosted by Joseph Lavoie.
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Pre-Suasion, by Robert Cialdini
The BookPre-Suasion: A Revolutionary Way to Influence and Persuade by Robert Cialdini.Cialdini is best known for Influence, which identified the six principles that drive agreement — reciprocity, liking, social proof, authority, scarcity, and consistency. That book is foundational. But Pre-Suasion answers the prior question: what do the best communicators do before they make the ask?Most of us over-invest in the quality of the argument and under-invest in preparing the moment of reception. Cialdini's thirty years of research say the frame often matters as much as the fact — and the moment before the message is the most underused point of leverage in all of communication.What we coverWhy the best persuaders spend more time on what happens before the pitch than on the pitch itself — and why that matters when you're handed a policy or position you didn't designThe focusing illusion: whatever is focal seems important, whatever is important seems causal, and whatever isn't focal doesn't seem to matterHow one word — "beast" vs. "virus" — shifted crime policy preferences by 22%, more than double the effect of gender and nearly triple party affiliationThe three-gear engine of pre-suasion: attention creates importance, association spreads the effect, commitment locks it inWhy asking "Do you consider yourself a helpful person?" before a request raised compliance from 29% to 77%Four mental models worth carrying around: the focusing illusion, the association bridge, the commitment lock, and the authenticity filterWhy detection of influence doesn't just weaken the effect — it reverses itAgenda-setting as institutional pre-suasion: the Iraq War embedded reporter program and how attention management at scale shapes which questions the public asksIdentity activation in mobilization — including what may be the most powerful five-word persuasive communication in thirty years of researchThe difference between attention-grabbing and pre-suasion, and why fear without an action pathway produces avoidance, not behaviour changeWhy mastery is in the preparation, not the performanceKey Quotes"The factor most likely to determine a person's choice in a situation is not the one that counsels most wisely there. It is the one that has been elevated in attention, and thereby in privilege, at the time of the decision." - Robert Cialdini"Nothing in life is as important as you think it is while you are thinking about it." - Daniel Kahneman"Pre-suasive openers can produce dramatic, immediate shifts in people, but to turn those shifts into durable changes, it's necessary to get commitments to them, usually in the form of related behavior." - Robert CialdiniAbout this showMasters in Public Affairs goes deep on one book at a time — books that train the fundamental skills of public affairs practitioners. We extract the mental models that hold up across contexts, across decades, and across campaigns. Hosted by Joseph Lavoie.If you found this episode useful, share it with one friend or colleague who'd benefit. We're growing this organically, and every share helps.
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How to make change
For a century, we've assumed that behaviours spread the way diseases do — find the right carrier, maximise exposure, make it sticky, and it'll go viral. Damon Centola, a network scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, spent two decades proving that model wrong. His book Change shows that the viral playbook works for spreading information but fails completely for spreading behaviour change. The distinction between those two things has serious implications for anyone who runs campaigns, builds coalitions, or tries to move public opinion.In this episode, I walk through Centola's core framework and unpack what it means for public affairs practitioners. This is one of those books that made me rethink how I design campaigns.What We CoverWhy the viral model of social change is structurally wrong — and what to use insteadSimple contagions vs. complex contagions: why the distinction matters for everything we doFireworks networks vs. fishing net networks, and why redundancy beats reachCountervailing influences: why targeting influencers and senior decision-makers first is often backwardsThe 25% tipping point — Centola's experimental proof that a committed minority can overturn an established normThree principles of relevance: when to use similarity and when to use diversityNarrow bridges vs. wide bridges and how to design for behaviour changeWhy too much information flow kills innovation on teamsHow Black Lives Matter built six years of network infrastructure before the world noticedThe polarisation experiment where removing party logos eliminated belief polarisation