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The One Minute Sales Person

by Spencer Johnson, Larry Wilson

Series: One Minute

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439359,762 (3.7)4
Showing 3 of 3
This was recommended to me by my hypnotherapy college, I'm very confused as to how a person with an MD and no sales experience has the ability to write a book on something they don't seem to have the appropriate background for. While a lot of this is very common sense and makes sense and it should work, I've yet to meet any sales person who this actually works for so I really just don't know. ( )
  melsmarsh | Dec 27, 2018 |
The One Minute Sales Person follows the huge international success of The One Minute Manager and Putting the One Minute Manager to Work.
For anyone in selling who wants to become a great sales person, and for everyone who ever has to sell an idea or themselves, whatever their career or profession, it shows the quickest way to prosper personally and financially.
The phenomenal One Minute methods are based on the fundamental belief that when the customer is satisfied, everyone is satisfied. Discover the secrets of self-management, the integrity of selling ""on purpose"" and the wonderful paradox of helping others get what they want, and you will achieve the real and lasting sales success with the least amount of time, effort and stress.
  rajendran | Feb 10, 2008 |
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
The nameless protagonist of this slender motivational parable originally published in 1984 suffers from the existential predicament of the salesman: "the quiet fear of rejection" caused by the nagging suspicion that "the customer did not want to buy the product." From a succession of sales gurus he learns the One Minute secret-it's not selling, it's "helping people...to feel good about what they buy." Johnson, author of the business mega-seller Who Moved My Cheese?, offers practical suggestions ranging from sensible (treat customers like people, listen carefully to their needs, use after-sale calls to generate good will and referrals) to questionable (use one-minute positive-thinking rituals to visualize successful sales calls) to sort of depressing (paste sales goals beside your shaving mirror). The "eighty/twenty rule" is paramount: "Eighty percent of our results are produced by about twenty percent of what we do." Unfortunately, the book embodies this rule a little too well: about twenty percent is truly solid advice, while eighty percent feels more like filler ("The man took out his notebook to record what he sensed was going to be useful information") padded further with extra-large type.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author
Spencer Johnson, M.D. is the New York Times bestselling author of Who Moved My Cheese? whose books have helped millions enjoy healthier lives with more success and less stress.His other books include The Precious Present and five books in the One Minute series.He is also the author and series editor of the popular New Value Tales children's books.
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
  Fortyplus | Feb 12, 2007 |
Showing 3 of 3

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