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Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 1
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius
Abstract
Joel Osteen Ministries has grown into an evangelical Christian powerhouse during recent
years. The ministry enjoys tens of thousands of worshippers during its weekly services. This
paper analyzes ways in which Joel Osteen employs persuasive techniques to ensure the retention
of existing, and acquisition of new, congregants worldwide. Primarily discussed are Osteen’s
appeals to heuristics and his implementation of “God” and “Devil” terms to create a context for
identification and dis-identification. The essay examines processes through which Petty and
Cacioppo’s “Elaboration Likelihood Model” prove useful in explaining conclusions reached by
receivers of Osteen’s persuasive messages. Cialdini’s heuristic principles are discussed in terms
of their usefulness in influencing perceptions of Osteen, and how this directly determines the
success of his ministry. The discussion concludes that Osteen’s covert encouragement of
peripheral information processing and subtle appeals toward membership within his “in-group”
leave consumers vulnerable and likely to comply with his persuasive requests.
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 2
Purpose of Persuasive Analysis
The purpose of this analysis is to examine persuasive techniques used by Joel Osteen on
his religious ministry’s website. Osteen is the head pastor at Lakewood Church, located in
Houston, Texas. He is America’s leading televangelist, as his non-profit organization, Joel
Osteen Ministries, has grown from its origins in 1999 to an evangelical powerhouse around the
world—serving 47,000 worshippers each week at his live services at Lakewood Church alone—
this figure does not include his worldwide television audience (Miller and Carlin 2009:28).
Osteen extends his message using social media and televised live worship, which he and his wife
Victoria lead inside the 16,000 seat arena formerly known as the Compaq center (Osteen 2014).
Osteen’s ministry hasn’t grown into what it is today by accident—very careful “behind-
the-scenes” techniques have been employed by those with expert understandings of persuasion.
Osteen and his company have successfully implemented such techniques, and they have yielded
incredibly lucrative results. How is this possible? Joel Osteen strategically employs the use of
social proof, authority, and liking heuristics (also known as cognitive shorthands), and presents
the consumer with two options—identification or dis-identification—through his use of “God”
and “Devil” terms. Each of these concepts operate independently of one another (appeals to
heuristic use and the use of “God” and “Devil” terms), but they gain new strength when applied
in conjunction with one another: Osteen first incorporates “God” and “Devil” terms, and then he
relies upon their functionality in creating an audience more vulnerable to the lures of heuristic
deference than they might have been without first being predisposed to the idealized notion of
belonging to a desirable in-group. Taken together, then, heuristics and “God” and “Devil” terms
conjunctively aid Osteen’s overarching attempt to adapt Petty and Cacioppo’s “Elaboration
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 3
Likelihood Model” toward persuading consumers to invest in his mega church. First, it is
important to delineate the basic structure and function of the Joel Osteen Ministries website.
General Description of Persuasive Artifact
The persuasive artifact to be analyzed is Joel Osteen Ministries’ website,
www.joelosteen.com. The web page is full of bright color and interactive elements. The page
features quickly scrolling banners advertising Joel’s books, upcoming live events, and multiple
donation opportunities. The front page welcomes viewers by warning them, “Don’t Let Fear
Freeze You” (Osteen 2014). By clicking on the related link, visitors are invited to read an
anecdotal story told by Osteen about a man who allegedly froze to death in a train car he thought
to be refrigerated, but that was actually 61 degrees Fahrenheit. Because the man was locked in
the car and thought he would freeze to death, readers learn, he actually died due to freezing
temperatures. The story is disheartening, but only to the extent that Osteen can take advantage of
the opportunity it provides for him to remind consumers that there is a solution to be had: “Fear
blows things out of proportion. Fear makes problems much bigger than they really are.” Osteen
continues with his assumption that “Perhaps like [the frozen man], you feel trapped. Everything
tells you, ‘You’ll never get out. You’ll never get ahead. You’ll never get well . . . God is saying,
‘If you will stay in faith, I will deliver you. I will protect you. I will heal you. I will vindicate
you. I will restore you’” (Osteen 2014). Those who side with Osteen side with God, and therein
lies reprieve from all anguish. God presented as the ultimate answer to every problem is, at its
base, quite an extraordinary claim. Thus, it depends upon the extraordinary execution of
persuasive tactics if it is to prevail.
Following this emotionally appealing and arguably thrilling introduction, browsers may
opt to read about Osteen, his wife Victoria, and their ministry, or they can skip to a page full of
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 4
blog-like essays written by one or more of the Osteens. Running down the side of every page are
bright photo advertisements for Joel’s books, including hyperlinks to purchase them directly.
When clicking on the “Pray Together” section of the page, visitors are asked to sign in or to
create a new profile in order to let Joel and Victoria know how, and in what way, to pray for
them. Lastly, the website offers a subpage where current and potential worshippers can follow
Joel Osteen Ministries on social media and by email newsletter. This Internet artifact functions
through the selling of hope, but why do so many buy in? Surely the answer doesn’t reside solely
in Osteen’s use of online persuasive techniques, but there is no doubt that those techniques
highlighted next most certainly play an important role in luring people into the televangelist’s
marketing net.