entirelyChina's 50-cent party: how the same mechanics used for social change can be run in reverse to prevent itThe mastery lesson: diagnose the infrastructure before you design the campaignKey Quotes from the Book"Successful social change is not about information. It's about norms.""Contact with a single adopter is not enough. People need to receive reinforcement, or social proof, from multiple adopters to be convinced and for the new behavior to propagate.""The mere inaction of these people, their lack of adoption, sends a resounding message to the social star that the innovation has not yet been accepted.""Below the tipping point, even large increases in activism have no effect on the rest of the population. But even a small increase in activism that pushes the fraction above the tipping point — that affects everyone.""Framing effects can have a bigger impact than the message itself on what people ultimately believe."About This ShowMasters in Public Affairs is a podcast that builds the canon of foundational books in the public affairs field. Each episode goes deep on one book — not to summarise it, but to extract the mental models, first principles, and durable frameworks that the best practitioners return to again and again. Think of it as working the fundamentals, the same way elite athletes obsess over footwork and form.Hosted by Joseph Lavoie. Over 20 years in public affairs. Still learning.Find us: mastersinpublicaffairs.com ·
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Words That Work by Frank Luntz
"It's no what you say, it's what people hear."Words That Work is Frank Luntz's attempt to codify what he learned across decades of polling, focus groups, and real-time language testing for politicians and Fortune 500 companies. The core claim is deceptively simple: effective communication starts with the listener, not the speaker. What matters isn't what you say — it's what people hear.Luntz is polarizing. His political work has drawn praise and criticism in roughly equal measure. But the principles underneath that work are sound, and they hold regardless of which side of any debate you're on. This book earns its place in the canon because it operationalizes something Walter Lippmann identified a century ago: people respond to the pictures in their heads, not to reality. Luntz built a practitioner's toolkit around that insight. And whether you agree with how he used it, the toolkit itself is worth understanding.What We CoverWhy Henry Kissinger's biggest regret was a single word he didn't even chooseThe foundational premise: communication is a receiver-side phenomenonHow words get filtered through the listener's existing beliefs, experiences, and emotions before they arrive as meaningWhy the order you present information can completely change the reactionThe mechanism behind single-word reframes that shifted entire industries (gambling to gaming, liquor to spirits, welfare to assistance)Four mental models practitioners can use immediately: the receiver's filter, results over process, education before motivation, and consistency with freshnessWhere practitioners misread this book — including the honest limits of languageWhy Luntz provides the answers but not the methodology, and what that means for your own practiceThe silence-equals-guilt principle and why it matters more now than when Luntz wrote itHow this book connects to Lippmann's Public Opinion and McRaney's How Minds Change to form a through-line across the canonThe mastery lesson: the best communicators are the best listenersKey Quotes from the Book"It's not what you say, it's what people hear. You can have the best message in the world, but the person on the receiving end will always understand it through the prism of his or her own emotions, preconceptions, prejudices, and pre-existing beliefs.""The act of speaking is not a conquest, but a surrender.""Tell someone 2 plus 2, but let him put them together himself and say 4, and he is transformed from a passive observer to an active participant.""Silence equals guilt. Every attack that is not met with a clear and immediate response will be assumed to be true.""Language is tremendously important... but it's not everything. Language alone cannot achieve miracles. Actual policy counts at least as much as how something is framed."About This ShowMasters in Public Affairs is the show where we go deep on the foundational books that every public affairs practitioner should know. The premise is simple: the best performers in any field work the fundamentals. They return to first principles. They don't chase trends. They master the structures underneath.Each episode takes a single book, extracts the durable ideas, and translates them into mental models you can actually use. We're building a canon — a shared foundation for a field that's never had one.Hosted by Joseph Lavoie.
