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Tagged With "Columbo"

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Re: The Quest for $200K Starts Tomorrow

George KRebs ·
Art, I loved this column, especially the lead- in history of your start as a technician. That was me in 1978-79. I worked for a Canon subsidiary in Union NJ as a tech. Just moved here from Ohio. My service manager told the owner after a year " he is a passable tech but he keeps losing his tools". It was a sign from God, I guess. Good luck on your quest. George Krebs Sent from my iPad Sent from my iPad > On Nov 21, 2017, at 10:43 PM, Print4Pay Hotel < alerts@hoop.la > wrote: > >
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Re: The Quest for $200K Starts Tomorrow

Art Post ·
Ty George! I enjoy writing this stuff, hoping it can others also!
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Re: The Quest for $200K Starts Tomorrow

Art Post ·
So you worked for MBS right? I believe that was Metropolitan Business Systems. My brother worked there as a tech also, in the mid eighties
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Re: The Quest for $200K Starts Tomorrow

George KRebs ·
Art, I worked for Office Products & Systems, a Canon subsidiary located on Vauxhall Rd in Union and then we moved to Mountainside. They were taken over by the New York subsidiary. I worked for them in 1978-79. I think you are right about the name. George Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network. From: Print4Pay Hotel Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2017 11:43 PM To: George KRebs Reply To: Print4Pay Hotel Subject: Comment By Art Post: The Quest for $200K...
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Dr. Print ·
I would ask him - Who else are you going to involve in this process. If he mentions the name of the owner’s company, ask how do you know him. You may need to ask a follow up question to get to the owners name. If he does not mention the owners company don’t bring them up, you may end up putting that company in play. You never know how well he knows the controller. I might have 1,000 linked in connections, some of them I may not think of using. That’s my advice
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

TML ·
I agree with dr print. I always ask who my competition is and I know them well enough now to ask which rep it is. I've found lately with one company the owner has been traveling on appointments with a new rep. I've been using this to our advantage as the owner of that company is quiet an aged fellow that knows little about our industry anymore. Find out who your competition is and if that company is listed, ask how they came about selecting them (since you mentioned the incumbent is out).
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Carl Little ·
Art, I would not ask that question. They may not be in the deal and you do not need another competitor. I might ask however how important relationships are. That will tell you a lot about him. I also try to see who they do business with to try and connect with someone who I know that might know a c-level person inside your prospect. Just thoughts. Carl Sent from my iPad > On Feb 17, 2015, at 10:33 PM, Print4Pay Hotel < alerts@hoop.la > wrote: >
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Art Post ·
Thus, I took all the comments and made zero mention of the LinkedIn connection. I did ask about all of the other players and received. Names of the three other vendors, machine models, and monthly lease pricing for each of them. AS predicted price will play the most important part of the buy in, however, I was able to get me and my company to the top of the list (did not give the price yet)m due to the knowledge that I brought to table for automating a workflow process. Gotta just figure out...
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Old Glory ·
If he gave you their lease pricing, he'll give them yours. You were right to hold that back and if price is all important, before I gave him mine, I would ask if all other proposals are in. If yes, then I'd ask, "If my price is best, any reason we couldn't go forward", etc. If price is all important and all prices are in, what else id there to do?
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Larry Kirsch ·
Simply ask what you need to do to obtain the business. If you believe the answer, you know what to do Art have paperwork approved. Best wishes.
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

bandit41076 ·
"press hard, third copy is yours".
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Re: Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Tim Cunningham ·
Agree
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Tell em Columbo Sent You!

Art Post ·
Last week I received a lead in my territory from our manufacturer!!!  OMG, these are rare nowadays!   Before I called the Decision Maker, I did my due diligence and checked the company out on their web site.  I got a feel for what they...
Blog Post

The Quest for $200K Starts Tomorrow

Art Post ·
Over the last couple of months, many of my peers asked if I would be doing another blog series about outlining my daily sales activities for the end of 2017. I stated, "No", the other two blog series ( 12 Days of Selling, 57 Days of Selling ) wore my sorry ass out and I'm no spring chicken anymore! Next year, I'll be staring my thirty-eighth year in the copier industry. Many of you know that I started as a technician, had my ninety day review and was told, "you're doing a great job of taking...
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Better Call Art "The Columbo Close"

Art Post ·
My first introduction to the Columbo Close and I had no clue what had happened
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Re: Better Call Art "The Columbo Close"

Ray Stasiezcko ·
The famous Columbo Close! "Excuse me one more thing." I used plenty times in the day. Great stuff buddy
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31 Ways to Close More Copier Sales (#21 of 31)

Art Post ·
Some of the best closes are the ones that sound out right dumb that you don't dare to use them right?   I learned along time ago that you always have to ask for the order in one way or another, it's a shame that I don't remember most of them...
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