The Secret of Certain Success has four principal elements.
It comprises:
(1) Knowing how to sell
(2) The true idea
(3) Of one’s best capabilities
(4) In the right market or field of service.
Your success will be in direct
proportion to your thorough knowledge and continual
use of all four parts of the whole secret.
No matter how great your effort, an entire lack of
one or more of these principal elements of Certain
Success will cause partial or utter failure in your
life ambition. You will be like a man who tries
to open a safe with a four-combination lock, though
he knows only two or three of the numbers.
No one, however well fitted for success
elsewhere, can succeed in the wrong field,
or in rendering services for which he is not
qualified. Nor is complete success attainable
by a man unless he develops the best that is
in him. Even if he brings to the right market
his utmost ability, he may fail miserably by making
a false impression that he is unfitted for
the opportunity he wants. Or he may be overlooked
because he does not make the true impression
of his fitness.
Evidently, in order to gain a chance
to succeed, anyone must first sell to the fullest
advantage the idea that he is the man for the
opportunity already waiting or for the new opening
he makes for himself. Of course he cannot do
this surely unless he knows how.
Therefore sales knowledge is universally needed
to complement the three other principal elements of
the complete secret of certain success.
When we try to explain the failure
of any man who seems worthy to have succeeded, we
nearly always say, in substance, one of three things
about his case:
“He is a square peg in a round
hole;” by which we usually mean he is a right
man in the wrong place.
Or, “He is capable of filling
a better position;” a more polite way of saying
that a man has outgrown his present job but has not
developed ability to get a bigger one.
Oftenest, probably, we declare, “He isn’t
appreciated.”
Very rarely is a worthy man’s
failure in life ascribed to the commonest cause his
personal inefficiency in selling to the world comprehension
of his especial qualifications for success.
If a man is a square peg in a round
hole, he should realize that his particular qualities
must be fitted into the right field for them before
he can succeed. A natural “organizer”
cannot achieve his ambitions if he works alone at
a routine task.
No sensible man would aspire to fill
a better position than he holds, unless he had developed
a capacity beyond the limitations of his present work.
The shipping clerk who craves the higher salary of
a correspondent knows he cannot hope for the desired
promotion if he has not learned to write good business
letters.
However deserving of advancement a
man may be, he realizes he has but a slim chance to
succeed if his worth is unrecognized. So he wants
appreciation from his chief. He knows that unless
his worth is perceived and truly valued, some one
else, who may be less qualified, is apt to be selected
for the “Manager’s” job he desires.
Such “injustices” have poisoned countless
disappointed hopes with bitterest resentment.
The deserving man who fails because
he is a misfit in his particular position, the worthy
man who is limited to a small career because the work
he does lacks scope for the use of all his ability;
the third good man who has been kept down for the
reason that his chief is blind to his qualifications
for promotion all three of these failures
understand pretty clearly the reasons for their non-success.
It is very different in the case of
the capable man who fails because he has been inefficient
in selling true impressions of his qualifications
for success. A private secretary, for illustration,
might be thoroughly competent for managerial duties;
but by his self-effacement in his present job he might
make the false impression that he was wanting in executive
capacity. He would be given a chance as manager
if he were effective in creating a true impression
of his administrative ability. Such a capable
man, if he has little or no scientific knowledge of
the selling process is apt also to lack comprehension
of the value to him of knowing how to sell
ideas. He does not happen to call himself
a salesman. Therefore he has never studied with
personal interest the fine art of selling. He
does not realize that ignorance of salesmanship,
and consequent non-use of the selling process, almost
always are responsible for the merely partial success
or the downright failure in life of the man who deserves
to win, but who loses out.
One may feel able to “deliver
the goods,” were he given the chance. He
may know where his best capability is greatly needed
and would be highly appreciated if recognized.
Yet the door of opportunity may not open to his deserving
hand, however hard he tries to win his way in.
His failure seems to him altogether unfair, the rankest
injustice from Fortune.
If a man knows he is completely fitted
to fill a higher position, he feels considerable self-confidence
when he first applies for it. But his real ability
may not be recognized by his chief. The ambitious
man may be denied the coveted chance to take the step
upward to the bigger opportunities for which he rightly
believes himself qualified. If his deserts and
his utmost efforts do not win the promotion he desires,
he grows discouraged. He loses the taste of zest
for his work. His earlier optimism oozes away.