Description of Theoretical Approach
This analysis will employ the perspectives of two distinct lenses: 1) Petty and Cacioppo’s
Elaboration Likelihood Model, or E.L.M., and 2) The use of “God” and “Devil” terms to
facilitate identification and dis-identification. Initial exploration of these concepts allows for a
closer inspection of the persuasive tactics undertaken by Osteen on his website.
The Elaboration Likelihood Model centers on the idea that “persuasion is a consequence
not just of external cues but also of the thoughts that the persuadee generates in response to
external communications” (Petty and Cacioppo as cited in Simons and Jones 2011:58).
Persuasion not only depends, then, on the persuader, but it is largely facilitated on the terms of
the persuadee. In generating responses to such external communications, receivers of persuasive
requests employ one of two routes to persuasion, and often a combination of both.
The two routes to persuasion as outlined by the Elaboration Likelihood Model are 1) the
central route, and 2) the peripheral route. The central route to persuasion entails high levels of
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 5
elaboration (defined as the extent to which one engages in issue-relevant thinking), and involves
critical thought and rational, reasonable consideration. In contrast, the peripheral route to
persuasion involves far less, if any, issue-relevant thinking. During peripheral processing, the
persuadee’s attention is focused on aspects of the interaction other than solely the message.
Additionally, peripheral processing oftentimes incorporates the use of cognitive shorthands, or
heuristics, by the persuadee (Waltman 2014).
Heuristics, as labeled by Cialdini (2009), are a collection of cognitive shorthands that
persuadees rely upon “when [they] haven’t the inclination or wherewithal to engage in more
mindful message processing” (Simons and Jones 2011:211). Cialdini (2009) describes these
shorthands as a set of seven principles: contrast, reciprocity, consistency, social proof, authority,
liking, and scarcity (Waltman 2014). The three heuristics to be analyzed in the context of Joel
Osteen are social proof, authority, and liking—each to be defined in sequence.
Social proof refers to the idea that people determine how they feel about a persuasive
request by considering how other people are reacting around them (Waltman 2014). Examples of
this would be the commercial message that “nine out of ten satisfied customers agree,” or that
“everyone is doing it!” The social proof heuristic can best be represented as the notion that “I
should comply with persuasive requests that are being accepted by others around me.”
Persuaders are well aware that people often elect simply to follow the opinion of the masses.
The authority heuristic can be seen when the receiver of a persuasive request defers
strictly to the authority of a given persuader instead of also considering other relevant elements
of the request (Simons and Jones 2011:217). Instances involving the authority heuristic generally
hinge on the assumed consensus that “Those in positions of authority know what is best for me.”
This can often be witnessed in situations involving doctors or clergy: both figures are viewed as
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 6
possessing authority, and patients often accept their advice based solely on such authority, rather
than first probing the persuasive request and asking critical questions about the substance of the
message.
The principle of liking involves the propensity for receivers of persuasive requests to
consider those from people whom they like in a more favorable light than of those whom they
dislike. The general idea is that “I should comply with persuasive requests made by likeable
people” (Waltman 2014). This is why the messages communicated by friends, family members,
and trusted others are usually more readily agreeable to us than those of strangers.
Each of the heuristic principles outlined above can play a critical role in determining
whether or not a person is likely to engage in issue-relevant thinking (central processing). What
makes the identification of heuristics difficult is that often they operate at a level largely beneath
our consciousness. For this reason, persuadees do not often know cognitive shorthands have
come into play until after a persuasive interaction has occurred—and sometimes they never
realize the influence of a heuristic. While heuristics serve as powerful tools for persuaders, there
exists a multitude of other variables that function to increase a person’s likelihood to comply
with a persuasive request, and another primary example to be considered in this analysis is the
use of “God” and “Devil” terms.
Persuaders employ “God” and “Devil” terms because they are antithetical to each other.
They are “symbols of approval or derision, of group identification or dis-identification”
(Waltman 2014). These terms operate by positioning receivers of persuasive messages to identify
themselves as falling onto one side of a choice or the other, and in a very rigid sense. This results
in a person’s being “in-grouped,” or “out-grouped” as a result of their compliance or non-
compliance with the request. Naturally, people tend to gravitate toward terms that indicate
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 7
identification with something deemed ideologically positive by society rather than with
something deemed ideologically negative. “God” and “Devil” terms are persuasive because they
obfuscate similarities that people share, and they provide a method of unsolicited simplification
in decision-making that restricts choices to terms of being societally “righteous” or “not,” when
issue-relevant thinking would reveal that there exists a more reasonable way of approaching the
persuasive request. Thus, “God” and “Devil” terms share a commonality with heuristic
implementation in that both techniques falsely dichotomize complex concepts and intensify a
persuadee’s likelihood of engaging in peripheral information processing. Having discussed the
two lenses through which this analysis will examine the persuasive artifact, it is now possible to
delve more deeply into the website itself, and to examine the ways in which Osteen attempts to
undermine potential and current customers’ ability to engage in issue-relevant thinking.
