From the cold calling, to commissions and caffeine addiction, learn the real hard truth about life in the sales profession.
Lying customers. Changing quotas. Soul-crushing management. PSSD-inducing pressure (Post Sales Stress Disorder). What's not to love about the world of sales?
Whether you've been in sales for a while, are new to the game, or just need a lift, The Sales Survival Handbook shows you how
Overcome objections without tears (yours and theirs) Get out of a sales slump legally Cold call without needing sedatives Beg for referrals (yes, beg) Spot common types of customers, coworkers, and managers Maintain a social life (mission impossible?) Complete with quizzes, lists, real-world advice, and all the dos and don'ts that have popped up thus far in the sales world, The Sales Survival Handbook offers you everything you need to survive the agony and enjoy the ecstasy of your sales career.
At first, I was amazed this book got published. Re-thinking it, this may be a good book for high school graduates / dropouts going into sales. A lot of strikingly obvious advices and stupid jokes, but could work for high school-level audience. The book does provide simplified sales intro with complete lifecycle view.
Hilarious in the aspect that you have a office sales job, not so much on the retail floor - but none the less humerus. I shared it with my team for a good hearted laugh as we are a sales family who also enjoy each others company (in the office)
This is the worst material I have ever read. I dont even feel comfortable referring to it as a book. I thought it was pretty bad from the start but continued to read it just to be sure. Should have listened to myself from the beginning. What a complete and utter waste of time. This book tries to straddle the area between real book and humor and fails at both. I wasted 9.99 on this book and wouldn't read it again if you paid me 999.99, it's that bad. The only reason I gave it one star is zero stars is not an option.
This is the worst material I have ever read. I dont even feel comfortable referring to it as a book. I thought it was pretty bad from the start but continued to read it just to be sure. Should have listened to myself from the beginning. What a complete and utter waste of time. This book attempts to straddle the area between real book and humor and fails at both. I wasted 9.99 on this book and wouldn't read it again if you paid me 999.99, it's that bad. The only reason I gave it one star is zero stars is not an option.
I often do my due diligence before purchasing a book. However, purchasing this book was more of an impulse decision as it was suggested by one of my favourite sales writers on Quora.
As soon as you start reading this book, you will realise that you have made an awful choice since the writing is very amateur and shallow despite promising headings. The author, Ken Kupchik renowned for his sales humour uses it excessively, almost to the extent that we feel the entire book is a joke. There is no fluidity in the writing and the statements provided by Ken often tests the reader's patience.
The book has been written with no target audience in mind. The author claims that this book will be useful for sales new-comers and veterans alike, although the only person who can actually use this book is the author himself for him to review his writing.
It was good, 50% humor and 50% general tips. Definitely meant to be a light read. Don't go in too hard on trying to LEARN from the book, el'se you forgo appreciating the humor, which is literally half the book (every other sentence.) Learning-wise, it offers gentle reminders of the basics of sales, but nothing deep and profound. Overall a pleasant book with good takeaways. That foreward by Jeb Blount, though--probably my favorite part.
Overall covers a lot of the ups and downs of sales, various situations and what the life is like (yes I drink too much coffee). Trying to inject humor into the end of every single paragraph gets a bit old, but I did have some laugh out loud moments when he nails it.