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51 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stunningly Useful and On Point--Vital to Gold Collar Workers, April 3, 2002
I bought this book because I thought it might be relevant to "gold collar workers", those who manufacture and sell knowledge that is quite "invisible" or intangible. What a great book this is! Every person that relys on their brain for a living, whether as an employee or consultant or teacher, can double their *perceived* value by reading and applying the lessons of this book.
A few of the author's well-discussed and well-illustrated ideas are offered here to complement the many other favorable reviews: 1) Simplify access to your work! [Learn how to create executive summaries, tables of contents, hyper-links, etc.--don't assume that everyone knows your value and is willing to spend time digging into your work.] 2) Quality, speed, and price are *not* in competition, they must be offered simulaneously and at full value. 3) What is your promise or value proposition? Are you just showing up, or does every day offer a chance for you to show your value in a specific way? 4) Don't just be the best in your given vocation, *change it* for the better and redefine what "best" means! 5) Sell your relationship (and your understanding of the other person's needs), not just your expertise in isolation. Your boss or client has three choices and you are the last: to do nothing, to do it themselves, or to use you. Focus on being the first choice every time. 6) Execute with passion--and if you are a super-geek or nerd that does not have a high social IQ, form a partnership with a super-popular person and put them in front. There are many other useful thoughts in this book. If you want to know how to sell the invisible, the intagible, the value propositions that revolve around knowledge and insight instead of bending metal and assembling things, this is absolutely the best book one could ask for. Really nicely presented.
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