Analysis
Joel Osteen is presented with an audience he knows will likely show high motivation to
elaborate. Many who have sought out his website arrive in search of some form of fulfillment,
spiritual or otherwise. Therefore, Osteen’s audience can be expected to ascribe a high level of
personal relevance to his persuasive message. Secondly, it’s probable that web surfers have
already heard “the good news” from numerous sources in the past, as well as differing variations
of it. Lastly, Osteen’s audience will exhibit a high need for cognition based upon the inherent
nature of the guidance they are seeking. Consumers will want to know whether Osteen has
something unique to offer that others have lacked. Because motivation to elaborate can be
anticipated, it makes sense that Osteen instead focuses on interfering with the other relevant
aspect affecting a person’s degree of elaboration: their ability to do so. Osteen cannot control the
prior knowledge of his audience, but he can provide distractions. This is the point at which his
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 8
knowledge of heuristic principles and the anticipatory striving by consumers for positive “in-
group” identification becomes useful. First, the impact of heuristic principles is examined.
The heuristics of social proof, authority, and liking are tempting on Osteen’s website.
Visitors first encounter the social proof pitfall when they read the news that:
Millions are watching . . . we are reaching over 100 million homes in the U.S. and tens of
millions more in 100 nations … each week more than one million people are hearing God’s Word
by downloading our audio and video podcast, making our podcast consistently one of the top five
in the world. (Osteen 2014)
These numbers are mind-boggling and are presented without substantiation. This is not to say
that there isn’t truth to the claims, but Osteen is going to leave every bit of the issue-relevant
thinking up to consumers if they desire to conduct more in-depth research. Osteen’s ministry
appears insanely popular on the global stage, and this is an effective tool for gaining the favor of
a large number of customers who will probe the issue no further, and who will join the more than
one million who are purportedly already believers in Joel Osteen. Again, this is not to suggest
Osteen’s claims are untrue, but to emphasize that, in this context, they are unsupported claims
and nothing more. Readers are then informed that “most recently, Joel was named as one of
Barbara Walters' ‘10 Most Fascinating People of 2006’ and he was selected as the ‘Most
Influential Christian in 2006’ by the readers of Church Report Magazine” (Osteen 2014). Once
again browsers encounter examples of people in society—both everyday individuals and
celebrities—declaring their approval of Osteen. Why then, shouldn’t the average newcomer do
the same? If the social proof heuristic has its intended effect, this is exactly what will occur.
If successfully employed, viewers will conclude that their taking part in “the sharing [of] hope
with millions in new ways and in new places” (Osteen 2014) is far simpler and more desirous
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 9
than engaging in issue-relevant thinking—which may uncover legitimate reasons not to
participate.
A second heuristic appealed to on the website is the principle of authority. Osteen “has an
extended relationship with his audience wherein his integrity and credibility must be maintained
over time, and the interest of his audience must be captured repeatedly” (Diekema 1991:146).
Osteen has no formal theological training and dropped out of college before earning his
Bachelor’s degree (Miller and Carlin 2009:28); he must establish integrity and credibility by
implementing heuristic cognitive shorthands to entangle his audience. To accomplish this,
Osteen invokes the authority of God within his ministry, stating that “the power of God . . . is
being broadcast through [his] ministry” (Osteen 2014). For Christian worshippers, there is no
higher authority than that of God. If God is said to be working through, or extending his power
into Joel Osteen and/or other members of his ministry, then there is no alternative for believers
but to desire to be in his presence and to hear what they (and God, by extension) have to say.
This is problematic, of course, because there exists no empirical evidence that any such deity
exists. Let it be assumed, for argument’s sake, that empirical evidence for an omnipotent,
omniscient God does exist. Even still, no evidence is offered in support of the claim that such a
God is intervening or working through Joel Osteen or his ministry. However, Osteen’s success
enjoys independence from empirical truth; the only relevant measure of such lies in the extent to
which his audience accepts his claims—and congregant headcounts indicate that it increasingly
does. As central processing remains largely untapped, then, Osteen’s proclamations are
consequently unquestioned when his appeal to the authority heuristic is successful. The
televangelist doesn’t have any need to derive internal authority when he can endow himself with
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 10
the external authority of God. What was once a problem of establishing credibility now becomes
an opportunity to presume the highest authority a Christian worshipper comprehends.
