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NLP, Communication, Coaching

What Are Metaprograms

What metaprograms are in Giovanni Ceroni's NLP: Away From/Toward, Internal/External Reference, General/Specific, Sameness/Difference.

In 30 seconds. This page presents a perspective built through study, experience and practice, connecting the topic to Giovanni Ceroni's books and to the La Lama Invisibile / The Invisible Blade series.

Many people observe behavior. Few read the criterion that generates it. Understanding someone doesn't just mean watching what they do: it means understanding why that choice makes sense to them.

What it is

Metaprograms are the invisible rules, the unconscious criteria every person uses to select, evaluate and direct their choices. They determine what motivates a person, what they consider important, where they direct their attention, and how they make decisions. They're like lenses through which someone views the world, thought patterns that determine how they classify, direct and organize their experiences. They don't say what's true: they say what a person will weigh heavily, what they'll tend to ignore, and which direction their behavior will take.

Metaprograms are strongly context-dependent: a person can show one orientation in one area of life and a different one in another, and they can shift depending on emotional state, pressure, role and context. They're tied to four decisive areas: motivation, decision criteria, the preferred amount of information, and how a person compares what they observe.

Why it matters

The ability to identify metaprograms in context helps you understand how people reason, and find the right lever to motivate and support them in making useful decisions. Listening to the words isn't enough: you need to listen to the criterion organizing them. Metaprograms aren't labels for pigeonholing people: they're keys for understanding them better. Recognizing them lets you stop communicating only with words and start communicating with the invisible structure behind them.

How it works

Away From / Toward, tied to motivation: "Toward" people want to reach something, they're driven by a goal, an advantage, a possibility — the dominant lever is expected pleasure. "Away From" people act to move away from an unwanted condition — the dominant lever is pain to avoid. The pain lever is more effective in the short term, while the pleasure lever helps keep desire high over time: many people start from pain, but stay in motion thanks to a desired direction. To recognize this metaprogram, you can ask "why does this matter to you?" or "why are you doing this?"

Internal / External Reference, tied to decision criteria: an internally referenced person bases decisions on their own opinions, values and experience, trusts their own intuition, often uses the pronoun "I," and needs little external feedback; a useful question is "what do you think you did well?" An externally referenced person seeks confirmation and outside opinions before deciding, relies on experts, friends or social norms, asks a lot of questions, and needs frequent feedback; the key question for recognizing them is "how do you know you did a good job?" — if they answer by referring to other people's comments, they're leaning external; if they answer referring to themselves, they're leaning internal.

General / Specific, tied to the preferred amount of information: someone with a general orientation prefers a big-picture view, is interested in the "what" and "why" more than the "how," and can get impatient with too much detail. Someone with a detail orientation prefers analyzing information in depth, is interested in the "how" and "when," breaks problems into smaller parts, and may perceive someone communicating generally as superficial and imprecise. To shift a general person toward detail, you can ask "how can I help you, specifically?"; to shift a detail person toward general, "what's the purpose of your choice?"

Sameness / Difference, tied to how information is compared: sameness-oriented people (matchers) look for similarities, common elements and connections, use words like "same," "similar," "tradition," prefer routine and familiar situations, and respond better to the word "improvement," which preserves a sense of continuity. Difference-oriented people (mismatchers) look for novelty, change and distinctiveness, use words like "different," "new," "innovation," "however," and love challenges and unique experiences. This metaprogram is considered more stable and "core" than the others, tending to show up consistently in a person even across contexts — though it should never be treated as an absolute label. There are also intermediate combinations ("sameness with difference" and vice versa), typical of people who adapt their point of view depending on the situation.

To recognize metaprograms in action, you need to train yourself to observe them in everyday conversations, emails and messages, paying attention to how people structure language, what they emphasize and how they make decisions. Once recognized, you can match the other person's metaprogram in your own response — spoken or written — together with their representational system, making communication immediately more fluid and effective.

Common mistakes

A common mistake is treating metaprograms as fixed, permanent labels, forgetting they're strongly context-dependent and can vary from situation to situation. A second mistake is pushing the wrong motivational lever (for example insisting on "toward" with a clearly "away from" person), meeting closure instead of openness. A third mistake is confusing the general/detail or sameness/difference orientation with a value judgment, when it's simply a matter of different preferences for organizing information.

Practical example

A client writes a harshly worded complaint email, dwelling on the technical details of their unresolved case and highlighting the gap between what they were told previously and reality. A response that matches their metaprograms explicitly acknowledges their need to get out of a damaging situation ("away from"), the desire to move forward without further blocks ("toward"), values the precision of the data provided ("detail" and "internal reference"), openly acknowledges the gap they identified ("difference"), and communicates a concrete action with a precise deadline ("toward" and "detail"). This kind of response, built on the code of the person writing, is far more effective than a standard reply, however formally polite.

Applications

Metaprograms apply to coaching, to identify the most effective motivational lever for each person; to sales and negotiation, to adapt arguments to the listener's decision criteria; to professional written communication, to craft more persuasive emails and messages; and to leadership, to understand how to motivate different team members differently, instead of applying one approach to everyone.

Frequently asked questions

What are metaprograms in NLP?

They're the unconscious criteria, the "invisible rules" each person uses to select, evaluate and organize their experiences, determining what motivates them, what they consider important, and how they make decisions.

What's the difference between "Away From" and "Toward"?

"Toward" people are motivated by reaching a desired goal (pleasure lever), while "Away From" people are motivated by moving away from an unwanted condition (pain-avoidance lever).

How do you tell an internally referenced person from an externally referenced one?

By asking "how do you know you did a good job?": someone who answers referring to themselves is internally referenced, someone who answers referring to others' comments or judgments is externally referenced.

Do metaprograms change depending on context?

Most do, they're strongly context-dependent and can vary based on emotional state, pressure, role and situation. The sameness/difference metaprogram is considered more stable than the others, but it still shouldn't be treated as a fixed label.

What's the point of "matching" a person's metaprograms?

It lets you communicate in the code that person uses to organize their experience, making the message immediately more understandable, fluid and persuasive, instead of speaking generically or in your own personal code.

Related concepts

Representational Systems, Effective Communication, Calibration, Rapport, Qualities of a Good Communicator.

Go deeper

Metaprograms, with all the example phrases and recognition questions, are presented in the "Invisible Rules" chapter of Volume I of "The Invisible Blade".

Go deeper in the books

If this topic is useful to you, you can explore it further in the "The Invisible Blade" series, where concepts are connected to examples, models and practical applications.

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Giovanni Ceroni
Giovanni Ceroni

Mental Coach and author of the La Lama Invisibile / The Invisible Blade series.