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![]() Gordon (and others),
What the heck, i'm going to take a risk and put my true (really) thoughts out there. I confess. I think like the "average man in the street" you mention in the post above. Consider me a case study ;-) What do I want? Here goes: I want to live in this house on this lake. I want to work for myself. I want to read to my child every day. I want to take weekends off. I want to earn $250,000 yr. (that's an expensive house ;-) I want to work < 50 hours per week. ( roughly $200000 / (50 hours * 50 weeks) ) = $80/hr. I want to be able to leave my house on the lake and drive to the coast to see the ocean when I feel like it. I want to have decent health insurance for my family. I want to have time to go fishing on that beautiful lake. OK, now that I've established what I want and I look at the list I get a sinking feeling that says "it'll never happen". This is the thought process of the average "Man in the street" that you refer to. I realize its a defeatist attititude. If you read first page of the article in the 1st link above, you'll see that that is a VACATION home. It's not even the guy's primary residence!!!. Yet I think about that house every day... Is attitude the only difference between me and that guy? Heck, I've got a graduate degree in Computer Science, a great GPA, i've been told i'm smart, easy to talk to, a good teacher, blah blah blah. Yet in spite of all these positive attributes, I'm no closer to the dream above then a billion other average joes... My question (for you and the others): how do you overcome your own bad attitude? Have you suffered from this "disease" before? What did you do to shake it? Fire away, be honest, I can take it... BTW, I appreciate all you do for those on this board. Regards, Jack > Let me reframe the question I'm known for > (what do you want?) to: > HOW do you want to spend your time? > Then break that down a little, OK? > How do you want to spend your WORK time? Or > how do you want to earn your living? > Several years ago at a virtual place known > as Compton College I "taught" a > class on business. > And my final exam was the question, What do > you want?...a question that stumps more > people than you can imagine. > NOW I ask about how you want to spend your > time...and what do you want in exchange for > it? > Some say dollars for hours...so how many > dollars do you want for your hour? I've > always thought that the end result was > important, call it a goal or a target or a > destination. > It is the REASON, the motivation that keeps > you working. What I've found to be > repeatedly true these last 10 years on-line > is that we have a tendency to fulfill our > expectations. > Which is why I think having a specific > stated monetary goal and an hourly figure > for what your time is worth is important. > Last week I mentioned the guy who made > $4,000.00 in 10 days at eBay, with only 10 > hours of work. > Some thought that to be incredulous and that > the "man in the street" wouldn't > accept that, it would be beyond the average > person's belief. > I contend that is EXACTLY why they are > average, and are the proverbial man in the > street. > There is nothing spectacular about earning 4 > grand in 10 hours, for many people it is > routine. I don't find it a stretch of > believability at all. > What I do find remarkable is how many people > are willing to exchange their precious work > hours for such a lowly amount, and in far > too many cases they hate what they are > doing. > If you've read me for any length of time, I > have a very steady and certain mantra...that > you are UNIQUE and you have > "stuff" (not chattel, but stuff > inside of you) to offer to the world which > could be the very answer to your dreams. > But, alas, I've seen very little of this > "giving"...and what a shame that > is, cause when I do see someone giving what > he/she has got inside, I see either success > or success in the making. > Selling has as many different methods as > there are religions. And in every religion > you'll find splinter groups and affiliates > that seem to preach opposite sermons. > In selling, the truth is...what works. > Because the "pros" do it this way > or that doesn't mean you can. Sure there is > body of work that is based on human > psychology that will work en masse, but fail > miserably one to one. > I have ONE attitude about sellling and this > has remained consistent over the years, and > I've proved the effectiveness of it in door > to door selling, retail and in-home with a > wide variety of goods and services. > MY sales method is this: > I DON'T sell...I educate. > And I am aware of timing. Knock on a door > and face a young mother with a two year old > at her knee and a baby on her breast...and > unless you're giving away diapers or > vacations, it's going to be hard to > "sell" this person anything. > In some neighborhoods you'll encounter > similar types of people, for example, a > MATURE crowd might be in one block and young > couples in the next. > WHO is in those homes is more important than > what is in your briefcase. > As a "problem solving partner" and > a "life easing consultant" (those > are IN my head as I knock on doors)...I'm > prepared with several different > introductions depending on who answers the > door. > Being DYNAMIC gives you a chance to meet the > person's needs at your intersection...static > presentations are purely a numbers game. > But even with door-to-door sales, you need > to have a target...what is your time worth? > How much do you need to make? How many > knocks produce a presentation? How many > presentations produce a sale? > All in all, it is a tough row to hoe, but > some people thrive on it. And the fact they > do, and have a method or an ATTITUDE about > it, doesn't in any way shape or form mean > you can do it too. > The best sales method you can learn is...be > TRUE to yourself. > Stammer, stumble, be handicapped, or smooth > as silk doesn't really matter. What matters > is that you VALUE people and their time, and > GIVE value to people and in so doing you'll > get. > OF course there is method and technique and > psychology. But before and after all that, > there is YOU. > So what do YOU want to represent, to stand > for? That is your sales pitch. > It doesn't matter if you WANT to sell, or do > the Internet, or take dictation...what > matters is that you DO what you want to do > at a dollar amount you want to do it at. > So, HOW do you want to spend your time? > Answer that, then find a role model, > simulate and check. Why make your life so > damn difficult? > Gordon Alexander |
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