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The People Business: The Story of Selling as It Affects Our Lives
The People Business: The Story of Selling as It Affects Our Lives
The People Business: The Story of Selling as It Affects Our Lives
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The People Business: The Story of Selling as It Affects Our Lives

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To be successful in life, one needs to know how to sell.

David Namer, a master salesman and marketing expert, walks you through how to communicate with peoplewhether youre trying to share an idea, need, product, fact, service, and/or relationship.

He also examines how selling has developed over time, starting from when Eve convinced Adam that he should bite into an apple to modern-day salespeople selling computers. The communication tips youll learn will help you:

improve your personal life to enjoy a more successful career;
become a better communicator by being a better salesperson;
better prepare yourself before meeting people;
learn when to stop talking and start writing;
overcome common objections to buying; and
motivate yourself and others.

Every person who lives, walks, and/or breathes should and must understand basic communication guidelines, which is the art of selling, so they can do business with others.

Filled with illustrative stories, this book will give you a broad understanding of the psychological issues affecting salespeople, customers, and the sales processso you can excel in The People Business.

thepeoplebusiness-inc.com
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 20, 2018
ISBN9781489716330
The People Business: The Story of Selling as It Affects Our Lives
Author

David Namer

David Namer's background is in real estate analysis, underwriting, and originations, with special emphasis in the development and implementation of income property, portfolio lending programs for financial institutions to maximize fee income. As well, Namer has extensive experience in sales and marketing consulting with special emphasis in the development and implementation of corporate training programs. Namer is a consultant in sales, management, and finance. He has developed fee income programs as well as marketed financial enhancement services in conjunction with asset-based lending programs. Over the years, he has generated in excess of one hundred million dollars in fees, financing over one billion dollars in projects/assets. Beginning in 1975, first as a captive to several Savings and Loans Associations, morphing into a service corporation for a varied conglomerate of national and international lending institutions, and finally breaking away to offers its services to the general financial and business community, Namer has provided full service, asset-based and mortgage lending services running the gamut from originations, underwriting, secondary marketing, packaging, to credit enhancement services to both the lending and the borrowing community. As well, Namer has served in managerial and executive functions in several companies over the years. He has advanced these companies' interests in the national and international business communities, as well as broadened the base to include services rendered to business, industry, and government. Mr. Namer was responsible for the development of programs for the governments of Spain, and Tunisia, as well as provided broad based experience in marketing and sales to residential home builders and agribusiness concerns in the United States and South America. Namer was directly involved with a major life insurance company in establishing individual life and health products, establishing a nationwide agency and then staffing, recruiting, and training their sales personnel. Namer has written a book on salesmanship and sales training entitled The People Business and has collaborated on a case study book in marketing used at the University Graduate level. Namer frequently lectured at Tulane University, University of New Orleans, University of Southeastern Louisiana, and other universities and companies on the subject of sales, marketing, and business ethics. Additionally, Namer has held direct sales positions with national and international corporations, receiving numerous sales and achievement awards for performance. Namer was educated at Tulane University where he received a B.S. Degree. As well, he has received various degrees in Office Technology, Communications, and Business Accounting from several colleges. Mr. Namer is fluent in English, Spanish, and French, as well as conversant in other languages. Namer is a multi-engines and instrumented rated pilot, an avid skier, tennis player, certified scuba diver, and loves to race cars and motorcycles.

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    Book preview

    The People Business - David Namer

    Copyright © 2018 David Namer.

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

    LifeRich Publishing is a registered trademark of The Reader’s Digest Association, Inc.

    LifeRich Publishing

    1663 Liberty Drive

    Bloomington, IN 47403

    www.liferichpublishing.com

    1 (888) 238-8637

    Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

    Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

    Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.

    ISBN: 978-1-4897-1634-7 (sc)

    ISBN: 978-1-4897-1635-4 (hc)

    ISBN: 978-1-4897-1633-0 (e)

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2018938684

    LifeRich Publishing rev. date:  04/20/2018

    Contents

    Part I. Foreword

    Part II. Preface

    Part III. Introduction

    A.   What Is a Salesperson?

    B.   Why Is Selling Important?

    C.   The Sales Profession

    D.   Principles of Learning or Changing Behavior

    Part IV. The Art of Selling

    A.   The Making of a Salesperson

    1.   The Psychology of Selling

    2.   Characteristic and Attributes Necessary for Successful Selling

    C.   Training a Salesperson

    1.   Preapproach

    2.   Approach

    3.   Presentation

    Showmanship

    4.   Close and Departure

    Assume the Sale

    Objection Control

    Buttoning up the Order

    Leaving Gracefully

    Part V. Motivation

    A.   What Is Motivation?

    B.   How to Motivate Yourself and Others

    Dedicated to Alexandra Vivian Namer

    Part I

    Foreword

    The Case for The People Business

    Forged by the experiences of life, trained by the best minds that ever traveled this earth, inspired by the indomitable courage and persistence of will of my daughter, Alexandra, and desirous of improving human relationships, I wrote this book to help each person who reads it to better their lives by communicating more effectively.

    Simply stated, communicating is the imparting of something to someone else. Communication is the essence of sales. For sales is nothing short of communicating to people something they are lacking, which they need, and which can be identified: an idea, product, fact, or feeling. So to be successful at life, we need to learn to sell.

