Rules For Cool Vendors
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 984 legacy views
Rules For Cool Vendors, nby H. Bernard Wechsler and Jackie A. Guiliano, Ph.D
There are four answers folks want when they read or listen to your proposal ornbrilliant White Paper. If you remember them, you will influence and convince -nverses making the reader yawn with an open mouth, and then mutter a curse at you.
1. What-the-deal? Contrary to Jack Kennedy’s inauguration speech,ntell me what you can do for me and mine. The clock is ticking and Inaint your Moma.
2. How much? Don’t flim-flam me, and I am not wading through to the final page of War And Peace to discover your price is ridiculous – tell me now, how much. It wouldn’t hurt if you showed me the prices of your competitors and justified your overblown cost schedule.
3. W.I.I.F.M? (What’s in it for me?) Show me and explain our benefits, not just the features of your product or service. Got a 10-year guarantee or a free service contract or is it all helium?
4. Why should I believe you – you’re working on a commission - so you
credibility is right between Richard Nixon and Bush’s press secretary.
Wanna convince me? Give me names of half-dozen companies you do business with, their operations director and his/her cell phone. How longnis their experience with your team. And one of them better not be you
brother-in-law Alvin.
Unlike what GEICO thinks, I don’t hold conversations with Australian Geckos.
How Homo Sapiens Learn
There are four ways the folks at the top of the food chain discover and absorb information. If you remember them, folks will nominate you for CEO.
1. Auditory:
By listening to the golden lyrics of an expert, the knowledge of a boring nprofessor, or hearing something new and useful from folks hanging around the water fountain.
If you learn best by hearing, carry a pen to memorialize it orninformation naturally flows into your left-ear and immediately floats out your right.
Do you know that what we hear (auditory cortex) lasts five-seconds without aid, while what we see (visual cortex) disappears within one-second?
2. Observation:
When you decide to learn a new skill and use your powers of observation,nyou lea
80% more compared to listening to examples and how-to details alone.
Donald Trump was right, an apprenticeship is a superior form of learningnbecause it involves your Mirror Neurons. Google: mirror neurons.
It is not enough to watch the master in action – guess what else is required?
3. Trial-And-Error
The single most powerful learning system is your left-brain teaching your right-nhemisphere through personal discovery. That’s how you learned to ride your first bike, drive a car, and to use your Word Processor.
Were you born hardwired to surf the Internet and email? It’s trial-and-error.
Ph.Ds call it auto-didactic, meaning self-taught. Core learning of anything practical and pragmatic is always auto-didactic. Do you remember any teache
pouring knowledge into your left ear through a funnel? It is always auto-didactic.
Failure, the error part, is enormously important to learning and memory. Most of us freak out at even hearing the word failure because it threatens our self- esteem and self-efficacy (your belief in your own competency and ability to hack it).
What is the core of trial-and-error?
Feedback is learning what does not work. Edison said before he succeeded, he know over one thousand ways how not to make a light bulb.
When you make a dreaded error, your hippocampus files it away in long-term memory so the next time you try (trial), you will not repeat the same old mistake.
That’s is the scientific meaning of Feedback, and this guy Feedback is your best friend, a tool and your learning partner.
4. The Whole Enchiladann Who said you have to use only one of the big three of learning?n n Brilliant folks like you and me opt to use 1-2-3 together to learn faste
and remember permanently. Independent research indicates combining listeningn how-to, being an apprentice and observing how-to, and finally being auto-n didactic – teaching ourselves through trial-and-error, is up to 250 percent moren effective than just listening to a lecture, watching a video or even going it alone.
Did you learn to drive a car by listening to your old-man yadda-yaddan at you for a week? Did he throw you the keys to his beloved Buick, and say,
“Here Charlie-boy, take my cherished chariot and figure out how to drive.
Oh yeah, if you wreck it, and maybe get paralyzed in a highway accident,n we’ll chalk it up to a learning experience and me and Mom won’t get mad.”
Endwords
OK, now you know what people want from a vendor and how to learn.
The last step is how to triple your reading speed permanently, and doublenyour long-term memory.
Here’s the deal: it is easy but not simple. You sit for our 12-hour SpeedLea
ing100 workshop and practice (like homework) 15 minutes daily for 21 days to put you
new skills on auto-pilot. After that you permanently own these life-long-skills.
You get a special handheld tool – a laser pacer to make learning easy and swift,nand later you will just use an ordinary pen.
What’s in it for you is the natural ability to read-and-remember three (3) books,narticles and reports in the time your competitors can hardly finish even one.
Did you know that the average U.S. college graduate reads at an 8th grade level?
No hype, it has held at that statistic for the past 50 years. Ask Reader’s Digest nwith 10 million subscribers (#1 in the U.S.) who demand from their writers the usenof no higher than a 7th grade vocabulary.
We’ll see you at the next SpeedLea
ing100 workshop.
By the way, did I mentioned my original business partner was Evelyn Woodnand we graduated 2 million including the White House staffs of four U.S. Presidents.
Barron’s published our book, Speed Reading For Professionals, the standard in thenfield. And I have been interviewed by The Wall Street Jou
al and Fortune Magazine for major articles on speed reading.
See ya,nncopyright 2007 H. Bernard Wechsler www.speedlea
ing.org hbw@.speedlea
ing.org 1-877-567-2500n------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------nnnn
Article author
About the Author
Author of Speed Reading For Professionals, published by Barron's.
My original partner was Evelyn Wood, graduating 2 million, including the White House staffs of four U.S. Presidents.n
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Children's Social Improvisation Sets the Stage for Academic Achievement and Relationship Skills
A child’s work is to play. Imaginative play is crucial to the development of a child, and deeply motivating. “Child’s play” engages children in social readiness, necessary in forming relationships. Normal conversation is social and improvisational. Social Improvisation in front of others becomes ...
Related piece
Article
Embracing Growth amidst the Challenges of Early Pregnancy: A Journey of Personal Discovery
Introduction
Related piece
Article
Embracing Growth amidst the Challenges of Early Pregnancy: A Journey of Personal Discovery
Introduction
Related piece
Article
Embracing Growth amidst the Challenges of Early Pregnancy: A Journey of Personal Discovery
Introduction
Related piece