After awhile his ambition slumps. Then he resigns
himself sullenly to the conviction that he is a failure
but is not to blame.
Leaving out of consideration most
exceptional, unpreventable bad luck, the worthy man
who fails in life is to blame. He is not,
as he thinks, a victim of circumstances or ill-fate.
His failure is due to his ignorance of the first of
the four principal factors of the secret of certain
success. Potentially qualified to succeed, he
does not have the absolutely necessary dynamic
element. He lacks an essential characteristic
of the self-made successful man, a characteristic which
any one of intelligence can learn how to develop a
high degree of capability in gaining his own opportunities
to succeed.
He does not know how to sell true
ideas about himself; though he may realize the
importance of making the best impression possible.
So, however, he tries, he cannot get his deserved
chances to succeed. He could secure them easily
if he comprehended the selling process of the master
salesman, and used it with skill. This process
of masterly selling is the key to certain success
for the fully qualified man in any vocation.
A capable applicant will invariably
be given a chance to succeed, if he takes the best
that is in him to a man who has need of such services
as he could render, and then sells the true idea
of his ability. He has mastered all four
principal elements of the complete secret of certain
success. Consequently he is able to create
and to control his opportunities to succeed.
He makes and governs his own good luck.
Everywhere the most desirable positions
in the business world are in need of men who can fill
them. Only the poorer jobs are crowded. But
when Opportunity has to seek the man, the right
one is often overlooked. The golden chance is
gained by another less qualified and less
worthy, perhaps; but a better salesman of himself.
The fully competent man, however, can assure
his success by becoming proficient in selling true
ideas of his best capability in the right market or
field of service. The master salesman of himself
makes his own chances to succeed, and therefore runs
no risk of being overlooked by Opportunity.
Master salesmen of ideas about “goods”
use particular selling processes to get their
ideas across surely to the minds of prospective
buyers. The professional salesman, therefore,
has plainly charted the way to certain success in
any vocation, for the man who has developed the best
that is in him. If you are a candidate for a
position, do not let a prospective employer buy
your services at his valuation, for he is certain
to under-estimate you. Sell him true ideas
of your merits. Set a fair price on your worth,
and get across to his mind the true idea that
you would be worth that much to him. Such
skillful salesmanship used by an applicant for a position
can be depended on to make the best possible impression
of his desirability; just as the practiced art of
the professional salesman enables him to present the
qualities and values of his goods in the most favorable
light. The masterly selling process is
not very difficult to learn. Proficiency in its
use can be gained gradually by any one who practices
consciously every day the actual sale of ideas in the
artistic way.
As was stated in the Introduction
to this book, it has been proved conclusively in business
that particular principles and methods of selling
are certain to produce the highest average of closed
orders. In other words, success for the professional
salesman is assured if he develops certain
qualifications, and if he does certain things; all
within the capacity of any normal, intelligent man.
Scientific sales executives know positively, as the
result of comparative tests, that the salesman who
develops these personal qualifications, and who does
these things, should get his quota of business and
hold it. Hence, as has been said, specific training
is given in the sales schools of the most successful
businesses, along the lines of best selling practice.
When the individual salesman who has
been so trained commences work in his territory, he
learns in his experiences with buyers that the principles
and methods he has been taught are actually most
effective. Assuming that he has developed
his best capabilities pretty fully, and that
he has become fairly skillful in using what
he knows about how to sell his line, he works with
continually growing confidence that he will succeed.
Why should he doubt his complete selling power?
He knows there is a field for his goods in
this territory. He knows clearly and vividly
what ideas he wants to get across to the minds
of prospective buyers. He knows most
important of all just how to make
convincing and attractive impressions of the desirability
and true value of what he presents for purchase.
He comprehends the most effective ways to show
prospects both their need for his goods and
that he has come, with a real purpose of service,
to satisfy that need.
You, the non-professional salesman
of yourself, will sell your “goods of
sale” with similar complete confidence in your
power to gain and to control your opportunities for
success if you, too, use the right selling
process.
This set of books explains and demonstrates
in detail the principles and methods of the successful
salesman of ideas. The Introduction and twelve
Chapters of the present series apply the selling process
especially to the sale of ideas about one’s
self, with particular relation to self-advancement
in the world. “The Selling Process,”
companion book to “Certain Success,” shows
the master professional salesman at work, getting
orders with assurance.
