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Rating: Summary: Disappointing at Best Review: As an agent for one of the largest life insurance companies in the world, I am always looking for "THAT" book which will reveal a missed point that can give the edge over my very capable competition. When I saw this I thought this might be it. After reading this book, my search must continue. The book may hold some value for someone brand new to the field of sales, but for anyone who has sold for more than a few months, the teachings are old hat with no nuggets to be found. I have other Carnegie books and this one is not worthy to be on the shelf beside the others. I would recommend books by Tracy or maybe "SuperSelf" by Charles Givens. Now there is a book to chew on for days. My advice, save your money and buy something else.
Rating: Summary: Disappointing at Best Review: As an agent for one of the largest life insurance companies in the world, I am always looking for "THAT" book which will reveal a missed point that can give the edge over my very capable competition. When I saw this I thought this might be it. After reading this book, my search must continue. The book may hold some value for someone brand new to the field of sales, but for anyone who has sold for more than a few months, the teachings are old hat with no nuggets to be found. I have other Carnegie books and this one is not worthy to be on the shelf beside the others. I would recommend books by Tracy or maybe "SuperSelf" by Charles Givens. Now there is a book to chew on for days. My advice, save your money and buy something else.
Rating: Summary: Cliche Selling Approach For The 60s-80s Review: I read this book with great expectations, thinking that the Dale Carnegie School of Thought should have something useful and great to say about selling this time.As it turns out, this book is poorly written, and is so naive about selling in such a hypercompetitive business world these days. If Dale Carnegie is still alive, he can definitely write a better book on selling since his writing is more persuasive, and his suggestions on selling should be more practical and convincing. At least, Dale Carnegie is a good salesman himself, with a strong philosophical rather than just how-tos, jargons-filled perspective on selling. Try Non-manipulative Selling or SPIN Selling, you can get more dollars out of reading them instead.
Rating: Summary: From Naperville Review: There are a ton of different sales books out there, and more written each day. From strategic to rainmaker, each plows into a well-worked strategy to get the sale and be the star. Yet, one must know the basics well, and this book does that in a complete fashion. Great for beginers, but essential for us all to run through so our heads don't get to big. The biggest message in this book is process - setting one and keeping to it. By having a process, one can look for the next target, with the knowledge that the ones in the pipeline are easy to identify as to status and progress. The fact that ACT! chose to use the 11 steps was also interesting. Worth the amazon.com price!
Rating: Summary: Sales Advantage by Crome Review: This is a good introductory work for a salesperson or someone opening his/her own business. The author teaches how to develop credibility, interest, stories, instructional approaches, needs analysis and a host of other components aimed at cultivating customer sales. Later on, the work builds upon a negotiation scheme involving information gathering, resolution of concerns, conflict resolution, collaboration, customer needs and multiple solution sets in order to produce a successful sale through advanced negotiation techniques. The thrust of the work teaches how to gain and cultivate customer commitments. The book is a good introductory rendition for budding salespeople. It will provide reinforcement for experienced salespeople.
Rating: Summary: AWESOME!!! Review: You get a proven process, practical examples, and enjoyable reading.
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