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How Minds Change by David McRaney
All persuasion is self-persuasionMost of what we do in public affairs is built on a broken assumption: that giving people better information will change their minds. David McRaney's How Minds Change dismantles that assumption and replaces it with something far more useful — a framework for understanding how people actually update their beliefs, drawn from field-tested techniques that outperform traditional persuasion by orders of magnitude.McRaney follows deep canvassers, street epistemologists, and cognitive scientists to a single, convergent finding: you cannot argue someone into a new position. The only way someone changes their mind is by examining their own reasoning and discovering — on their own terms — that it doesn't hold up. The best persuaders don't deliver better arguments. They ask better questions.This episode unpacks why that matters for public affairs practitioners and extracts the mental models worth carrying into your practice.What we coverWhy the information deficit model — the assumption that facts change minds — has been wrong for centuries and still drives most campaignsThe difference between a post-truth crisis and a post-trust crisis, and why the distinction mattersHow assimilation and accommodation work, and the Redlwask experiment showing that moderate doses of counter-evidence make people more entrenchedSURFPAD: why reasonable people looking at the same information reach opposite conclusions without realizing they've made a choiceWhy social death is more frightening than physical death, and what that means for any issue tied to group identityThe three independent techniques — deep canvassing, street epistemology, Smart Politics — that converge on the same principleNetwork percolation: how opinion cascades actually spread, and why you don't need elites to start themThe connection between McRaney's findings and Lippmann's pseudo-environment from Episode 1What this book teaches about restraint as a core persuasion skillKey Quotes"There is no superior argument, no piece of information that we can offer that is going to change their mind. The only way they are going to change their mind is by changing their own mind, by talking themselves through their own thinking." — Steve Deline, deep canvasser"People are generally better persuaded by the reasons which they have themselves discovered than by those which have come into the mind of others." — Blaise Pascal, quoted in How Minds Change"We don't live in a post-truth world, but a post-trust world." — David McRaney"If there was an E = MC² of social science, it would be SD is greater than PD. Social death is more frightening than physical death." — Brooke Harrington, sociologist"The system must become vulnerable. When it is, it is inevitable that someone will start the cascade that changes everything, but that someone isn't preordained. You need no special privilege to start striking at the status quo, because no one is in control." — David McRaneyAbout This ShowMasters in Public Affairs is a podcast about the fundamentals of public affairs — one book at a time.The best performers work the fundamentals. In every field, the people at the top got there by returning to first principles long after everyone else moved on. Public affairs doesn't have a shared curriculum. Most of us learned by improvising. This show is built to fix that — by going deep on the books that contain the mental models, frameworks, and structural insights that elite practitioners return to again and again.Hosted by Joseph Lavoie.Book InformationHow Minds Change: The Surprising Science of Belief, Opinion, and Persuasion David McRaney Portfolio/Penguin, 2022 ISBN: 978-0593190296
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Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann
This is the first episode of Masters in Public Affairs.We're starting with what might be the most important book ever written about how public opinion actually forms. Not how we wish it worked. Not the civics textbook version. How it actually works.Walter Lippmann wrote Public Opinion in 1922—over a century ago. The technology has changed beyond recognition since then. But the mechanism he describes? It's the same now as it was then.The core insight: People don't respond to reality. They respond to pictures of reality in their heads. Those pictures are constructed by intermediaries, filtered through stereotypes, and animated by identification. And the gap between those pictures and actual reality is where consequences live.If you work in public affairs—government relations, communications, advocacy, stakeholder engagement—this book will change how you see your work.
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Welcome to Masters in Public Affairs
Masters in Public Affairs is a podcast about the fundamentals of public affairs—how power moves, how opinion forms, and how change actually happens.Kobe Bryant used to do 45-minute pre-dawn workouts on nothing but footwork. Michael Jordan warmed up every practice with a chest pass. The greatest to ever play their game, still drilling the basics.The best public affairs practitioners operate the same way. They return to the same books, the same ideas, the same first principles—again and again.Each episode goes deep on one book that belongs in the canon. Not to summarize it, but to extract what actually lasts: the core idea, the mental models you can use, the mistakes practitioners keep making, and how it all connects to real wins and failures in public affairs today.Elite performers in any field keep returning to first principles. This show is built for practitioners who want to do the same—one book at a time.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Each episode goes deep on one book that belongs in a modern public affairs canon—extracting the core idea, the mental models, and how it connects to real wins and failures today. Built for practitioners who never stop working the fundamentals.
HOSTED BY
Joseph Lavoie
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