What is sales all about ?

September 11, 2010

What is sales all about ?

Sales is about exchange the product from the seller to the buyer….Is it right?

Literally yes. But actually sales is not merely the good or service exchange.  There are a lot of things involve in the sales activities.

For certain industries there are a lot of steps to conduct a close deal of sales.

This steps called SPANCOP, that is Suspecting, Prospecting, Negotiating the term, Contract deal, Operation in distributing or exchanging the goods, and Payment.  You are doing sales or good exchange to get the payment.

Byrnes (2005) in Harvard Business School Working Knowledge  wrote that company could  create “standards of care” to Fire up sales team performance by:

Identify best practice. Try interviewing your top performers. Focus on key processes like territory management, account selection, the account penetration lifecycle, and day-to-day fundamentals like sales visits and follow-up.

Codify best practice. Here, the key is to concentrate on a small number of high-payoff activities that can be translated into replicable processes, your “standards of care.” To take an analogy from football, try dividing the world into fundamentals and game plans. Fundamentals include things like crisp sales calls and the ability to talk comfortably with customer managers and engineers; game plans include an account prioritization process and a small number of well-specified alternative account penetration lifecycle profiles.

Train the process. The most effective training must go far beyond teaching general sales capabilities. It must focus on systematically teaching your reps your company-specific best practice “standards of care.” For example, in the account penetration process, there likely will be a small number of well-proven game plans, and each of these will have several identifiable stages with particular critical activities at each stage. Every rep should know your best practice process and master in advance the essential skills necessary for success at each stage.

Coach the process. Consider the words of Tom Brady, the New England Patriots’ star quarterback: “The goal of winning three consecutive Super Bowls should take a back seat to putting together three straight quality practices.” In the account penetration process there will be certain identifiable “pinch points” at each stage. For example, if a rep is moving into a stage in which the critical element is talking to engineers, the manager should coach and drill the rep in the process of talking to engineers until his or her performance is consistently excellent.

Measure the process. All too often, sales measures are too vague and broad. In account penetration, measuring progress in moving an account from stage to stage is critical. Sometimes, important progress does not yield immediate revenues.

Compensate the process. The compensation system must be aligned with the best practice process. If turnaround account management is critical, a significant component of compensation should be tied to account penetration milestones.

Constantly improve the process. Like any “standard of care,” your best performers will always find ways to make the process better. The key is to identify and capture these improvements and systematically move your whole sales force to this new and better level.

Becky from Sales Best Practices group asking “Sales is about……? If you could only use one word to fill in the blank, what would it be and why?”…

There are hundred of words that suit to fill the blank such as : trust (trust…. A sale is more than a unit. A relationship can be built and a customer can become a ……… (Business partner, friend, referral, reference, etc), relationship, services,  people, facilitator,Customer = Results = Money, problem solving, finding solutions to the customers individual needs and offering the right solutions, at the right time, for the right budget, mutual understanding, persuasion, Process (the sale is a process that involves: Attention, Interest, Desire, Decision, Action).

So, sales is about a lot of words and activities to meet your objectives.

The science of shopping: The way the brain buys

January 7, 2009

Retailers are making breakthroughs in understanding their customers’ minds. Here is what they know about you

IT MAY have occurred to you, during the course of a dismal trawl round a supermarket indistinguishable from every other supermarket you have ever been into, to wonder why they are all the same. The answer is more sinister than depressing. It is not because the companies that operate them lack imagination. It is because they are all versed in the science of persuading people to buy things—a science that, thanks to technological advances, is beginning to unlock the innermost secrets of the consumer’s mind.

In the Sainsbury’s in Hatch Warren, Basingstoke, south-west of London, it takes a while for the mind to get into a shopping mode. This is why the area immediately inside the entrance of a supermarket is known as the “decompression zone”. People need to slow down and take stock of the surroundings, even if they are regulars. In sales terms this area is a bit of a loss, so it tends to be used more for promotion. Even the multi-packs of beer piled up here are designed more to hint at bargains within than to be lugged round the aisles. Wal-Mart, the world’s biggest retailer, famously employs “greeters” at the entrance to its stores. Whether or not they boost sales, a friendly welcome is said to cut shoplifting. It is harder to steal from nice people.