The fact that you have proceeded thus
far in reading “Certain Success” proves
you have an earnest purpose to make the most of your
present opportunity to learn how to succeed
with certainty. We will assume that you have
developed your individual ability pretty fully, and
that you know where there is a field for such services
as you are sure you could render if afforded the chance.
Surely, then, your ambition in life, whatever it may
be, is a sufficient incentive to the most thorough
study of the principles and methods of successful salesmanship.
Do not merely read this set of books.
MASTER “Certain Success” and “The
Selling Process” to make yourself the master
of your own destiny.
Again and again, lest at any time
while you study you might fall below 100% in absolute
assurance, you will read in these chapters the
assertion that your success can be made certain.
This statement is not an exaggeration. It is
necessary that you accept it literally throughout
your reading of this set of books. Do not take
it “with a grain of salt.” The taste
of the declaration that the selling process makes
success sure will become familiar after these many
repetitions. Realize when you come upon the repeated
idea as you proceed with your study that your continued
reading should frequently be reenforced by a steadily
growing conviction that you are mastering the
sure way to succeed. You believe in yourself
more than you did when you began to read this book.
This increasing faith should develop to complete confidence
when you have dug into the text of both “Certain
Success” and “The Selling Process,”
and have dug out every idea in the twenty-four
chapters.
At the outset of your present study
comprehend that salesmanship is not a science.
Rather, it is an art. Like every other
art, however, it has a related science.
Selling is a process. Knowledge about the
principles and methods that make the process most
effective is the related science. But
such knowledge supplies only the best foundation for
building success by the actual practice of most
effective salesmanship. The master salesman practices
the scientific principles and methods he has learned
until the skillful use of his knowledge in
every-day selling becomes second nature to him.
Thus, and thus only, is his art perfected.
You will gain knowledge from
these books about how to sell with assurance
the true idea of your best capabilities about
how to sell any “goods of sale”
unfailingly. But you can develop the skill
necessary to the actual achievement of certain
success only if you continually use what you
learn about the selling process. You must perfect
your selling art by the intelligent employment
of every word and tone and act
of your life to attract other men to you, and to impress
on them convincingly true ideas of your particular
ability.
The master professional salesman is
“always on the job” with his three means
of self-expression, to get across to prospects true
ideas of the desirability and value of his goods.
He is a salesman every minute, and in everything
he does or says. You can become as efficient as
he, in selling ideas about your “goods
of sale,” if your proficiency becomes as easy
and natural as his. Such ease is the sure
result of sufficient right practice.
You have countless opportunities daily
to make use of the selling process. In each expression
of yourself in your every word, tone, and
act you convey some idea of your
particular character and ability. You should
know how to make true, attractive impressions
of your best self; and how to avoid making
untrue and unfavorable impressions by
what you do and say. Then, when you have learned
the most effective way to sell ideas about
yourself that you want other people to have, it is
necessary that you use the selling process
consciously all the time until you grow into the habit
of using it unconsciously, as your second nature.
Once you are accustomed to acting the salesman
continually, it will be no more difficult for you
to be “always on the job” selling right
ideas of your qualifications for success, than it
is for the professional user of the selling
process to be a salesman “every minute.”
As already has been emphasized, “the
goods of sale” in your case are your best
capabilities. You need first of all to know
your true self, before you can sell true ideas about
your qualifications for success. Your true
self is your best self. You are untrue
to yourself, you balk your own ambition to succeed,
unless you develop to the utmost of your capacity
your particular salable qualities.
You do not need qualities you
now wholly lack. You should not attempt to “salt”
the gold mine in yourself with the characteristics
of other men who have succeeded by the development
and use of capabilities that were natural to them,
but that would be unnatural to you. It
is worse than futile it is foolish for
you to imitate anybody else. Just be your
best self. Make the most of what you have
that is salable. You require no more to assure
your success.
Every individual has distinct characteristics,
and is capable of doing particular things, of which
he may be genuinely proud if he fully develops and
uses his personal qualifications. When all the truth
about his best possible self is skillfully made known
to others, chances for success are certain to
be opened to the ambitious man. If he lacks the
salesmanship key, the doors of opportunity may always
remain closed, however well he deserves to be welcomed.
