One
Simple Idea: How Positive Thinking Reshaped Modern Life – Mitch Horowitz (Crown
Books)
The power of positive thought may seem as old as time
itself, but that’s not the goal of author/speaker Mitch Horowitz’s new book, One Simple Idea; rather than re-hashing
or re-packaging the principles, this weaves together a cogent history of
positive thought.
Horowitz doesn’t just espouse the thought process, but
creates a historical biography of the those who contributed to the positive
thinking movement and avoids that hokey sentimentality of the “you can be
anything you want to be” types. I have said for years that there is a reason
way bookstores have entire sections on motivation; because no one needs a guide
on negative thinking because it’s so easy. This would make for an interesting
starting place if you’re looking for and attitude shift.
When
Buyers Say No – Tom Hopkins and Ben Katt (Business Plus)
ABC – always be closing. The sale starts when the
customer says no. I could go on and on with a laundry list of sales clichés;
like my all time favorite from Glengarry
Glenn Ross, “coffee is for closers.” Over the course of time there have
been shelves of books written on the art of selling chock full of ideas about
overcoming objections and closing the deal.
With When Buyers
Say No, veteran sales trainers Tom Hopkins and Ben Katt, aren’t necessarily
breaking new ground, offering up techniques for making the sales they do offer
some insight into the process of uncovering and responding to unstated
objections or unasked questions or concerns that buyers may have. There is a
great deal of psychology at play when it comes to buying and selling and
Hopkins and Katt offer some useful strategies to keep the sales process moving
forward.
The
Opening Playbook: A Professional’s Guide to Building Relationships That Grow
Revenue – Andrew Dietz (McGraw Hill Publishing)
With NFL training camps in full bloom, rookies and veterans
alike are not only breaking a sweat during two a day practice sessions, but are
spending plenty of time with their nose stuck firmly in their playbooks and
study film to get a handle on their coaches approach to playing the game.
Anyone who is paying attention knows that the business world is rife with
sports analogies, so why not a business strategy book that literally borrows
from the sports playbook?
That’s exactly what Andrew Dietz, president of the
Creative Growth Group serves up with his new book, The Opening Playbook: A Professional’s Guide to Building Relationships
That Grow Revenue. Dietz articulates a series of foundational principles and
then illustrates clearly how to execute a more effective approach to
relationship building that realizes the goal of growing your business. This one
is useful across a broad spectrum of businesses, but if you are in the professional
services end of things, this book is essential reading for your continued
growth and success.
Step
Up – Lead in Six Moments That Matter – Henry Evans and Colm Foster (Josey Bass
Publishing)
Leaders…true leaders are those folks that answer the
call when the situation demands. So much of what separates a great leader from
the run of the mill is those moments or situations that when you as a leader
are hit with the choice of stepping up and taking charge or sitting back and
letting someone else deal with it. Call it grace under fire or doing the right
thing, it really boils down to those leadership moments.
That is the focus of Henry Evans and Colm Foster’s new
book, Step Up – Lead in Six Moments That
Matter. Rather than trying to define the traits of great leadership, Evans
and Foster detail broad situations that we all face on a daily basis and how
leadership respond to those challenges and offer actionable strategies to be a
more effective leader. Step Up is
chock full of QR codes that lead to a plethora of additional insights and
techniques and even offers an online assessment tools to gauge your leadership
skillset.
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