Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The One Minute Sales Person

The One Minute Sales Person

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.00
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The greatest for Job hunters
Review: If you are looking for a job. Get the audio version pop it in and listen before you go. Visualize you are selling your abilities the same way you sell a product and go for it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Provides Focus
Review: Johnson (with Wilson) notes "I frequently look at my goals and then at my behavior to see if it matches my goals (p. 68). This is the practical advice offered throughout this well-written book. There is discussion of "relaxed excitement," whereby a person enjoys the process of success as it happens. The benefit of "seeing success" before it materializes is also included.
Sales is elevated beyond drudgery to altruism when one sells on "purpose." By this, the author means helping people get the good feelings they want about what they purchased (p. 25).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Primer on Closing Those Sales!
Review: Johnson and Wilson have written an excellent book how to close sales without putting stress on the buyer.

While some of the concepts may sound basic and insulting to the reader, remember that sticking to the basics is often the best way to close the sale.

Among the points the authors cover include:

1. Key points to remember before you make the sales call.
2. Common objections to a sale (trust is a big one!).
3. Acting in the buyer's interest.
4. Follow up on the sale.
5. 80 - 20 rule: 20% of what we do provides 80% of the results.
6. How to write out your sales goals.
7. Honesty and integrity is an important part of the selling process.
8. The One Minute Sales Person's Game Plan.

Since I work in sales, the book has been an excellent encouragement to continue to display honesty and integrity in the selling process.

Read, be encouraged to be a better salesperson, and close those sales!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Less Is More...Much More
Review: Of the hundreds of books now available which offer guidance on sales, this is one of the most valuable because -- carefully adhering to the "one minute principle" -- Johnson compresses an abundance of practical advice within just 109 pages. He creates a hypothetical situation in which "a very successful sales person" reflects back on his career and recalls specific people from whom he learned how to succeed. They include a wealthy and respected "salesman" who was now chairman of the board of a major corporation and several others, he explains, who also had become a One Minute Sales Person. The eager young man then seeks each out, schedules a meeting, and thereby sustains his learning process. By the end of the book, the New One Minute Sales Person receives a call from a "brand-new sales person" eager to obtain his advice. He agrees to meet with her, willing to share with her what so many others had shared with him. That in the proverbial nutshell is how Johnson organizes his material but such a brief description cannot possibly do full justice to the value of that material.

It would be a disservice to both Johnson and to those who read this review to say much more about this book. (I found myself in precisely the same situation when reviewing Johnson's Who Moved My Cheese?) I highly recommend it to anyone involved in significant relationships with others. Yes, yes, I know: That includes most of the adult population on the planet Earth. Permit me to explain. The core principles which Johnson advocates are relevant to any situation in which the objective is communication (e.g. explanation and/or persuasion) or providing service to others (helping them to solve problems, fill their needs, achieve their own objectives, etc.). Moreover, I totally agree with Johnson that everyone is a sales person, that selling to one's self and to others are interdependent, and that the most important "pay off" should be measured in spiritual rather than in material terms.

My strong suggestion is that anyone involved with sales or customer service in any organization (regardless of size or nature) should read this book. All of the workshops I devise and conduct for my own corporate clients are based on this assumption: That it is a great privilege to serve others. Those who disagree are strongly encouraged to seek opportunities elsewhere.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: LOVE IT!
Review: Perfect for those who'd like better sales but aren't comfortable selling yet.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Create a Vision of Your Past Successes
Review: Prior to pitching your sale, take one minute to envision yourself selling to the customer that you want to sell to. Feel what it feels like to successfully do this. Describe those feelings to yourself.

Now, take a minute to think back to a time when you have sold something to someone, in the past. Notice this as though you are watching a 60 second commercial.

Praise yourself for that past accomplishment. And praise yourself for being able to create a vision of your success.

Use this self-image of yourself to sell to your next prospect.

This is a great book that reminds of our abilities, when we harness them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Create a Vision of Your Past Successes
Review: Prior to pitching your sale, take one minute to envision yourself selling to the customer that you want to sell to. Feel what it feels like to successfully do this. Describe those feelings to yourself.

Now, take a minute to think back to a time when you have sold something to someone, in the past. Notice this as though you are watching a 60 second commercial.

Praise yourself for that past accomplishment. And praise yourself for being able to create a vision of your success.

Use this self-image of yourself to sell to your next prospect.

This is a great book that reminds of our abilities, when we harness them.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: It's almost worth 0.99
Review: Smacks of SNL's Al Franken's "I like me" skits.

However, the listen, understand the problem, present a pleasant way to solve a problem and think positive is basic stuff that is sometimes overlooked.

Wouldn't pay 7 dollars for this. The message above pretty much is a good summary. 99 pennies is valid to spend for the whole thing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It keeps things in perspective!
Review: The book is designed to give the concept of "sales" a simple perspective. Big time sales folks would have you believe that there is a sense of mystery associated with sales, or that it is somehow magic. This book brings the entire concept down to simple levels, and points out how much of everyday life for ALL OF US... is sales. Whether one sells products, organizations, or sells oneself, it's ALL sales. Much of the book is simple and logical, and it gives its lessons by way of telling a story of a person that ultimately meets with various sales "experts." Each expert offers a point to remember which culminates at the end of the book with a summary of all the lessons learned. It may prove to be truly basic for some, but the majority of us don't think with such clarity and experience, so the book will certainly be a treasure for most of us. The bottom line, it puts things in perspective... and it's a perspective that a lot of us lack.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ABSOLUTELY UNBELIEVABLE!
Review: The week after I first listened to the audio cassette my production more than tripled.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates