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Guerrilla Deal-Making: How to Put the Big Dog on Your Leash and Keep Him There
250
by Jay Conrad Levinson, Donald W Hendon
Jay Conrad Levinson
Guerrilla Deal-Making: How to Put the Big Dog on Your Leash and Keep Him There
250
by Jay Conrad Levinson, Donald W Hendon
Jay Conrad Levinson
Paperback
$19.95
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Overview
Why a book on guerrilla deal-making? Because people envy those who are more powerful than they are. They want to bring the big dog down to their own level. If they succeed, they’ll feel better about themselves. That’s why Jay Conrad Levinson’s guerrilla books have sold over 30 million copiesJay doesn’t just promise to empower small businessmen, he actually becomes the wind beneath their wings. It’s a natural! Empowerment! How to get powerful peoplebig dogsto do what youthe small guerrillawant them to do! Your impossible dreamactually controlling big dogsseems within your reach. (A lot better than just catching their attention.) So millions of people buy Jay’s books. And when they’re in serious negotiations with big dogs, they’ll buy "Guerrilla Deal-Making"!
On top of that, jealousy of big dogs is on the increase, simply because there are more of them to envy today than ever before. In 2010, 8.4 million households in the US had assets of $1 million or more. That’s 7-1/2 percent of the 112.6 million households.
There are many other guerrilla vs. big dog situations, not just high-powered buying and selling. Readers will use the 100 very powerful tactics in "Guerrilla Deal-Making" when they
* Deal with their boss
* Go to town hall meetings to talk to pompous politicians
* Deal with their home owners association
* Try to get their medical insurance company to reimburse them in full
8 Deal with uncaring bureaucrats at city hall
On top of that, jealousy of big dogs is on the increase, simply because there are more of them to envy today than ever before. In 2010, 8.4 million households in the US had assets of $1 million or more. That’s 7-1/2 percent of the 112.6 million households.
There are many other guerrilla vs. big dog situations, not just high-powered buying and selling. Readers will use the 100 very powerful tactics in "Guerrilla Deal-Making" when they
* Deal with their boss
* Go to town hall meetings to talk to pompous politicians
* Deal with their home owners association
* Try to get their medical insurance company to reimburse them in full
8 Deal with uncaring bureaucrats at city hall
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781614482444 |
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Publisher: | Morgan James Publishing |
Publication date: | 01/15/2013 |
Pages: | 250 |
Product dimensions: | 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d) |
About the Author
Dr. Donald Wayne Hendon has valuable information that nobody else in the world has. He has given several thousand seminars and consulted for firms in 36 nations on six continentsfrom Saudi Arabia to Australia. He has made deals with executives from 54 nations, using more than 300 tactics in his repertoire. Each nation has a unique negotiating style, and Dr. Hendon knows these styles intimatelythe specific tactics used the most by executives in those countries when they buy and sell, when they wheel and deal. Don trains his clients thoroughly. He gives them the power to win bigand to win oftenwhen they negotiate with people from these nations. Contact him and become more powerful when you make deals.
Jay Conrad Levinson, the father of Guerrilla Marketing, is the author of the best-selling marketing series in history. His books have sold more than 30 million copies worldwide.
Jay Conrad Levinson, the father of Guerrilla Marketing, is the author of the best-selling marketing series in history. His books have sold more than 30 million copies worldwide.
Table of Contents
Summary: 18 chapters:Chapter 1: Donald Trump vs. Mao Tse-Tung at the negotiating table. A fractured fairy tale introducing major deal-making weapons, countermeasures, dumb mistakes made in deal-making.
Chapter 2: Why Americans aren’t very good at deal-makingand what you can do about it! 18 comprehensive reasons
Chapter 3: Know your enemyhow to get inside the big dog’s mind. What makes big dogs and winners different than underdogs and losers
Chapter 4: 365 deal-making weapons. The most comprehensive list ever assembled
Chapters 5 through 9. The 50 most powerful and under-used deal-making weapons. 6 categories: Preparation. Assertive. Defensive. Submissive. Cooperative. Dirty tricks. Plus several hundred counter-weapons
Chapters 10 through 15: The 50 most powerful and over-used deal-making weapons. Same 6 categories. Plus several hundred more counter-weapons
Chapter 16: Guerilla concession-making. How to make concessions the right wayand how to make big dogs give you more than they want to. Highlights:
* 20 do’s and 20 don’ts
* Strongest and weakest concession patterns
* How to determine the dollar value of every concession
* Why simply talking is a big concession
* Why listening is the cheapest—and most important—concession you can make
* How to recognize the big dog’s concession patterns and how to use them against him
* Why you should never say “I’ll think about it”
Chapter 17: Guerrilla body language. How to tell what’s going on in the big dog’s mind without him knowing that you knowwhether he’s interested, whether he’s lying, whether he’s on a power trip. Over 200 gestures
* The 51 basic gestures
* 79 evaluation gestures
* 40 gestures liars make
* 18 domination gestures
* 12 touching gestures
* The body language of furniture placementHidden meanings of office layout
* Where people choose to sit
* 32 ways to manipulate other people with your own body language
Chapter 18: How to become the ultimate guerrilla. Wrapping it up by revealing how losers become winners
Some of the 100 deal-making weapons in Chapters 5-15:
* Learn from childrenthey’re great negotiators
* Negotiate on an empty stomach, never when you’re full
* Mornings are much better times to make deals than afternoons
* Imply your powerdon’t intentionally display it
* Learn from the Chineseuse the swarming ambush and the rule of three
* The person with the least commitment to the relationship has the most power. So does the person who says the least
* Why grapevine gossip is the most believable kind of communication
* How to actually capture the big dogmake it impossible for him to go elsewhere
* Win by using manipulative music and frightening surroundings
* Playing dumb is smart. And it’s even smarter to know when you’re stupid
* The dynamic duothe power of arrogance and the power of ego
* Wish lists and reality lists
* Intimidating the big dog4 ways to win, 5 ways to lose
* Take it or leave itusing it and mis-using it
* Using the 2 G-spots: Greed and gullibility
* Funny money and real money
* The power of being un-prepared
* Reciprocity should not be evenhow to get the big dog to give you a lot more than you gave him
* The power of powerlessness and 8 other power sources you didn’t even know you had
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