Hardball Selling

Hardball Selling

Author: Robert L Shook

Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc.

Published: 2003-12-01

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 1402233833

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Straightforward strategies for those who want to take control of the sale and join the winning top 5 percent of the sales force ?Get your foot in the door Control the sale without manipulation ?Create a sense of urgency ?Let the buyer participate ?Learn the crucial subtleties of an aggressive approach ?Target the biggest sales ?Sell abroad And much more For many companies, 20 percent of their sales force generates 80 percent of their sales volume. In this hands-on guide, Robert L. Shook, a master salesman, teaches the high-pressure strategies that mean the difference between a super seller and a salesperson. The methods spelled out in this book describe what it takes to be in the elite 5 percent. In Hardball Selling, Shook inspires all salespeople to dare to be different and master hard selling without browbeating or offending customers. Shook spent 17 years in the trenches perfecting his successful strategies. Using the four basic principles of hardball selling, he guides you through all the steps, from getting past the "gatekeeper" to the single-minded tactics necessary to close a sale. "Shook's Hardball Selling is provocative and controversial—and filled with wonderful selling tips. I highly recommend it to every salesperson."—Martin D. Shafiroff, the world's No. 1 stockbroker


The Last of the Imperious Rich

The Last of the Imperious Rich

Author: Peter Chapman

Publisher: Penguin

Published: 2010-09-02

Total Pages: 346

ISBN-13: 1101442700

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On September 11, 1844, Henry Lehman arrived in New York City on a boat from Germany. Soon after, he moved to Montgomery, Alabama, where he and his brother Emanuel established a modest cotton brokering firm that would come to be called Lehman Brothers. On September 15, 2008, Dick Fuld, the last CEO of Lehman Brothers, filed for corporate bankruptcy amid one of the worst financial crises in American history. After 164 years, one of the largest and most respected investment banks in the world was gone, leaving everyone wondering, "How could this have happened?" Peter Chapman, an editor and writer for The Financial Times, answers this question by exploring the complete history of Lehman Brothers between those two historic Septembers. He takes us back to its early days as a cotton broker in Alabama, and then to its glory days as one of the leading corporate financiers in America. He also provides an intimate portrait of the people who ran Lehman over the decades-from Henry Lehman, the founder, to Bobbie Lehman, who led the company into the world of radio, motion pictures, and air travel in first part of the 20th century, to Dick Fuld, who allowed it to morph into a dealer of shoddy securities. Throughout his account of this imperiously rich firm, Chapman examines the impact Lehman Brothers had not only on American finance but also on American life. As a major backer of companies like Pan American Airlines, Macy's, and RKO, Lehman helped lead the country into major new industries and helped support some of its most intrepid entrepreneurs. He then shows how, starting in the 1980s, Lehman's increased focus on short-term gain investments led the firm down the dangerous path that would eventually lead to its demise. In the end, the story of Lehman Brothers is not only the story of a truly important American company but a cautionary tale of what happens when leaders lose sight of their core mission in their quest for something too good to be true. Praise for The Last of the Imperious Rich: "Thought provoking and illuminating" - The New York Times "Chapman has succeeded in holding up a mirror to America's past - and what its future might hold" - Bloomberg


Communication in Management

Communication in Management

Author: Owen Hargie

Publisher: Gower Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 380

ISBN-13: 9780566079863

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In this book, the authors look in turn at each of the key management tasks, from meetings to negotiation, from writing reports to using the telephone, and they provide practical guidance for increased effectiveness. Other chapters cover non-verbal communication and 'doing things right and doing the right thing'. The text is presented in a lively way but also with academic rigour, and is supported throughout by exercises, checklists and ready-to-use formats.


Successful Telephone Selling in the '90s

Successful Telephone Selling in the '90s

Author: Martin D. Shafiroff

Publisher: Harper Paperbacks

Published: 1990-07-12

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13: 9780060964917

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With the cost of personal sales visit to an industrial customer at well over $200, almost all salespeople now make at least some use of the telephone to save time and money. The main purpose of Successful Telephone Selling in the '90s, however, is not to talk about reducing expenses but to show how to increase your sales production dramatically by using the telephone. A gold mine of practical guidance and information, this book divulges the methods that work for the top telephone salespeople in the country -- methods that can guarantee your own success.


How to Give Good Phone

How to Give Good Phone

Author: Lisa Collier Cool

Publisher: Plume Books

Published: 1988

Total Pages: 244

ISBN-13: 9781556110504

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Effective telephone communication is vital to the successful executive, ambitious newcomer and job applicant. This total guide to telephone success employs step-by-step programs, anecdotes, examples and quotes from successful businesswomen and men.


Marketing Yourself

Marketing Yourself

Author: Dorothy Leeds

Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 324

ISBN-13:

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How to use state-of-the-art sales and marketing techniques to enhance your value in a rapidly changing business world.