Rick Baker Thought Posts
Left Menu Space Holder

About the author

Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

E-mail me Send mail
Follow me LinkedIn Twitter

Search

Calendar

<<  November 2024  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
28293031123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
2526272829301
2345678

View posts in large calendar

Recent Comments

Comment RSS

Thought Tweet #756

by Rick Baker
On Jun 10, 2013

Thought Tweet #756 Give yourself injections of that oxymoron, Constructive Criticism

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Create a Do It Yourself hormesis-program, aimed at thickening your skin and building your tolerance for other people's shortcomings. 

CAUTION: If you are like most people then your initial tolerance for criticism will be unbelievably low...so start with very low doses of self-criticism. And, build the doses up slowly over time...until you are able to face your screaming vein-bulging face in the mirror. 

 

And

Remember

Do Unto Yourself Before You Do Unto Others

So the customer wants a carrot, does he!

by Rick Baker
On Jun 7, 2013

[an excerpt from the unpublished 'The Dark Side of Sales'] 

 

 

You: the Sales Boss

 

The Mob: your wide-eyed Sales guy

 

The Situation: The wide-eyed Sales guy writes to you, “He told me that he wants us to dangle a carrot in front of him, so that he can see how we will return his investment.  He is much more interested in dollars saved than peace of mind. Is there anything I can give him to get him over the hump?

 

Preamble: I know exactly what you are thinking. It is the first thing that hit me too. “What! Are we grocers?” ... "No, of course we are not grocers".

Then, I’m thinking,

"We have no produce and we have no Sales people who can produce." 

"Our cupboard is bare."

"And now this customer guy is asking us for carrots."


***

and so, a sales lesson followed...

Tags:

Sales

Thought Tweet #755

by Rick Baker
On Jun 7, 2013

Thought Tweet #755 When we possess Courage we can sort out, in our minds, what we believe in and what we don't believe in.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

We speak too infrequently about Courage, the #1 Value for Spirited Leaders. 

Tags:

Thought Tweets | Values: Personal Values

The Dysfunction Of Our Times - #1: Business People Who Don't Take Their Payment Obligations Seriously

by Rick Baker
On Jun 6, 2013

In times gone by, I used to talk about 3 Sacred Things in Business. And, out of the 3 things, #2 was: "Customers Pay Me".

 

Customers Pay Me

A deal is a dealThat’s the starting point. We are only as good as our word.

There’s nothing wrong with a hard-negotiated deal, as long as you don’t make it the ‘norm’. When that becomes the 'norm' - well, that’s no fun and that's not fair.

Regardless, once a deal is done – a deal is a deal.

The most insulting thing my customer can do to me is not pay me. When the customer fails to pay me, the customer is telling me what they think my work is worth - nothing. That not only violates a deal is a deal it also is just plain wrong. My work is worth much more than nothing. And, I will not sit back and allow anyone to argue, through actions, the contrary. It is offensive. Of course, having thick skin I will not take real offense…however, I will take immediate action to make sure it does not happen or, if that fails, it only happens once. Or, better still, and this has been the reality more than 99% of the time – I will take action to make sure the attempt to avoid paying me fails.

To clarify my thoughts...and recognizing they are laced with my biases and my experience-filters:

  • I do not think the above words are the screams of a sensitive big ego. This is not a what's-mine-is-mine issue. It is about personal Values and Integrity. It's about doing the right thing. And, it's about doing my part to promote better business practices. 
  • I will not jump to conclusions or act haphazardly, ignoring questions like, "Why would a normal, reasonable person fail to pay me?" [I used to do that in my younger years and I have learned that's not fair to anyone, including myself.]

 

As a Business Leader...

Do you instruct your people how to deal with payments?

Does your organization treat suppliers with the same level of consideration expected from clients?

 

PS: When Sales reps allow customers to renege on deals or fail to pay, I see weakness where there should be strength, conviction, and a high level of self-worth. If weakness exists then I try to illustrate a better way. 

PPS: Similarly, I think 'stretching accounts payable' is a dysfunctional and entirely inappropriate way of dealing with suppliers. 

Thought Tweet #754

by Rick Baker
On Jun 6, 2013

Thought Tweet #754 Managers handle situations; Leaders plan situations.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Leaders & Managers - What's The Difference? 

About Situations

And Napoleon set the high bar...“Circumstances-what are circumstances? I make circumstances”

Tags:

Business Contains Only 3 Things | Hero Worship | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #753

by Rick Baker
On Jun 5, 2013

Thought Tweet #753 Do you spend more time (A) annoying people or (B) watching people you don't know annoying people you don't know on TV?

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

The mob loves reality TV. As technology advances the mob watches real TV people decorate cakes, dance with stars, and catch alligators. The mob has an insatiable appetite for annoying other people - both doing it and watching it being done.

As the techies and academics work away at bringing us the Singularity, the mob gorges itself on a wide range of TV reality shows. What a juxtaposition. 

Tags:

Attitude: Creating Positive Attitude | Beyond Business | Humour | Thought Tweets

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.