AUG 2016

August 28, 2016 § Leave a comment

Daniel Defoe

July 14, 2016 § Leave a comment

Motivational Poem #3

June 21, 2016 § Leave a comment

This is the third and final poem in this short series. For the other two, go and look here and here. Unlike the first two, this poem does not have any obvious connection with the world of rugby. Many years ago, ex-IBMer, Dermot Bradley, used the first verse of this poem to close some of his clever sales training classes, albeit with a little light editing. What follows is a relatively ‘pure’ version. We’ve seen it called either The Set of the Sails or The Winds of Fate. The poet is Ella Wheeler Wilcox.

One ship drives east and another drives west; With the selfsame winds that blow; ‘Tis the set of the sails; And not the gales; Which tells us the way to go.

Like the winds of the sea are the ways of fate; As we voyage along through life; ‘Tis the set of a soul; That decides its goal; And not the calm or the strife.

Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 1850 – 1919

Motivational Poem #2

June 20, 2016 § Leave a comment

Continuing the theme from yesterday’s post, here is another poem with a [tenuous, this time] rugby connection. In the film, Invictus, the poem of that name featured as a motivator for the captain of the Springboks – Francois Pienaar, played by Matt Damon. It’s a short poem by William Henley – originally untitled, but subsequently called Invictus when it was included in The Oxford Book of English Verse.

Out of the night that covers me; Black as the pit from pole to pole; I thank whatever gods may be; For my unconquerable soul.

In the fell clutch of circumstance; I have not winced nor cried aloud; Under the bludgeonings of chance; My head is bloody, but unbowed.

Beyond this place of wrath and tears; Looms but the horror of the shade; And yet the menace of the years; Finds, and shall find me, unafraid.

It matters not how straight the gait; How charged with punishments the scroll; I am the master of my fate; I am the captain of my soul.

William Ernest Henley, 1849 – 1903

Motivational Poem #1

June 19, 2016 § Leave a comment

Yesterday, England beat Australia in the second test in Melbourne, winning the series – a historic first for English rugby union. We’re told that defence coach Paul Gustard used the poem ‘The Guy in the Glass’ by Dale Wimbrow as part of his attempt at motivating an English team which had won the previous week’s test in Brisbane. It’s an antidote to hubris. Here it is, in its entirety.

When you get what you want in your struggle for gain; And the world makes you king for a day; Just go to the mirror and look at yourself; And see what that man has to say!

It isn’t your father or mother or wife; Whose judgment upon you must pass; The one whose verdict counts most in your life; Is the man staring back in the glass.

He’s the one you must satisfy beyond all the rest; For he’s with you right up to the end; And you will have passed the most difficult test; If the man in the glass is your friend.

You may be the one who got a good break; And you think you’re a wonderful guy; But the man in the glass says you’re only a fake; If you can’t look him straight in the eye.

You may fool the whole world down the pathway of years; And get pats on the back as you pass; But your final reward will be heartache and tears; If you’ve cheated the man in the glass.

Peter ‘Dale’ Wimbrow, 1895 – 1954

Are Salesmen Needless?

May 30, 2016 § Leave a comment

The death of the salesman has been something of a recurring theme for at least one hundred years. The following article is from The New York Times. It was published on Sunday 18th June 1916.

“The elimination of the salesman by the use of printed matter in the form of circulars or of advertising in periodicals, which is now being tried out in some lines, has its advocates as well as opponents. One of the former, Arthur J Steinfeld of Steinfeld & Co., who is testing out his theory by actual experience, gives his views in the subjoined communication, which is in response to an article that recently appeared in the paper.

You show that, while casual opinion consigns to the wastebasket much of the advertising matter sent to buyers, there are, nevertheless, many instances where proper advertising is producing better results than the old method of personal solicitation – larger volume at lesser cost. You tell only of the advertising matter that goes to waste, but you make no mention of the tremendous and wasteful time and money extravagance of the traveling-salesman system.

The traveling man adds considerable to the cost of goods without adding to its value or selling qualities. His range of territory is relatively small, and therefore relatively costly. While he visits one, advertising reaches thousands. True, it is, that he often puts over sales through samples, plus personality, persuasion, and perseverance, that alone his merchandise could not. He talks the buyer into the purchase, and the passing of the order copy marks the finality of the sale.

Merchandise sells through advertising strictly because of its own intrinsic worth, ungarnished by the spoken word. The goods must talk for themselves and the sale is not concluded until the buyer is satisfied, not just with the samples, but with the actual merchandise delivered.

The economy and the efficiency of the printed word need no eulogy from me. Retailers recognize their need for the daily newspapers by their increasing use of them.

Things were different once upon a time before the railroads turned farms into cities. Then the original retailers were traders and carried their wares cross-country seeking out buyers one at a time. Now the retailer draws the customers to his store in crowds, and advertising is the magnet. Representative retailers are very particular about the goods they advertise; very careful as to the exactness of their printed word. So are representative wholesalers. Buyers know this. That is why they are paying careful attention to advertising matter they receive.

The travelling salesman’s mission is to sell goods. To accomplish this he often employs methods that would not look well in print. On the other hand, an advertising statement must carry the unqualified backing of the concern behind it, and is therefore virtually a guarantee in bold unchanging type.

The travelling man is a middleman, and the evolution of business is gradually eliminating the middleman.

Even now, travelling men’s organizations are endeavoring to discourage the retailer from buying direct. The buyer who must meet the competition of the store across the street that buys direct will himself be compelled to buy direct. The personality of the traveling salesman is rapidly losing its effectiveness. Formerly, the buyer would say, “I buy from So-and-So”. Now the buyer says, “I buy to the best advantage of my concern regardless of from whom”. Economic efficiency is bringing the retailer to the store of the wholesaler just as it brought the consumer to the store of the retailer.”

APR 2016

April 28, 2016 § Leave a comment

Huthwaite’s YouGov Research

March 18, 2016 § Leave a comment

New Post

February 25, 2016 § Leave a comment

JAN

January 13, 2016 § Leave a comment