You possess “goods of
sale” that have real quality, that are
durable, that will render service and
afford pleasurable satisfaction to others. Your
goods can be sold as surely as quality phonographs,
durable automobile tires, serviceable clothes, or pleasing
books.
Maybe you can “deliver the goods”
with smiles, or hearty tones, or ready acts of kindness.
Any one can easily be friendly. But have you developed
all your ability to smile genuinely? Have
you cultivated the hearty tone of real kindness so
that now it is unnatural for you ever to speak
in any other way? Do you perform friendly acts
of consideration for others on every occasion,
as second nature?
If your honest answers to such questions
must be negative, you are not a good salesman of your
best self all the time.
Your most salable quality may be dependability,
rather than quick thinking. If this is the case,
concentrate your salesmanship on making impressions
of the true idea of your reliability. Your
greatest success will be achieved in some field of
service where dependableness is a primary essential.
You may be naturally unfitted to make a star
reporter, but peculiarly qualified to develop
into the cashier of a bank.
Should you happen to be unattractive
in features, your job is to transform your homeliness
into a likable quality not to try
to make yourself appear handsome. If you are
wholly inexperienced, that need not be a detriment
to your success in the field you want to enter.
When you have mastered the selling process, your very
greenness can be presented before the mind of a prospective
employer as the best of reasons for engaging you.
You will be able to make yourself appear desirable
because you are green in that field, and therefore
have no wrong ideas to “unlearn.”
You can greatly improve your chances
to get the job for which you are best adapted, if
you use the reciprocal selling process employed by
the professional salesman when he sells his services
to a house. He meets the head of the concern
as his man-equal, and does not just offer himself
“for hire.” Such a consciousness of
your man-equality when you are face to face with a
prospective employer can result only from certain,
analytical knowledge of your best self, complemented
by knowing how to sell the true idea of your
particular desirability and worth.
Very likely you think you are seriously
handicapped in many ways. Having made
no detailed analysis of yourself from a salesman’s
view-point, you do not appreciate fully the number
and the market value of the advantages you
might have. Probably some of your best, most
salable qualities are latent or but partly developed.
List your particular “goods
of sale.” Put down on a chart, not only
the qualities you have now, but all the additional
ones you feel capable of developing. Then
you will realize vividly that you possess many abilities,
some undeveloped yet, which are always needed in the
world. You know that such qualities should
be readily salable, to the mutual benefit of yourself
and of buyers. You are learning the selling process
in order to make certain that you can sell the
best that is in you, as other men are selling
themselves successfully.
Complete your chart by listing your
various defects. Then study out ways to
use even your particular faults differently
than you have been handling them; so that they will
help you, instead of being hindrances to your success.
Think of some people you know, and of how they have
turned their physical “liabilities” into
“assets” of popularity.
The very first sales knowledge you
need is of exactly what you have to sell.
You cannot see all of yourself, your good and
bad points yourself as you are,
and as you might be unless you make
a detailed chart of your “goods of sale.”
One of the most important immediate effects of such
a self-analysis will be increased self-respect.
Your handicaps will shrink, and the peculiar advantages
you have will grow before your eyes. You should
feel new confidence in your own ability.
With this confidence will come a feeling
that you are not the inferior of another man who has
achieved a larger measure of success than you have
gained. When you start the sale of true ideas
of your best self to an employer-buyer of such services
as you are capable of rendering, you will have an
innate consciousness of your man-equality with him.
You should realize that this sale of yourself, like
all other true sales, is to be a transaction of reciprocal
benefits, and should be conducted on the basis of
mutual respect.
It is your right to take pains that
the prospective buyer of your services shall sell
himself to you as the boss you want to work with.
Expect him to sell himself to you as a desirable employer
just as thoroughly and satisfyingly as you intend
to sell yourself to him as a worthy applicant for
an opportunity in his business. When you have
definite, sure knowledge of your capability and service
value, you certainly should not be willing to take
“any old job.”
There is no better way to make the
impression of your desirability as an employee
than to demonstrate that you are choosing your
employment intelligently. In explaining your
choice, give specific reasons for your selection of
this particular opening. Show that you comprehend
what is to be done. Give some indication
of your ability to do it efficiently and satisfactorily.
Suggest the worth of your services when you
shall have proved your fitness.