The final heuristic to be analyzed in the context of Joel Osteen’s website is the principle
of liking. In televangelism, a persistent pattern of marketing includes “appeals to altruism [that]
are frequent and cover a wide range of activities from helping the poor and needy to supporting
the moral and political goals of the New Christian Right” (Diekema 1991:149). This is apparent
as Osteen gloats that his ministries are “the hands and feet of hope to those in need all around the
world,” and reminds potential supporters that his ministry is facilitating “vaccination programs,
abandoned baby centers and centers for young troubled teens looking for a new life and a fresh
start. We are helping feed the hungry, clothe the needy and provide hope to the hopeless”
(Osteen 2014). By pointing out his altruistic gestures around the world in one of the introductory
pages of his website, Osteen persuades his audience to perceive him as a selfless, benevolent
person—he arguably constructs himself as being Godlike, or, at very least, as embodying
congregants’ individual and collective visions of a loving, selfless God. Thus, while establishing
himself as an unquestionably likeable figure, Osteen simultaneously furthers his previously
discussed perceptibility as an authoritative source. For audience members who allow for the
liking heuristic to play its part, there is almost no avoiding feelings of fondness for Osteen—
which influences, often subconsciously, the extent to which they engage in elaboration when
evaluating his persuasive requests and deciding whether or not to comply with them.
The second primary concept to be examined is the using of “God” and “Devil” terms on
Osteen’s website. Joel Osteen inserts “God” and “Devil” terms far less abrasively than the
televangelists of times past might have preferred; instead, he uses subtler messages to remind
current or potential worshippers that they are either in, or they are out. Although he rarely speaks
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 11
of “sin” in the direct sense, Osteen uses imagery and prose geared toward “facilitat[ing] a ‘we
the righteous’ and ‘they the sinful’ mentality” (Diekema 1991:150). Osteen relies upon his
endorsement of other authors—in one particular instance that of his sister Lisa Osteen Comes—
who remind his website followers that “the Bible has much to say about the sinful life versus the
godly life . . . it clearly shows that it pays to live a godly, righteous life” (Osteen 2014). Such a
statement carries the implication that there exists an alternative, deleterious path by which those
who are ungodly and unrighteous will choose to live their existences. Consumers can choose to
identify with the safety and certainty of the expressed in-group—the godly life—or they can
move on and opt to remain part of the unknown, assumedly treacherous out-group—the sinful
life. Osteen places photos (advertisement links) of his books around the edges and on banners
that head his website. The titles of his books include “From Victim to Victor,” “You Can, You
Will,” Power Over the Enemy,” and “Your Best Life Now.” Each of these titles directly or
indirectly suggests a path leading from the defeated to the victorious, or from the satisfactory to
the perfected. The titles suggest that there exists a deficiency in the identities of audience
members as they currently are, and that it is through Osteen’s products that they can attain the
necessary fix. Such an approach embodies what will henceforth be called “Osteen’s Paradox:”
outwardly projected messages of love, acceptance, and altruism—but messages in which
effectiveness unequivocally depends upon the conscious or subconscious internalization of a
secondary, ominous message: “Comply with the request I am making, because you are in need of
all the help you can get.” Without the qualification provided by the latter premise, there exist no
grounds for the acceptance of, or compliance with, the first premise. Thus, Osteen’s
communicative goals are those of beneficence, but his underlying tactics can be seen as
necessitating malevolence if they are to find success. Banners reading “It’s time for you to win”
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 12
are draped over the book images, and links to purchase tickets for live events promise attendees
“A Night of Hope with Joel and Victoria” (Osteen 2014). Here the couple offers another
opportunity for inclusion—they offer worshippers the experience of being in their presence, and
vicariously through the Osteens, in God’s presence.
Conclusions
In fairness, this analysis should not be viewed as an indictment of Joel Osteen for
utilizing persuasive techniques that have been demonstrated as effective time and again.
Countless numbers of faith leaders have utilized these appeals, and to criticize Osteen alone for
doing so would be to misrepresent history. Furthermore, heuristic ploys and “God” and “Devil”
terms are implemented regularly by corporations, local organizations, and within interpersonal
interactions in everyday attempts to persuade. Therefore, the pertinent question becomes how
this analysis might translate into a practical tool for use against such complex persuasive
techniques. The hope is that receivers of persuasive requests might, as a result of this analysis,
find themselves better equipped to handle such messages, and become less likely to cease
elaboration. This is not to imply that persuasive messages shouldn’t warrant consideration, but
rather to emphasize the importance of approaching them with this supplied knowledge regarding
the dynamics at work underneath the surface of interpersonal and mass communication.
Marketers, whether selling a commercial product or, like in Joel Osteen’s case, the solution to
life’s problems, rely upon their audience’s deferment to peripheral processing and people’s
desire to identify as part of the established “in-group.” Having examined this case study,
potential customers can enter into Joel Osteen’s persuasive dialogue better prepared to engage in
issue-relevant thinking, and as a result, to make better-informed decisions prior to investing in
what is ultimately just another ingeniously disguised product in a capitalistic market.
Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 13
References
Diekema, David A. 1991. “Televangelism and the Mediated Charismatic Relationship.” The
Social Science Journal 28(2):143–62.
Miller, Christine and Nathan Carlin. 2009. “Joel Osteen as Cultural Selfobject: Meeting the
Needs of the Group Self and Its Individual Members in and from the Largest Church in
America.” Pastoral Psychology 59(1):27–51. Retrieved October 27, 2014
(http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11089-009-0197-7).
Osteen, Joel. 2014. “Joel Osteen Ministries.” Retrieved October 27, 2014
(http://www.joelosteen.com/Pages/Home.aspx).