    Therefore, if we want to be successful at life, we need to learn how to sell, which means we need to learn how to communicate. If we do not communicate clearly, we risk being misunderstood, and that leads to strife, discord, and unhappiness.

    I dedicate my book to every man, woman, and child who wants to succeed in life. I know that anyone who reads this book will find something in it that will change their life for the good. I dedicate my book to my daughter, Alexandra Lexi Vivian Namer, who has taught me to never give up, to never be discouraged, and to never lose belief in myself.

    Every person who lives, walks, and breathes should understand that the basic principles upon which the fabric of their lives are woven derive from salesmanship; (i.e., communications). Regardless of who we are or what we do, regardless of what walk of life we are in, we are all involved in selling, whether ourselves, a product, our ideas, a service, or a relationship.

    A boy meets a girl and, through the process of selling, convinces her that he is the one for her; he sells her on how great he is, or how good he will be for her, listing all the reasons why she should go out with him. This is selling. He is selling himself. And this is just one example of how the principles of selling apply to our daily lives.

    Physicians who are involved in a specialty field depend on their selling ability to attract patients. They depend on general practitioners to refer business to them. Now, these general practitioners won’t send business to doctors who don’t share their beliefs or the desire to place the interests of their patients first. They won’t refer patients to a specialist who is going to leave a bad taste in their mouth.

    It is important for everyone, in every walk of life, to understand and master the principles that are at work in selling. Not only are we selling; we are also being sold. We have all felt and experienced these principles used against us. Sales is a dynamic process; it involves two-way communication. Whenever two people are involved in business, a conveyance of ideas, or an exchange of feelings, selling is taking place. Each person is either selling or being sold. Understanding the principles involved in this dynamic will make us more aware of the process and better prepare ourselves for when they are used against us. That will turn those experiences into more productive and rewarding times.

    The People Business puts the sales profession on a very high plane. It makes the case that salesmanship is practiced to some degree by everyone. Everyone is involved in the people business, all of us. From the first days of Adam and Eve, we have been trying to sell others on our own ideas, beliefs, viewpoints, or services. Eve was the first salesperson when she sold Adam on the idea of eating the apple. And what a salesperson she was. Here was Adam, all the comforts of paradise and no worries, and yet Eve convinced him that he would have a better life if he ate the apple.

    You may think that man could recognize on his own what is beneficial and what is necessary for his betterment or for his existence, but he really can’t. Man is resistant to change and will fight change all the way down the line. Man is ignorant of change; he does not always recognize the beneficial value of it. We must be sold; sold on an idea, sold on a product, sold on a service. This is why salespeople are so important in society today and have been since the beginning of time. And they will probably continue to be, no matter how far we progress.

    This is why the artist and the writer, who are both innovators, are attacked by society. It is not that the consumer is too dumb to know what is good for him. It is not that man is dumb in the sense of not being educated or not knowing what’s going on around them. It’s simply that we are ignorant about the new things going on, unaware of the changes being made.

    The fundamental aspects of persuasion are suggestion and logical reasoning, suggestion taking precedence and probably more important than logical reasoning. Human beings are not essentially reasoning creatures. In fact, most people scarcely reason at all. All of their actions are usually the result of imitation, habit, or suggestion. Most of their actions, and psychologists will bear this out, are only reactions. The average person accepts as true every idea or conclusion that enters his mind, unless a contradictory idea blocks this acceptance.

    Additionally, the average person will act according to an idea or action that enters his mind unless he is blocked by a physical obstacle or a contrary idea. This is the principle upon which the foundation of most of our modern- day advertising is based, the fact that statements that are repeated and not denied will tend to be accepted.

    The salesperson uses those principles during the presentation and close. He will often fill out the order, thereby suggesting an act of writing. When he hands the prospect a pen with the suggestion, Please okay this agreement where indicated, the prospect will generally go along with the idea.

    A Peace Corps worker in South America trying to teach Indians to drink only water that has been boiled would be just as interested to pick up this book, as would be a less scrupulous type who wishes to utilize persuasion to sell something that was not needed.

    When I sat down to write this book, I reflected on my many years in sales; I really like sales. It should be noted that I have sold everything from vacuum cleaners to encyclopedias to magazines to coffee, door-to-door; I’ve also provided financial services. I have sold commodities, including flour, rice, wheat, cement, lemon oil, and even olive oil to Italy. During this time, my mind was constantly thinking of ways to improve the occupation, to upgrade sales and make it more professional. I wanted to bring salesmanship out of the drummer image and spread that professionalism to all salespeople, regardless of what they are selling.

    That is why I entitled the book The People Business. The Peace Corps worker would be just as apt to pick it up as would someone selling vacuum cleaners. It is applicable in all phases of life. I feel that I’ve compiled something that can be used by everyone. My contention is that everyone is selling in their day-to-day interactions with other people. I am selling my ideas to you. Whether I get my ideas across to you or not determines the success of my presentation, regardless of whether there is a sale or not.

    Many people have the wrong impression of salespeople, either through naiveté or bad experiences, actual or perceived. The best example of this is the insurance industry. There was a time when people had a negative image of an insurance salesman: the sloppy, shirt-sleeved person driving through rural sections, banging on doors to get people to buy insurance through high pressure, threatening people, using out-and-out coercion, threatening loss of life, limb,

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