Article Overview: ecent special Massachusetts senate race between Democrat Martha Coakley and relative unknown Republican Scott Brown, the eventual winner. Well guess what! If this hard fought campaign had taken place at the same time 49 other states were holding their senate elections, Martha Coakley would have crushed Scott Brown.
Free Download - Sales Courage and Resilience By Dave Kurlan
Mass. Senate Race Alternate Ending Compares with Major Account Selling
By know you must know about the recent special Massachusetts senate race between Democrat Martha Coakley
and relative unknown Republican Scott Brown, the eventual winner. Well
guess what! If this hard fought campaign had taken place at the same
time 49 other states were holding their senate elections, Martha Coakley
would have crushed Scott Brown. But, since it was only such election
being held, attention, and far more importantly, campaign
contributions, endorsements, support and actual campaigning came from
all over the nation. All of that extra attention and support got him
elected. It was a full-court press! Of course it helped that Martha
did not run her campaign very well.
Relate
this to a major accountsalesinitiative. What if you had the ability
to do what Scot Brown did, each and every time you had a major account
opportunity? What if those major accounts could be leveraged in the
same way as Scott Brown's senate seat? What if you could amass the
focus and attention to that opportunity? What would your full-court
press look like?
Elections and Major Account Sales
Opportunities are essentially the same thing. Convince more people to
vote for you than your competitor.
Hint: It wouldn't be about
price...so what would it be about and how would you run your campaign?
What normally untapped resources are at your disposal? Especially if
you are the underdog, the lesser known, the small company, or the niche
player, how would you win your prospect's vote? Comment here and let's
see how creative you can be!
Dave Kurlan is a best-selling author, top-rated speaker and thought leader on sales development. He is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the industry leader in sales assessments and sales force evaluations, and the CEO of David Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in sales force development.
Dave has been a top rated speaker at Inc. Magazine's Conference on Growing the Company, the Sales & Marketing Management Conference and the Gazelles Sales & Marketing Summit.
He has been featured on radio and TV, including World Business Review with General Norman Schwarzkopf, in Inc. Magazine, Selling Power Magazine, Sales & Marketing Management Magazine and Incentive Magazine.
He is the author of Mindless Selling and Baseline Selling – How to Become a Sales Superstar by Using What You Already Know about the Game of Baseball.
He created and wrote STAR, a proprietary recruiting process for hiring great salespeople, and he writes Understanding the Sales Force, a popular business Blog and is a contributing author to The Death of 20th Century Selling (Dan Seidman), Stepping Stones (Deepak Chopra and Brian Tracey) and 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life, Volume 2 (David Riklan).
Related Forum Posts The Game Inventor's Guidebook
- by Brian Tinsman, 2002
I checked this out of my local library today and its pretty interesting... didn't address what I wanted to know, which was how to actually design an online gaming system (indeed this doesn't cover online games at all), but for board games etc. it's pretty good.
Here's the TOC:
1. How they diid it:
Trivial Pursuit
Magic, the Gathering
Dungeons & Dragons
Pokemon Trading Card Game
Interview with an inventor
Interview with a publisher
2. How the industry works
1. What's in it for you
2. How new games happen
3. Anatomy of a publisher
4. Markets for games
3. Games and companies you should know
1. Mass market games you should know
2. Mass market companies you should know
3. Hobby games you should know
4. Hobby companies you should know
5. American specialty games and companies you should know
6. European specialty games and companies you should know
4. Self publishing
1. What am I getting into
2. Before you print
3. After you print
5. Selling a game step by step
1. How to invent a game
2. Game design
3. Game development
4. Targeting publishers
5. Before you submit
6. Eight submission strategies
7. Contacting publishers
8. Protecting your property
9. What to do if they don't say yes
10. What to do if they do say yes!
11. The game industry's dirty little secret
6. Resources and examples
Publishers and mnufacturers
Distributors
Brokers
Game conventions and trade shows
Industry publications
Sample query letter
Sample record of disclosure
Sample licensing agreement
Sample option agreement
Re: Will Politics Help Or Harm Your Business?
- Well...Obama has won...
Democrats have increased their presence in both House and Senate...
Welcome to four years of socialism in the USA...
Everyone should remember where they are - financially speaking - at this moment, and four years from now, ask yourself, are you worse or better off?
I know what[i:1032zmgm] I [/i:1032zmgm]expect to be.... hope I'm wrong...
Re: Interrealtionship between financial statements
- Hi there,
It is not necessary to post each transaction in all of the separate financial statements. In any given transaction, you will post an equal amount of debits and credits to the associated accounts. An example would be if you were to write a check for $500 to office depot for office supplies. The posted transaction would be:
DEBIT Office Supplies $500.00
CREDIT Bank Account $500.00
Once the transaction is posted, it will automatically show up on the appropriate financial statement report. In the above example, you would find the Bank Account transaction on the balance sheet and the office supplies transaction on the profit and loss statement. I hope this is clear!
Please let me know if you have any other bookkeeping questions. I would be happy to help,
Stephanie Horne
Re: Fashion
- Nana,
At you choice you may choose to research the fashion industry a bit more. There is obviously a Business side to it as well as a creative side to it. Find out all the types of roles that exist in the industry. Some that come to mind merchandiser, Window dresser, floor plan organizer (someone needs to determine the layout of a retail store to best sell the goods), fashion consultant (Yorkdale mall has fashion consultants that take you around and tell you what looks great on you - you also get a cut from the sales). This is what I've observed from the business side, you may know more.
All these roles I've written about will help you grow as a business person and make the contacts in the industry...possible stepping stones.
But further more you'll also notice that you need to develop some business acumen possibly tailored to the fashion industry.
When I was at Ryerson I knew I wanted to be an entrepreneur someday too. I knew I needed some basic business courses to get a foundation to build from.
I was in a Tech/Business Major (I'm sure Fashion has something similar - Fashion/Business Major) and then started to create my own minor.
Here are some of the courses I took: Marketing, Law, Entrepreneurial, Management, consulting.. and a few more .
Also, I'm sure that within the Fashion Major there are also courses you have to take where you can use your creative side and create designs. Typically within a Major there are focuses you can choose - ask the program coordinator.
Your next step is to do some research.
1. Visit Commercial retail outlets like H&M, Banana Republic, or jacob. Tell the Manager your doing some research for University and would like to know what types of Corporate roles exist aside from the roles on the retail floor (like sales associates). If she asks you to elaborate then you can use some of the roles I mentioned above.
2. With this information in hand you can visit the Ryerson Fashion department and inquire with the Program Coordinator on what focus within the Fashion Degree would help you the most. In my program there were 5 different focuses within the Tech/Business program.
Just a quick aside. A good friend of mine too has a dream of fashion. he want to create a niche fashion line tailored to skinny men (I can't mention the style). He's in Business school but not in the Fashion program... He's in International Business but all his Minor courses are tailored to running a successful business ... similar to the ones I mentioned above for myself.
I have no doubt in my mind he'll make it 'cos his vision is that strong.
laptop vs. Desktop
- I'm not a heavy gamer or graphics person so a Laptop is ideal for me for all the obvious reasons (portability, wireless, work on the go, etc etc)
Major downside is the battery power and the cost to replace it - half as much as the cost of the laptop on my current IBM.
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