Simons, Herbert W. and Jean G. Jones. 2011. Persuasion in Society. 2nd ed. New York:
Routledge.
Waltman, Michael. 2014. “ELM and Heuristics Lecture.”

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Joel Osteen - The Persuasive Genius (Final Conference Version)

  • 1. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 1 Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius Abstract Joel Osteen Ministries has grown into an evangelical Christian powerhouse during recent years. The ministry enjoys tens of thousands of worshippers during its weekly services. This paper analyzes ways in which Joel Osteen employs persuasive techniques to ensure the retention of existing, and acquisition of new, congregants worldwide. Primarily discussed are Osteen’s appeals to heuristics and his implementation of “God” and “Devil” terms to create a context for identification and dis-identification. The essay examines processes through which Petty and Cacioppo’s “Elaboration Likelihood Model” prove useful in explaining conclusions reached by receivers of Osteen’s persuasive messages. Cialdini’s heuristic principles are discussed in terms of their usefulness in influencing perceptions of Osteen, and how this directly determines the success of his ministry. The discussion concludes that Osteen’s covert encouragement of peripheral information processing and subtle appeals toward membership within his “in-group” leave consumers vulnerable and likely to comply with his persuasive requests.
  • 2. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 2 Purpose of Persuasive Analysis The purpose of this analysis is to examine persuasive techniques used by Joel Osteen on his religious ministry’s website. Osteen is the head pastor at Lakewood Church, located in Houston, Texas. He is America’s leading televangelist, as his non-profit organization, Joel Osteen Ministries, has grown from its origins in 1999 to an evangelical powerhouse around the world—serving 47,000 worshippers each week at his live services at Lakewood Church alone— this figure does not include his worldwide television audience (Miller and Carlin 2009:28). Osteen extends his message using social media and televised live worship, which he and his wife Victoria lead inside the 16,000 seat arena formerly known as the Compaq center (Osteen 2014). Osteen’s ministry hasn’t grown into what it is today by accident—very careful “behind- the-scenes” techniques have been employed by those with expert understandings of persuasion. Osteen and his company have successfully implemented such techniques, and they have yielded incredibly lucrative results. How is this possible? Joel Osteen strategically employs the use of social proof, authority, and liking heuristics (also known as cognitive shorthands), and presents the consumer with two options—identification or dis-identification—through his use of “God” and “Devil” terms. Each of these concepts operate independently of one another (appeals to heuristic use and the use of “God” and “Devil” terms), but they gain new strength when applied in conjunction with one another: Osteen first incorporates “God” and “Devil” terms, and then he relies upon their functionality in creating an audience more vulnerable to the lures of heuristic deference than they might have been without first being predisposed to the idealized notion of belonging to a desirable in-group. Taken together, then, heuristics and “God” and “Devil” terms conjunctively aid Osteen’s overarching attempt to adapt Petty and Cacioppo’s “Elaboration
  • 3. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 3 Likelihood Model” toward persuading consumers to invest in his mega church. First, it is important to delineate the basic structure and function of the Joel Osteen Ministries website. General Description of Persuasive Artifact The persuasive artifact to be analyzed is Joel Osteen Ministries’ website, www.joelosteen.com. The web page is full of bright color and interactive elements. The page features quickly scrolling banners advertising Joel’s books, upcoming live events, and multiple donation opportunities. The front page welcomes viewers by warning them, “Don’t Let Fear Freeze You” (Osteen 2014). By clicking on the related link, visitors are invited to read an anecdotal story told by Osteen about a man who allegedly froze to death in a train car he thought to be refrigerated, but that was actually 61 degrees Fahrenheit. Because the man was locked in the car and thought he would freeze to death, readers learn, he actually died due to freezing temperatures. The story is disheartening, but only to the extent that Osteen can take advantage of the opportunity it provides for him to remind consumers that there is a solution to be had: “Fear blows things out of proportion. Fear makes problems much bigger than they really are.” Osteen continues with his assumption that “Perhaps like [the frozen man], you feel trapped. Everything tells you, ‘You’ll never get out. You’ll never get ahead. You’ll never get well . . . God is saying, ‘If you will stay in faith, I will deliver you. I will protect you. I will heal you. I will vindicate you. I will restore you’” (Osteen 2014). Those who side with Osteen side with God, and therein lies reprieve from all anguish. God presented as the ultimate answer to every problem is, at its base, quite an extraordinary claim. Thus, it depends upon the extraordinary execution of persuasive tactics if it is to prevail. Following this emotionally appealing and arguably thrilling introduction, browsers may opt to read about Osteen, his wife Victoria, and their ministry, or they can skip to a page full of