The ordinary man who applies for a
job in the ordinary way is accepted or turned down
wholly at the discretion of the employer. If you
use the selling process skillfully, you will suggest
that you are out of the ordinary class.
Of course, you should demonstrate in your salesmanship
that you are not over-rating your ability. The
other man must be made to feel you have sound reasons
for your bearing of equality and self-confidence when
you seek to make sure that in his business you will
have your best chance to succeed. By showing him
that you are taking intelligent precautions against
making a mistake in your employment, you indicate
conclusively that you are not merely a “floater,”
but that you have a purpose “to stick and make
good.”
In the same measure that you require
proof of a desirable personality in an employer, you
should make sure that the work is exactly what you
expect. See that your prospective “new boss”
sells you the job at the same time you are selling
him your services. If he perceives in you the
one man who best fits his needs, he will put forth
every effort to buy your services. Every employer
will respect the man who states, with salesmanship,
a sound reason for selecting and seeking connection
with a business house; since such a man gives promise
of making the sort of dependable, loyal worker that
every business values and appreciates.
The true salesman sells to satisfy
a real need of the buyer. Therefore, when
you have charted your salable qualities, select the
field of service in which such capability as you possess
is needed. That, you may be sure, is your
right market the field where you are certain
to succeed. Enter it, and no other field.
Apply there for a place of opportunity to serve; with
the absolute confidence of a good salesman come to
satisfy a want, and conscious of his individual fitness
“to deliver the goods.”
You may not get just what you desire
at the first attempt. The best professional salesman
often has to make repeated efforts to close
orders. But in the end, if you “have the
goods,” that are needed where you bring them,
and you know how to sell true ideas of your best
self (as you will know after mastering
the selling process) you will be sure of getting sufficient
opportunities to succeed. You will be as certain
about getting enough chances as the first-class professional
salesman is certain of attaining his full quota of
business despite some turn-downs. Success is a
matter of making a good batting average.
Remember as you read that you are
studying a completed process. An unfinished
sales effort is not a sale at all. You
will not be a certainly successful salesman
until you perfect your knowledge and skill in all
the steps of salesmanship. You can learn only
a single part of sales efficiency at a time.
The relative significance of each point, its full
importance in the entire selling process, will not
be comprehended until you have read at least once
all there is in this set of books. When you re-study
the successive chapters, the details you may at first
understand but vaguely in a disconnected way will be
clear. You will comprehend them as various elements
of salesmanship which must be fitted together to complete
the process of selling.
Thus far in the present chapter we
have been considering principally the “goods
of sale.” We have been looking at our subject
from the material aspect. Now let us turn
our attention to the mental view of sales.
In the effective selling process the
skilled salesman is able to be the controlling
party. He makes the other man think as he thinks.
As has been stated repeatedly, he sells ideas,
not goods. So the real nature of any sale
is mental, not material. You must “deliver
the goods” to the mind of the man to
whom you wish to sell your best capabilities.
You should use the same process as the professional
salesman, who works to control the thoughts
of his prospect regarding the line of goods presented.
Hence when you plan to make sure of getting a desired
position, it is necessary that you know exactly
how to put true ideas about yourself into the
head of the person whom you have chosen as your prospective
employer. Further, you need to know precisely
what psychological effects you can secure with
certainty by using skillful salesmanship.
Ideas of your best capability may
be sold through three mediums advertising,
correspondence, and personal selling. Take advantage
of all three, wherever and whenever possible, to gain
your chance for success. Use these mediums with
real salesmanship.
If you advertise for a position, think
out in detail the impression of your true best self
that you wish to make on the minds of readers.
Put your personality into the advertising medium
in such carefully selected language as will reach
the needs of particular employers, and will
not appear to be just a broadside of words shot into
the air without aim. Indicate clearly that you
are not seeking “any old job so long as the
salary is good.” Analyze and know just
what you suggest about yourself in print.
Many a successful business man has sold himself through
the door of his initial big opportunity by real salesmanship
in his advertisement of his capabilities.
Each letter you write should be regarded
as “a sales letter.” It makes an
impression, true or false, of you. Take
the greatest pains to have that impression what you
want it to be. Never be slovenly or careless in
writing to anyone on any subject. Put genuine
salesmanship into all your letters consciously;
instead of conveying ideas unwittingly, without realizing
what the reader is likely to think of you and the
things you write. You can scatter impressions
of your best self broadcast over the earth by using
your ordinary correspondence as a medium of salesmanship.
