The Law of Defensiveness
People defend their self-image more fiercely than they defend facts. If your message threatens how they see themselves—competent, fair, intelligent, moral—they will resist even when you are correct.
The most effective persuasion rarely begins with contradiction. It begins with confirmation: you acknowledge what the person needs to believe about themselves, then you guide them toward change without forcing them to feel humiliated.
This is not dishonesty. It is psychological realism. If you want influence, stop treating the ego as an obstacle you can bulldoze. Treat it as the gate you must pass through—quietly, respectfully, and with precision.