  • 4. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 4 blog-like essays written by one or more of the Osteens. Running down the side of every page are bright photo advertisements for Joel’s books, including hyperlinks to purchase them directly. When clicking on the “Pray Together” section of the page, visitors are asked to sign in or to create a new profile in order to let Joel and Victoria know how, and in what way, to pray for them. Lastly, the website offers a subpage where current and potential worshippers can follow Joel Osteen Ministries on social media and by email newsletter. This Internet artifact functions through the selling of hope, but why do so many buy in? Surely the answer doesn’t reside solely in Osteen’s use of online persuasive techniques, but there is no doubt that those techniques highlighted next most certainly play an important role in luring people into the televangelist’s marketing net. Description of Theoretical Approach This analysis will employ the perspectives of two distinct lenses: 1) Petty and Cacioppo’s Elaboration Likelihood Model, or E.L.M., and 2) The use of “God” and “Devil” terms to facilitate identification and dis-identification. Initial exploration of these concepts allows for a closer inspection of the persuasive tactics undertaken by Osteen on his website. The Elaboration Likelihood Model centers on the idea that “persuasion is a consequence not just of external cues but also of the thoughts that the persuadee generates in response to external communications” (Petty and Cacioppo as cited in Simons and Jones 2011:58). Persuasion not only depends, then, on the persuader, but it is largely facilitated on the terms of the persuadee. In generating responses to such external communications, receivers of persuasive requests employ one of two routes to persuasion, and often a combination of both. The two routes to persuasion as outlined by the Elaboration Likelihood Model are 1) the central route, and 2) the peripheral route. The central route to persuasion entails high levels of
  • 5. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 5 elaboration (defined as the extent to which one engages in issue-relevant thinking), and involves critical thought and rational, reasonable consideration. In contrast, the peripheral route to persuasion involves far less, if any, issue-relevant thinking. During peripheral processing, the persuadee’s attention is focused on aspects of the interaction other than solely the message. Additionally, peripheral processing oftentimes incorporates the use of cognitive shorthands, or heuristics, by the persuadee (Waltman 2014). Heuristics, as labeled by Cialdini (2009), are a collection of cognitive shorthands that persuadees rely upon “when [they] haven’t the inclination or wherewithal to engage in more mindful message processing” (Simons and Jones 2011:211). Cialdini (2009) describes these shorthands as a set of seven principles: contrast, reciprocity, consistency, social proof, authority, liking, and scarcity (Waltman 2014). The three heuristics to be analyzed in the context of Joel Osteen are social proof, authority, and liking—each to be defined in sequence. Social proof refers to the idea that people determine how they feel about a persuasive request by considering how other people are reacting around them (Waltman 2014). Examples of this would be the commercial message that “nine out of ten satisfied customers agree,” or that “everyone is doing it!” The social proof heuristic can best be represented as the notion that “I should comply with persuasive requests that are being accepted by others around me.” Persuaders are well aware that people often elect simply to follow the opinion of the masses. The authority heuristic can be seen when the receiver of a persuasive request defers strictly to the authority of a given persuader instead of also considering other relevant elements of the request (Simons and Jones 2011:217). Instances involving the authority heuristic generally hinge on the assumed consensus that “Those in positions of authority know what is best for me.” This can often be witnessed in situations involving doctors or clergy: both figures are viewed as
  • 6. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 6 possessing authority, and patients often accept their advice based solely on such authority, rather than first probing the persuasive request and asking critical questions about the substance of the message. The principle of liking involves the propensity for receivers of persuasive requests to consider those from people whom they like in a more favorable light than of those whom they dislike. The general idea is that “I should comply with persuasive requests made by likeable people” (Waltman 2014). This is why the messages communicated by friends, family members, and trusted others are usually more readily agreeable to us than those of strangers. Each of the heuristic principles outlined above can play a critical role in determining whether or not a person is likely to engage in issue-relevant thinking (central processing). What makes the identification of heuristics difficult is that often they operate at a level largely beneath our consciousness. For this reason, persuadees do not often know cognitive shorthands have come into play until after a persuasive interaction has occurred—and sometimes they never realize the influence of a heuristic. While heuristics serve as powerful tools for persuaders, there exists a multitude of other variables that function to increase a person’s likelihood to comply with a persuasive request, and another primary example to be considered in this analysis is the use of “God” and “Devil” terms. Persuaders employ “God” and “Devil” terms because they are antithetical to each other. They are “symbols of approval or derision, of group identification or dis-identification” (Waltman 2014). These terms operate by positioning receivers of persuasive messages to identify themselves as falling onto one side of a choice or the other, and in a very rigid sense. This results in a person’s being “in-grouped,” or “out-grouped” as a result of their compliance or non- compliance with the request. Naturally, people tend to gravitate toward terms that indicate
