|
Arts & Photography
|
|
Biographies & Memoirs
|
|
Business & Investing
|
|
Children's Books
|
|
Comics & Graphic Novels
|
|
Computers & Internet
|
|
Cooking, Food & Wine
|
|
Entertainment
|
|
Gay & Lesbian
|
|
Health, Mind & Body
|
|
History
|
|
Home & Garden
|
|
Law
|
|
Literature & Fiction
|
|
Medicine
|
|
Mystery & Thrillers
|
|
Nonfiction
|
|
Outdoors & Nature
|
|
Parenting & Families
|
|
Professional & Technical
|
|
Reference
|
|
Religion & Spirituality
|
|
Romance
|
|
Science
|
|
Science Fiction & Fantasy
|
|
Sports
|
|
Teens
|
|
Travel
|
Welcome to Fast-Book.NET - The best Bookstore over the Inernet. We are seling books: Biographies, Memoirs, Calendars, Children's Books, Comics, Graphic Novels, Cooking book, Law, Literature, Reference, Romance and Travel books!
|
|
The Trusted Advisorby David H. Maister
List Price: $22.70

Editorial ReviewsProduct Description This is a guide to professional success. In the modern world of business, it's all about the ability to earn the client's trust and thereby win the ability to influence them. In these high risk times, trust is more valuable then gold. This detailed resource book provides readers with the five crucial steps they need for developing, managing and improving client confidence. Amazon.com Review David Maister, Charles Green, and Robert Galford--consultants on professional-service management and customer-relation issues--believe nobody can become successful as a business guru until they first gain the confidence of their clients. In The Trusted Advisor, the authors effectively build their case through anecdote and illustration, then relay a solid series of relevant suggestions applicable to both would-be consultants and those already active in the field. Among their most potent suggestions is a practical, five-step development process that encourages outsiders to engage clients by focusing attention on the issues and individuals at hand; listening both to what they say and what they leave unsaid; framing the immediate problem from their perspective; envisioning with them how a solution might appear; and committing jointly to the actions and resources that will bring it about. Also particularly useful is the examination of trust-building during four phases of a client-advisor alliance: at the time the relationship is consummated; during the assignment; after the assignment; and when "cross-selling," or establishing affiliations with the customer's associates. Boosting its utility, the book is filled with concise, easily adopted tips like "return phone calls unbelievably fast" and "always tell the truth and not what the client wants to hear." --Howard Rothman |