Immediately to the left in Sainsbury’s is another familiar sight: a “chill zone” for browsing magazines, books and DVDs, tempting impromptu purchases and slowing customers down. But those on a serious mission will keep walking ahead—and the first thing they come to is the fresh fruit and vegetables section.

For shoppers, this makes no sense. Fruit and vegetables can be easily damaged, so they should be bought at the end, not the beginning, of a shopping trip. But psychology is at work here: selecting good wholesome fresh food is an uplifting way to start shopping, and it makes people feel less guilty about reaching for the stodgy stuff later on.

Shoppers already know that everyday items, like milk, are invariably placed towards the back of a store to provide more opportunity to tempt customers. This is why pharmacies are generally at the rear, even in “convenience” stores. But supermarkets know shoppers know this, so they use other tricks, like placing popular items halfway along a section so that people have to walk all along the aisle looking for them. The idea is to boost “dwell time”: the length of time people spend in a store.

Traditionally retailers measure “footfall”, as the number of people entering a store is known, but those numbers say nothing about where people go and how long they spend there. But nowadays, a ubiquitous piece of technology can fill the gap: the mobile phone. Path Intelligence, a British company working with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, tracked people’s phones at Gunwharf Quays, a large retail and leisure centre in Portsmouth—not by monitoring calls, but by plotting the positions of handsets as they transmit automatically to cellular networks. It found that when dwell time rose 1% sales rose 1.3%.

Having walked to the end of the fruit and vegetable aisle, Basingstoke’s hard-core shoppers arrive at counters of prepared food, the fishmonger, the butcher and the deli. Then there is the in-store bakery, which can be smelt before it is seen. Even small supermarkets now use in-store bakeries. Mostly these bake pre-prepared items and frozen dough, and they have boomed even though central bakeries that deliver to a number of stores are much more efficient. They do it for the smell of freshly baked bread, which makes people hungry and thus encourages people to buy not just bread but also other food, including frozen stuff.

Most of the information that shoppers are bombarded with is visual: labels, price stickers and advertising. But the wafting bread aroma shows smell can usefully be stimulated too, says Simon Harrop, chief executive of BRAND sense agency, a British specialist in multi-sensory marketing. In the aisle by the laundry section he suggests introducing the smell of freshly laundered sheets. Even the sound of sheets being folded could be reproduced here and contained within the area using the latest audio technology. The Aroma Company, which Mr Harrop founded, has put the smell of coconut into the shops of Thompson, a British travel agent. Some suntan oils smell of coconut, so the scent is supposed to remind people of past holidays. The company even infuses the fresh smell of citrus into a range of clothing made by Odeur, a Swedish company. It can waft for up to 13 washes.

Such techniques are increasingly popular because of a deepening understanding about how shoppers make choices. People tell market researchers and “focus groups” that they make rational decisions about what to buy, considering things like price, selection or convenience. But subconscious forces, involving emotion and memories, are clearly also at work.

Scientists used to assume that emotion and rationality were opposed to each other, but Antonio Damasio, now professor of neuroscience at the University of Southern California, has found that people who lose the ability to perceive or experience emotions as the result of a brain injury find it hard or impossible to make any decisions at all. They can’t shop.

Oh, that’s what I want

Researchers are now exploring these mechanisms by observing the brain at work. One of the most promising techniques is functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which uses a large scanner to detect changes in the blood flow in parts of the brain that correspond to increases or decreases in mental activity. People lying inside the scanners are shown different products or brands and then asked questions about them. What they say is compared with what they are thinking by looking at cognitive or emotional activity. The idea is that if, say, a part of the brain that is associated with pleasure lights up, then the product could be a winner. This is immensely valuable information because eight out of ten new consumer products usually fail, despite test marketing on people who say they would buy the item—but whose subconscious may have been thinking something different.

“We are just at the frontier of the subconscious,” says Eric Spangenberg, dean of the College of Business at Washington State University and an expert on the subtleties of marketing. “We know it’s there, we know there are responses and we know it is significant.” But companies commissioning such studies keep the results secret for commercial reasons. This makes Dr Spangenberg sure of one thing: “What I think I know, they probably know way more.”

We are just at the frontier of the subconscious

Retailers and producers talk a lot about the “moment of truth”. This is not a philosophical notion, but the point when people standing in the aisle decide what to buy and reach to get it. The Basingstoke store illustrates some of the ways used to get shoppers’ hands to wobble in the direction of a particular product. At the instant coffee selection, for example, branded products from the big producers are arranged at eye-level while cheaper ones are lower down, along with the supermarket’s own-label products.