So you can open both nearby and far distant opportunities
for the future; even while you still are training yourself
to make the most of these chances you hope to gain.
Good sales letters are so rare that
the ability to write them has erroneously been called
“a gift.” It is not. Any one
of educated intelligence can write his ideas; provided
he has clear, definite thought-images in his own mind.
But cloudy thinking reflects only a blur on paper.
A letter that plainly conveys true
ideas is a sales letter; for it gets across to the
mind of the recipient a clear, definite mental impression
of the writer’s real personality and thoughts.
In all your correspondence, throughout
the period of preparation for your chosen life career,
send out true ideas of your best capability. If
you do, you doubtless will find the door of your desired
opportunity open by the time you are fully prepared
to knock. Successful business is always ready
in advance to welcome “comers;” whenever
and wherever they are sighted. Therefore project
your personality far and wide through your letters.
Employ the medium of correspondence, with salesmanship
knowledge and skill, even when you write the most ordinary
messages to your acquaintances or to strangers.
That is, think out certain ways to sell particular
ideas about yourself; then incorporate these bits
of salesmanship in your letters.
A young man in his senior year at
college selected a large corporation as his prospective
employer. He did not know any of the executives
of the company, but he worked out a plan to get acquainted
through letters. He was especially desirous of
entering the field of foreign trade, and had made
a fairly comprehensive study of the export business.
He wrote to the president of the corporation, gave
a brief outline of articles and books he had read;
then complimented the great company by declaring that
he realized the knowledge he had acquired was theoretical
and abstract, and that he wished to gain practical,
concrete ideas by studying the methods of the corporation.
He enclosed with his letter ten cents in postage stamps,
and requested that he be sent any forms, instruction
sheets, sales bulletins, etc., the president was
willing to let him have for study.
His letter was referred to the vice-president
in charge of sales, who in turn passed it on to a
department manager with instructions to supply the
matter requested. In the course of a week the
college student received a bulky package. Meanwhile
a letter had been sent from the department head which
stated that the vice-president in charge of sales
had referred to him the request for forms, instruction
sheets, etc., and that they would be forwarded
under separate cover.
The student took advantage of the
three opportunities opened to conduct correspondence
with the executives of the corporation. He first
wrote courteous, carefully worded “thank-you”
letters to the president, vice-president, and department
head. These were all in his own hand, so that
his good penmanship might make an individual impression.
After these letters were dispatched the student mastered
the material that had been sent to him. Then
he wrote three supplemental letters of appreciation,
and made concise comments on some of the methods of
the corporation, with comparisons from his previous
reading of books and articles on foreign trade.
He stated that he intended to make further investigation
along these particular lines and that if he learned
anything he thought might be interesting to the company
he would write what he found out. In the course
of a month he sent a letter which detailed his investigations.
This he addressed to the department head only.
But he also penned brief letters to the president and
vice-president, in which he informed them that he had
written in detail to the department head.
The correspondence continued throughout
the remainder of the student’s senior year at
college. The letters from the business men soon
evidenced more than formal courtesy. They grew
personal and indicated real interest. A month
before his graduation the student was invited to call
at the company’s office after Commencement.
He went, made an excellent impression in interviews
with the vice-president in charge of sales and the
department head, and though the ink on his sheepskin
was not yet dry, he gained his object. He was
engaged by the corporation and began training as a
prospective representative of the company in foreign
territory.
Thus through the correspondence medium
of salesmanship a young man who had no advantage of
personal influence or acquaintance secured exactly
the chance he wanted. Similar opportunities are
open to any one.
Every moment of your life when
you are in the presence of other people, you have
chances to sell true ideas about the best that is in
you. You will not need to seek such opportunities
for personal salesmanship. Chances come to you
continually to make good impressions on the minds of
the men and women you meet from day to day.
Be a skillful salesman of true ideas
about yourself always, even in the most casual relations
you have with other people. Sell the best possible
impressions of yourself to passers-by on the street,
to your fellow riders in cars, to clerks and customers
of stores you visit, to your home and business associates.
Put selling skill, as second nature, into each word,
tone, and action of your social and business life.
