Strategy (NLP)

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One of a series of articles on
Neuro-linguistic programming
(NLP)

Main articles
NLP · Principles · Topics · History
NLP and science · Therapy · Bibliography


Concepts and methods
Modeling · Meta model · Milton model
Perceptual positions · Rapport · Reframing
Representation systems · Submodalities
Positive intention · Meta program · Neurological levels
Anchoring · Well-formed outcome


People
Richard Bandler · John Grinder
Robert Dilts · Stephen Gilligan
Judith DeLozier · David Gordon
Connirae Andreas · Steve Andreas
Frank Pucelik · Paul McKenna
Ross Jeffries · Tony Robbins
Genie Laborde · Charles Faulkner


Principal influences
Fritz Perls · Gestalt therapy
Milton Erickson · Hypnotherapy
Virginia Satir · Family therapy
Transformational linguistics
Gregory Bateson · Paul Watzlawick
Epistemology · Double Bind
Alfred Korzybski · Map-territory
Frank Farrelly · Provocative therapy


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In Neuro-linguistic programming, a strategy is a mental sequence used to achieve a goal. Strategies are usually described in a sequence of sensory-specific terms of the representational systems and submodalities employed. They may include alternatives, fall-back strategies, and the like.

Contents

[edit] Representational systems and submodalities

Main articles: Representational systems (NLP), Submodalities (NLP)

[edit] Strategies

Steps in a strategy might include listening to a person, asking oneself a question, imagining something, undertaking transderivational search internally, checking how one feels, and the like.


[edit] Elicitation

[edit] Uses

[edit] See also