Often head offices will send out elaborate plans of where everything has to be placed; Albertsons, a big American supermarket chain, calls these a “plan-a-gram”. Spot-checks are carried out to make sure instructions are followed to the letter. The reason for this strictness is that big retailers demand “slotting fees” to put suppliers’ goods on their shelves, and these vary according to which positions are considered to be prime space.

But shelf-positioning is fiercely fought over, not just by those trying to sell goods, but also by those arguing over how best to manipulate shoppers. Never mind all the academic papers written on how best to stack shelves, retailers have their own views. While many stores reckon eye-level is the top spot, some think a little higher is better. Others charge more for goods placed on “end caps”—displays at the end of the aisles which they reckon to have the greatest visibility (although some experts say it all depends on the direction in which people gyrate around a store—and opinion on that is also divided). To be on the right-hand-side of an eye-level selection is often considered the very best place, because most people are right-handed and most people’s eyes drift rightwards. Some supermarkets reserve that for their own-label “premium” goods. And supermarkets may categorise things in different ways, so chapatis may not be with breads, but with ready-meals of the Indian variety. So, even though some suppliers could be paying around $50,000 per store a year for a few feet of shelf space, many customers still can’t find what they are looking for.

Technology is making the process of monitoring shopper behaviour easier—which is why the security cameras in a store may be doing a lot more than simply watching out for theft. Rajeev Sharma, of Pennsylvania State University, founded a company called VideoMining to automate the process. It uses image-recognition software to scan the pictures from security cameras of shoppers while they are making their selections. It is capable of looking at the actions of hundreds of thousands of people. It can measure how many went straight to one brand, the number that dithered and those that compared several, at the same time as sorting shoppers by age, gender and ethnicity.

VideoMining analysed people in convenience stores buying beer. Typically it would take them two minutes, with the majority going straight to one brand. “This shows their mind was already made up; they were on autopilot,” says Dr Sharma. So brewers should spend their marketing money outside, not inside, the store. The analysis can also help establish the return on investment to a new advertising campaign by showing what proportion of beer-buyers can be persuaded to consider rival brands. Another study in a supermarket some 12% of people spent 90 seconds looking at juices, studying the labels but not selecting any. In supermarket decision-making time, that is forever. This implies that shoppers are very interested in juices as a healthy alternative to carbonated drinks, but are not sure which to buy. So there is a lot of scope for persuasion.

Reducing the selection on offer might help too. Cassie Mogilner of Stanford University and her colleagues found in a study that consumers like unfamiliar products to be categorised—even if the categories are meaningless. In a study of different coffees they found people were more satisfied with their choice if it came from a categorised selection, although it did not matter if the categories were marked simply A, B and C, or “mild”, “dark roast” and “nutty”.

Despite all the new technology, simply talking to consumers remains one of the most effective ways to improve the “customer experience”. Scott Bearse, a retail expert with Deloitte Consulting in Boston, Massachusetts, has led projects observing and quizzing tens of thousands of customers about how they feel about shopping. It began when a client complained that he had mountains of data on the one in four people that entered his store and bought something, but knew hardly anything about the vast majority who left without making a purchase. The “customer conversion” rate varies between types of store: it could be around 20% in some department stores but reach almost 100% in a grocery. And within the same store the conversion rate will vary in different sections.

People say they leave shops empty-handed more often because they are “unable to decide” than because prices are too high, says Mr Bearse. Working out what turns customers off is not difficult, yet stores still struggle with these issues: goods out of stock, long queues at the checkouts and poor levels of service. Getting customers to try something is one of the best ways of getting them to buy, adds Mr Bearse. Deloitte found that customers using fitting rooms convert at a rate of 85% compared with 58% for those that do not do so.

Often a customer struggling to decide which of two items is best ends up not buying either. A third “decoy” item, which is not quite as good as the other two, can make the choice easier and more pleasurable, according to a new study using fMRI carried out by Akshay Rao, a professor of marketing at the University of Minnesota. Happier customers are more likely to buy. Dr Rao believes the deliberate use of irrelevant alternatives should work in selling all sorts of goods and services, from cable TV to holidays.