Realize that in whatever you do or
say, consciously or unconsciously, you are
selling ideas about your capability or your incapacity.
You are making more or less definite impressions you
are affecting your opportunities to succeed, and are
forming good or bad habits all the time.
Control the effects of your words, tones, and acts
by saying and doing, consciously and intelligently,
only what will aid in selling true ideas of your best
capabilities..
Of course you already know that each
word and tone and act of your life makes some
impression on the people who hear or see you.
But probably you have not realized fully that particular
ways of saying and doing things have distinct
and different effects, each governed by an exact
law of psychology. You perhaps do not know now
just what impression is made by a certain word,
or tone, or act. To be a master salesman of yourself
you need to study the science of mind sufficiently
to acquire working knowledge of common mental
actions and reactions. Familiarity with at least
the general principles of psychology is of the utmost
importance in using the selling process effectively.
Do not shy from study of the science
of mind because it is an “ology” and therefore
may seem hard. You are a psychologist already.
You know that certain things you do and say make agreeable
or unfavorable impressions on other people. In
a general way you know why. It is
necessary only that you analyze specifically
what you realize now rather indefinitely. If
you do not care to study a book on psychology,
just use your own mind as your psychological laboratory
for continual self-analysis.
Answer for yourself such questions
as, “Exactly what effect will this particular
word, or tone, or act have and just why?”
You can work out pretty well the practical knowledge
of psychology you must have in order to sell ideas
about your capabilities most effectively. You
simply need to apply purposeful intelligence
in everything you do and say; instead of making impressions
without comprehending that by each word and tone and
act of daily living you are influencing, favorably
or adversely, your chances to succeed.
Think of yourself as one of the three
factors of the selling process. The goods
of sale are your best capabilities, of course.
The second factor is the prospective buyer,
the man who has need of such qualities or services
as you could supply. The agent of sale,
or third factor, is yourself. If you will keep
in mind always the conception of yourself as the
uniting link between your “goods of sale”
and the prospective buyer, you can be a salesman of
yourself every minute. At any moment except when
you are alone you may encounter and influence a possible
buyer of your best capabilities. You are continually
within sight and hearing of people whose impressions
of you might affect your chances to succeed in life.
Therefore always be alert to grasp every sales opportunity
within your reach.
It will be essential, also, that you
have knowledge of the successive steps of the
selling process, as well as knowledge of your goods
of sale and knowledge of practical mind science.
Otherwise you might omit inadvertently to use some
round of the ladder to certain success, and tumble
to failure. These steps are so important to understand
that the last nine chapters of the companion book
are devoted to them exclusively. It will suffice
here just to state what they are.
1. Preparation For Selling;
2. Prospecting;
3. The Plan Of Approach;
4. Securing An Audience;
5. Sizing Up The Buyer;
6. Gaining Attention;
7. Awakening Interest;
8. The Creation Of Desire;
9. Handling Objections;
10. The Process Of Decision;
11. Obtaining Signature or Assent;
12. The Get-Away That Leads To Future Orders.
Another element of necessary knowledge
about the selling process is the classification of
sales according to the five degrees of effort required
to close them.
1. A sale completed by response
to the mere demand of the buyer.
Example While a
street car strike is on you are driving, an automobile
down town. A man in a hurry to catch a train stops
you and says, “I’ll give you two dollars
to take me to the station.” You transport
him in response to his call for your services.
2. A sale completed by the buyer’s
acceptance on presentation only.
Example A man is
walking along a country road in the summer time.
He sees a sign in the door-yard of a farmhouse; BERRY
PICKERS WANTED. He presents himself as a candidate
and the farmer at once engages his services.
3. A sale completed immediately
after a desire of the buyer has been created by a
definite, intentional effort of the salesman.
Example A man out
of work wants a job that will employ his physical
strength. He encounters three men who are struggling
to load a very heavy box onto a truck. He takes
off his coat and proves his strength by the ease with
which the box is lifted when he helps. He inquires
which of the three men is the truck boss; and asks
for a job. He is hired because he has made the
boss want the aid of his strength in handling heavy
loads.
4. A sale completed only after persuasion of
the buyer.
Example Assume that
the truck boss in the next preceding illustration
refuses at first to hire the applicant who has demonstrated
his strength. It is necessary then for the man
out of a job to talk his prospective boss into the
idea that he needs a fourth man in his gang.