  • 7. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 7 identification with something deemed ideologically positive by society rather than with something deemed ideologically negative. “God” and “Devil” terms are persuasive because they obfuscate similarities that people share, and they provide a method of unsolicited simplification in decision-making that restricts choices to terms of being societally “righteous” or “not,” when issue-relevant thinking would reveal that there exists a more reasonable way of approaching the persuasive request. Thus, “God” and “Devil” terms share a commonality with heuristic implementation in that both techniques falsely dichotomize complex concepts and intensify a persuadee’s likelihood of engaging in peripheral information processing. Having discussed the two lenses through which this analysis will examine the persuasive artifact, it is now possible to delve more deeply into the website itself, and to examine the ways in which Osteen attempts to undermine potential and current customers’ ability to engage in issue-relevant thinking. Analysis Joel Osteen is presented with an audience he knows will likely show high motivation to elaborate. Many who have sought out his website arrive in search of some form of fulfillment, spiritual or otherwise. Therefore, Osteen’s audience can be expected to ascribe a high level of personal relevance to his persuasive message. Secondly, it’s probable that web surfers have already heard “the good news” from numerous sources in the past, as well as differing variations of it. Lastly, Osteen’s audience will exhibit a high need for cognition based upon the inherent nature of the guidance they are seeking. Consumers will want to know whether Osteen has something unique to offer that others have lacked. Because motivation to elaborate can be anticipated, it makes sense that Osteen instead focuses on interfering with the other relevant aspect affecting a person’s degree of elaboration: their ability to do so. Osteen cannot control the prior knowledge of his audience, but he can provide distractions. This is the point at which his
  • 8. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 8 knowledge of heuristic principles and the anticipatory striving by consumers for positive “in- group” identification becomes useful. First, the impact of heuristic principles is examined. The heuristics of social proof, authority, and liking are tempting on Osteen’s website. Visitors first encounter the social proof pitfall when they read the news that: Millions are watching . . . we are reaching over 100 million homes in the U.S. and tens of millions more in 100 nations … each week more than one million people are hearing God’s Word by downloading our audio and video podcast, making our podcast consistently one of the top five in the world. (Osteen 2014) These numbers are mind-boggling and are presented without substantiation. This is not to say that there isn’t truth to the claims, but Osteen is going to leave every bit of the issue-relevant thinking up to consumers if they desire to conduct more in-depth research. Osteen’s ministry appears insanely popular on the global stage, and this is an effective tool for gaining the favor of a large number of customers who will probe the issue no further, and who will join the more than one million who are purportedly already believers in Joel Osteen. Again, this is not to suggest Osteen’s claims are untrue, but to emphasize that, in this context, they are unsupported claims and nothing more. Readers are then informed that “most recently, Joel was named as one of Barbara Walters' ‘10 Most Fascinating People of 2006’ and he was selected as the ‘Most Influential Christian in 2006’ by the readers of Church Report Magazine” (Osteen 2014). Once again browsers encounter examples of people in society—both everyday individuals and celebrities—declaring their approval of Osteen. Why then, shouldn’t the average newcomer do the same? If the social proof heuristic has its intended effect, this is exactly what will occur. If successfully employed, viewers will conclude that their taking part in “the sharing [of] hope with millions in new ways and in new places” (Osteen 2014) is far simpler and more desirous
  • 9. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 9 than engaging in issue-relevant thinking—which may uncover legitimate reasons not to participate. A second heuristic appealed to on the website is the principle of authority. Osteen “has an extended relationship with his audience wherein his integrity and credibility must be maintained over time, and the interest of his audience must be captured repeatedly” (Diekema 1991:146). Osteen has no formal theological training and dropped out of college before earning his Bachelor’s degree (Miller and Carlin 2009:28); he must establish integrity and credibility by implementing heuristic cognitive shorthands to entangle his audience. To accomplish this, Osteen invokes the authority of God within his ministry, stating that “the power of God . . . is being broadcast through [his] ministry” (Osteen 2014). For Christian worshippers, there is no higher authority than that of God. If God is said to be working through, or extending his power into Joel Osteen and/or other members of his ministry, then there is no alternative for believers but to desire to be in his presence and to hear what they (and God, by extension) have to say. This is problematic, of course, because there exists no empirical evidence that any such deity exists. Let it be assumed, for argument’s sake, that empirical evidence for an omnipotent, omniscient God does exist. Even still, no evidence is offered in support of the claim that such a God is intervening or working through Joel Osteen or his ministry. However, Osteen’s success enjoys independence from empirical truth; the only relevant measure of such lies in the extent to which his audience accepts his claims—and congregant headcounts indicate that it increasingly does. As central processing remains largely untapped, then, Osteen’s proclamations are consequently unquestioned when his appeal to the authority heuristic is successful. The televangelist doesn’t have any need to derive internal authority when he can endow himself with