The notion of shoppers wearing brain-scanning hats would be ridiculous

A lack of price tags is another turn-off, although getting that right will become crucial with the increasing use of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags. These contain far more information than bar codes and can be scanned remotely. People have been predicting for years that they would shortly become ubiquitous; but, with costs continuing to fall, they eventually will. Tills will then become redundant, because everything shoppers put in their trolleys will be automatically detected and charged to their credit cards.

The basic mechanisms to do this are already in place. A store or loyalty card can be fitted with an RFID tag to identify customers on arrival. A device on the trolley could monitor everything placed in it, check with past spending patterns and nudge customers: “You have just passed the Oriels, which you usually buy here.”

Mind over matter

Technology will also begin to identify customers’ emotions. Dr Sharma’s software has the potential to analyse expressions, like smiles and grimaces, which are hard to fake. And although fMRI scanners presently need a crane to move, something that provides a similar result might one day be worn on your head. Researchers believe it is possible to correlate brain patterns with changes in electrical activity in the brain, which can be measured with electroencephalography (EEG) using electrodes placed on the scalp. Small EEG machines are already available, especially for computer gamers, which fit on the head.

The notion of shoppers wearing brain-scanning hats would be ridiculous if it were not so alarming. Privacy groups are already concerned about the rise of electronic surveillance that records what people do, let alone what they might be thinking. The San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation is concerned that because RFID tags can be read at a distance by anyone with the necessary equipment they could create “privacy pollution”; being used to discover what is in not only someone’s shopping trolley, but also their cupboards.

To some degree shoppers would have to “buy in” to the process: a bit like having an account with an online retailer which comes with the explicit knowledge that your past purchases and browsing history will be monitored and used to pitch purchase suggestions. And if that makes shopping easier—especially if sweetened with discounts—then consumers might sign up to it. When Dr Sharma asks shoppers what they think about his video-monitoring he says most people do not mind.

But what if psychological selling is done stealthily? That way lies grave perils. It is the anger not of privacy groups that retailers should fear, but of customers at being manipulated from behind the scenes.

There have been backlashes before: “The Hidden Persuaders” by Vance Packard, an American journalist, caused a sensation when it was first published in 1957 by revealing physiological techniques used by advertisers, including subliminal messages. It is what got Dr Spangenberg interested in the subject. He thinks shopping science has limits. “I don’t think you are going to be able to make someone buy a car or a computer that they don’t need,” he says. “But you might persuade them to choose one model instead of another. And importantly, they wouldn’t know it.” But if they did realise psychological methods were being used to influence their choice, “the counteraction can be so huge it can put someone off buying anything at all,” he adds.

Which is probably why at the end of this shopping trip there is not much in the trolley. At least the temptations at the checkout are easy to avoid: a few celebrity magazines and bags of sweets at the eye-level of children. But that will change too.

Barry Salzman, the chief executive of YCD Multimedia in New York, has big plans for the area around a cash till. He is using digital video screens displaying ads that relate to what someone is buying and which can also be linked with facial-recognition software to refine the displays according to the customer’s age or sex. His system is already being used in Aroma Espresso Bars in America to present, say, an advert for a chocolate croissant to someone buying only a cappuccino.

But the checkout in this Sainsbury’s comes to a halt because the teenager at the till is not old enough to sell alcohol and can’t attract the attention of a supervisor for permission to ring up a multi-pack of beer, which is therefore left behind on the counter. The science of shopping is a marvellously sophisticated business; the practice is still a little more primitive

http://www.economist.com/science

What The Economist say on Indonesia?