5. A sale completed only after
a decision by the buyer as to the comparative benefits
of purchasing or of not buying.
Example You and
another candidate apply for the same position in an
office. You appear to be about equal in capability.
The employer “weighs you in the balance”
against the other applicant. This is a sale requiring
the fifth degree of effort. Manifestly you will
need to use a very high quality of skill to get into
the mind of the prospective buyer of services the
idea that you are likely to be of more value as an
employee than your competitor for the place. Then
you must skillfully prompt him to accept your application.
When you appreciate exactly how sales
differ in the degrees of effort necessary to close
them, you will realize the wisdom of preparing to
sell your particular qualities and services with
full comprehension of all the difficulties commonly
met by candidates for desirable positions.
Countless men have died failures because
they used throughout their lives only the first or
second degrees of effort. Consequently all their
attempts to get good jobs were futile. The non-success
of millions of other worthy men has been due to their
use of no more than the third or fourth degrees of
selling effort.
Sales of the fifth degree of difficulty
sometimes demand knowledge and skillful use of the
entire selling process. They are the sales most
worth making. The applicant for a new position
or for a promotion is certain to succeed in
his purpose if he knows how to complete a sale of
the true idea of his best capabilities. In order
to do this he must control the weighing process
of the buyer; and be skillful in prompting acceptance
of his “goods of sale.”
When you master and reduce
to every-day practice the fundamental principles
you can learn from this set of books, you will be assured
of making a successful average in handling sales of
the fifth degree of effort.
They are sales of the kind the professional
salesman makes with complete confidence every day.
His methods, applied to the marketing of your
goods of sale, will work such wonders for you that
you soon should build up self-confidence equal to
the matter-of-fact assurance of the master salesman
of clothing, insurance, and other materials
of sale. He knows when he begins a season
or starts on a trip that he will make a good batting
average.
Comprehend, further, exactly what
results are desired by the skilled salesman
whose work is based on scientific principles.
The immediate results desired are:
First, confidence;
Second, acceptance of the ideas brought by
the salesman.
One who is unfamiliar with the scientific
principles underlying the skillful practice of the
right selling process is unlikely to realize that
the first sales effort should be concentrated
on winning the prospective buyer’s confidence
in the salesman and in the goods of sale.
Failures in selling are often due to the fault of the
salesman who works primarily for but the second
of the immediate results to be desired; the acceptance
of his proposition the acceptance of his
personal capabilities and services, for instance.
He neglects, as a preliminary to securing acceptance,
to gain the confidence of the other man.
When you undertake to sell your particular good qualities
and your services to a prospective employer, do not
make the mistake in salesmanship of omitting the process
of first winning his belief in you.
Besides the two immediate results
desired by the skillful salesman, there is a permanent
result to be worked for an enduring consequence
desired from the present gains made. That permanent
result wanted is the opening of other opportunities
for future sales.
Complete success in life is
not assured when the original sale of one’s
best capabilities is closed successfully. Gaining
the initial desired chance does not make it
certain that one will succeed in his entire career.
The first sale is faulty if it does not include a lead
to future opportunities “to deliver the goods.”
The right selling process is continuous.
Where one sale ends, another should be already started.
A great many failures of capable men can be ascribed
to short-sighted concentration on immediate chances.
One who would make certain of the success of his
whole life must ever look ahead to the next possible
opportunity for the sale of the true idea of his best
capabilities, meanwhile making the most of his present
chance
In order to get the right viewpoint
for further study of the selling process, you, the
salesman of yourself, need to comprehend clearly
the fundamental purpose of all true salesmanship.
It should be the service of the buyer in satisfying
his real needs
Few salesmen know what sales
service is, and how it should be rendered.
Service is the very soul of the certain success selling
process. Service must be studied as a purpose
until the principles underlying the fullest satisfaction
of the buyer’s real needs are mastered, and
all false misconceptions of service are cleared away
from the salesman’s idea of his obligation to
the purchaser of his goods of sale.
This brief summary of the principal
essentials of sales knowledge has been outlined in
order to impress on you the practically universal
need for a better understanding of the selling process.
Certainly you are convinced now that it will pay you
to know HOW to sell. Then let us look next at
yourself in a different light as
a subject of study in sales-man-ship.