  • 10. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 10 the external authority of God. What was once a problem of establishing credibility now becomes an opportunity to presume the highest authority a Christian worshipper comprehends. The final heuristic to be analyzed in the context of Joel Osteen’s website is the principle of liking. In televangelism, a persistent pattern of marketing includes “appeals to altruism [that] are frequent and cover a wide range of activities from helping the poor and needy to supporting the moral and political goals of the New Christian Right” (Diekema 1991:149). This is apparent as Osteen gloats that his ministries are “the hands and feet of hope to those in need all around the world,” and reminds potential supporters that his ministry is facilitating “vaccination programs, abandoned baby centers and centers for young troubled teens looking for a new life and a fresh start. We are helping feed the hungry, clothe the needy and provide hope to the hopeless” (Osteen 2014). By pointing out his altruistic gestures around the world in one of the introductory pages of his website, Osteen persuades his audience to perceive him as a selfless, benevolent person—he arguably constructs himself as being Godlike, or, at very least, as embodying congregants’ individual and collective visions of a loving, selfless God. Thus, while establishing himself as an unquestionably likeable figure, Osteen simultaneously furthers his previously discussed perceptibility as an authoritative source. For audience members who allow for the liking heuristic to play its part, there is almost no avoiding feelings of fondness for Osteen— which influences, often subconsciously, the extent to which they engage in elaboration when evaluating his persuasive requests and deciding whether or not to comply with them. The second primary concept to be examined is the using of “God” and “Devil” terms on Osteen’s website. Joel Osteen inserts “God” and “Devil” terms far less abrasively than the televangelists of times past might have preferred; instead, he uses subtler messages to remind current or potential worshippers that they are either in, or they are out. Although he rarely speaks
  • 11. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 11 of “sin” in the direct sense, Osteen uses imagery and prose geared toward “facilitat[ing] a ‘we the righteous’ and ‘they the sinful’ mentality” (Diekema 1991:150). Osteen relies upon his endorsement of other authors—in one particular instance that of his sister Lisa Osteen Comes— who remind his website followers that “the Bible has much to say about the sinful life versus the godly life . . . it clearly shows that it pays to live a godly, righteous life” (Osteen 2014). Such a statement carries the implication that there exists an alternative, deleterious path by which those who are ungodly and unrighteous will choose to live their existences. Consumers can choose to identify with the safety and certainty of the expressed in-group—the godly life—or they can move on and opt to remain part of the unknown, assumedly treacherous out-group—the sinful life. Osteen places photos (advertisement links) of his books around the edges and on banners that head his website. The titles of his books include “From Victim to Victor,” “You Can, You Will,” Power Over the Enemy,” and “Your Best Life Now.” Each of these titles directly or indirectly suggests a path leading from the defeated to the victorious, or from the satisfactory to the perfected. The titles suggest that there exists a deficiency in the identities of audience members as they currently are, and that it is through Osteen’s products that they can attain the necessary fix. Such an approach embodies what will henceforth be called “Osteen’s Paradox:” outwardly projected messages of love, acceptance, and altruism—but messages in which effectiveness unequivocally depends upon the conscious or subconscious internalization of a secondary, ominous message: “Comply with the request I am making, because you are in need of all the help you can get.” Without the qualification provided by the latter premise, there exist no grounds for the acceptance of, or compliance with, the first premise. Thus, Osteen’s communicative goals are those of beneficence, but his underlying tactics can be seen as necessitating malevolence if they are to find success. Banners reading “It’s time for you to win”
  • 12. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 12 are draped over the book images, and links to purchase tickets for live events promise attendees “A Night of Hope with Joel and Victoria” (Osteen 2014). Here the couple offers another opportunity for inclusion—they offer worshippers the experience of being in their presence, and vicariously through the Osteens, in God’s presence. Conclusions In fairness, this analysis should not be viewed as an indictment of Joel Osteen for utilizing persuasive techniques that have been demonstrated as effective time and again. Countless numbers of faith leaders have utilized these appeals, and to criticize Osteen alone for doing so would be to misrepresent history. Furthermore, heuristic ploys and “God” and “Devil” terms are implemented regularly by corporations, local organizations, and within interpersonal interactions in everyday attempts to persuade. Therefore, the pertinent question becomes how this analysis might translate into a practical tool for use against such complex persuasive techniques. The hope is that receivers of persuasive requests might, as a result of this analysis, find themselves better equipped to handle such messages, and become less likely to cease elaboration. This is not to imply that persuasive messages shouldn’t warrant consideration, but rather to emphasize the importance of approaching them with this supplied knowledge regarding the dynamics at work underneath the surface of interpersonal and mass communication. Marketers, whether selling a commercial product or, like in Joel Osteen’s case, the solution to life’s problems, rely upon their audience’s deferment to peripheral processing and people’s desire to identify as part of the established “in-group.” Having examined this case study, potential customers can enter into Joel Osteen’s persuasive dialogue better prepared to engage in issue-relevant thinking, and as a result, to make better-informed decisions prior to investing in what is ultimately just another ingeniously disguised product in a capitalistic market.
  • 13. Joel Osteen: The Persuasive Genius 13 References Diekema, David A. 1991. “Televangelism and the Mediated Charismatic Relationship.” The Social Science Journal 28(2):143–62. Miller, Christine and Nathan Carlin. 2009. “Joel Osteen as Cultural Selfobject: Meeting the Needs of the Group Self and Its Individual Members in and from the Largest Church in America.” Pastoral Psychology 59(1):27–51. Retrieved October 27, 2014 (http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11089-009-0197-7). Osteen, Joel. 2014. “Joel Osteen Ministries.” Retrieved October 27, 2014 (http://www.joelosteen.com/Pages/Home.aspx). Simons, Herbert W. and Jean G. Jones. 2011. Persuasion in Society. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge. Waltman, Michael. 2014. “ELM and Heuristics Lecture.”