November 18, 2008
  • The Economist Intelligence Unit expects the president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, to secure re-election in the presidential election of 2009, despite the fact that he currently trails Megawati Soekarnoputri of the opposition Indonesian Democratic Party-Struggle (PDI-P) in the opinion polls. The parliamentary election earlier next year is likely to return another fragmented legislature, and this will impede the economic reform process. If the PDI-P becomes the largest party in parliament, Mr Yudhoyono will face added difficulties in forming a government.
  • Peace in Aceh is holding up relatively well, but there is still the potential for social unrest as international aid in response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami dries up. Discontent persists in Papua, but there is little risk of instability. The militant Islamist group behind the Bali bombings of 2002 and 2005, Jemaah Islamiah, has been extensively infiltrated by security personnel, and the risk of another major terrorist attack in Indonesia currently appears to be low.
  • Indonesia’s international profile is being enhanced by its temporary seat on the UN Security Council until the end of 2008, and this opportunity has allowed the country to exploit both its improving ties with the US and its long-standing links with Iran and North Korea to mediate in the disputes involving these countries. Diplomatic relations with neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia are likely to remain characterised by periodic spats. Ties with China should strengthen in 2009-13.
  • The monetary policy stance of Bank Indonesia (the central bank) will be aimed at containing inflation while setting interest rates at a level conducive to commercial lending. Greatly reduced public debt ratios have given the government more freedom in fiscal policy decisions, but the large fuel subsidy bill makes the public finances vulnerable to increases in global oil prices.
  • Real GDP growth is expected to average 4.6% a year in 2009-13, reflecting strong net inflows of foreign investment and solid private consumption growth. Consumer price inflation is forecast to average 6% a year during the forecast period. The rate of price increases will slow in 2009-13 as high investment levels translate into increased production capacity, as upward pressure on wages remains weak (owing to high levels of unemployment) and as global commodity prices stabilise.
  • The current account will continue to post surpluses during the forecast period, supported by increasing capacity in the export sector. The ratio of external debt to GDP will fall further in 2009-13.

key-indicator

http://www.economist.com/countries/Indonesia/profile.cfm?folder=Profile-Economic%20Data

Global economic decline will continue in 2009, OECD predicts

November 18, 2008

The world’s most developed economies have slid further into a recession that will continue into 2009, according to an international forecast released on Thursday.

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has issued a forecast predicting that the world’s most developed economies are going to continue to contract over the next year.

“The OECD area economy appears to have entered recession,” said Jorgen Elmeskov, director of the policy studies branch and economics department.

Gross domestic product is likely to decline by 0.3 per cent in 2009 for its 30 member countries, said the Paris-based organization.

It is the first time the organization has seen an aggregate shrinkage in its members’ economies since it started keeping records in 1970.

The organization said the U.S. economy is likely to post 0.9 per cent negative growth in 2009, Japan will contract by 0.1 per cent and European economies by 0.5 per cent.

Uncertain projections leading into 2009 “point to a protracted downturn,” with recovery not likely before the second half of next year, Elmeskov said.

The organization issued its last forecast in June. At that time, it was predicting a growth of 1.7 per cent in 2009.

Full impact not yet seen

“Even more worrying, the full impact of the financial crisis still has to unfold,” said Carsten Brzeski, an analyst with ING Financial Markets. “If you think today’s numbers are already bad, just wait for the next quarter.”

The OECD’s projections assume that the financial stress since the banking crisis exploded in mid-September will prove to be “short-lived” but be followed by an “extended period of financial headwinds” through the end of next year, with conditions then returning to near normal.

But emerging hazards such as further failures of financial institutions, emerging market economies being hit harder by the downturn in global trade and foreign investors turning even more risk shy could make the recovery take even longer, according to the forecast.

Germany enters recession

The German government also released new data on Thursday that showed the country’s economy recorded negative growth for the second consecutive quarter, officially pushing it into a recession.

Germany’s Federal Statistical Office reported that gross domestic product of the country, which has Europe’s biggest economy, contracted by 0.5 per cent in the July-September period.

The economy had also declined for the first time since 2004 when it recorded a 0.4 per cent contraction in the second quarter.

A technical recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth.

“We are going to have to face up to a very difficult and long-lasting economic crisis,” Germany’s deputy economy minister, Walther Otremba, told Reuters.

Government measures should be “timely and temporary and designed to so as to ensure maximum effectiveness,” while establishing a framework to ensure budget responsibility in the long term, Elmeskov said.

The International Energy Agency also cut its global oil demand forecasts on Thursday due to the recession causing slowing demand.

The IEA is forecasting the global demand for oil will average 86.2 million barrels a day for 2008 and 86.5 million per day in 2009.

It’s a cut of 330,000 barrels for 2008 and 670,000 barrels from estimates it had released earlier in the year.

http://www.cbc.ca

U.S. Recession to Extend Into 2009, Business Economists Say

November 18, 2008

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. has entered a recession that will persist into next year, and economies around the world will follow suit, according to a survey of business economists.

After growing 1.4 percent this year, the U.S. will contract 0.2 percent in 2009, according to the median estimate in a poll taken by the National Association for Business Economics. A majority of respondents said the U.K., euro area, Japan, Canada and Mexico are either now, or will soon be, in a recession.

“Business economists became decidedly more negative on the economic outlook for the next several quarters as a result of the intensification of credit-market stresses,” Chris Varvares, president of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC in St. Louis and of NABE, said in a statement.

Pessimism about the outlook for stocks, construction, home prices and employment means household wealth and spending will keep weakening, the report said. Of all the measures undertaken so far to stem the slump, the U.S. Treasury’s bank-capital injections and Federal Reserve support for the commercial paper market will prove the most effective, the economists said.

The jobless rate, now at a 14-year high of 6.5 percent, will climb to 7.5 percent by the end of 2009, according to the median forecast. Last month, the group anticipated it would peak at 6.4 percent by the middle of next year.

Auto sales, which the group last month projected would stabilize in 2009, are now forecast to keep sliding. Purchases will decline 6.7 percent in 2009 after dropping 17 percent this year, according to the survey.

Housing Slump

Similarly, the economists said housing starts won’t bottom until next year. Builders will break ground on 870,000 homes in 2009, the fewest in 50 years of record-keeping. Property values are likely to fall another 3.5 percent in 2009 after dropping 6 percent this year, the group said.

The outlook for home sales was less dire, with almost all respondents projecting purchases would reach a low by next June.

On a quarterly basis, the business economists projected the U.S. would shrink at a 2.6 percent annual pace from October to December and at a 1.3 percent rate in the first three months of next year. The world’s largest economy would resume growing in the second quarter of 2009, expanding at a 0.5 percent pace.

Fed policy makers are likely to hold the benchmark interest rate at 1 percent through the third quarter of next year, even as the outlook for growth dims and inflation is projected to cool, the survey showed.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News from Nov. 3 to Nov. 11 were more pessimistic about the U.S. economy than the NABE group. The economy will probably contract 0.3 percent next year, prompting central bankers to lower the key rate to a record-low 0.5 percent by March, the Bloomberg survey showed.

Credit crisis:

November 18, 2008

Where has all the lost money gone?

The chronic global financial crisis has wiped trillions of dollars off world stock markets since it first erupted last year – but where has all the money gone? Nowhere, according to analysts.

From New York to Tokyo, via London, Frankfurt and Paris, investors were gripped by another roller-coaster ride of turbulent trade last week.

Across the globe, equity markets have now slumped by 30-50 per cent since the same stage of 2007, as confidence has been ravaged by the collapse of the US subprime housing sector and the subsequent credit crunch.

Economists say markets have suffered massive “paper” losses that do not relate to the disappearance of cash – but instead to a dramatic drop in value.

“When we say that trillions of dollars have been lost, this is a miswording,” said economics professor John Sloman at the University of Bristol.

“What we should say is: trillions of dollars of value have been wiped off from the stock market’s value, which is totally different,” he told AFP.

“It’s not money, it is value, which is basically the price (that) people are ready to pay at one time.”

Robert Shiller, professor of economics at Yale University in the United States, drew a comparison with the drop in the price of a house.

“Suppose one day you ask a real estate agent to estimate the value of your house if it were to be sold,” Shiller told AFP.

“The next day you ask a second real estate agent to estimate the value of your house, and the second agent gives you an estimated value that is 10 per cent lower.

“Have you lost any money? Certainly not, the currency notes in your pocket have not changed, nor have any of your bank accounts.

“But you would be poorer, in a very real sense. It is just the same with the stock market. Nobody loses any ‘money’ in the strict definition of that term, but they have lost value.”

However, speculative investors can get their fingers burned when they dabble in fiercely volatile stock markets.

Some traders buy poorly performing stocks when they bet that shares have “bottomed out” or hit their lowest point – in the hope of selling them after a sharp rally in order to make a profit.

But traders can be left nursing losses if the acquired shares fall even further.

“If you need to sell these assets, and the value of your assets has come down … you can lose money compared to the prices you had to pay for these assets,” Sloman said.

He added: “You have got to distinguish assets, like stocks or houses, from cash.

“The cash has not gone but the value of assets – paper (stocks) or physical (houses) – have come down because they depend on supply and demand. It doesn’t mean that money has disappeared.”

http://money.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=650626

Positive mental attitude in selling

October 27, 2008

How to nurture positive mental attitudes in selling activities

Listening Power

October 27, 2008

The 80/20 Rule

October 27, 2008

Evan sales

October 27, 2008