首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
TASK ONE - VIEW • For questions 13 - 17, match the extracts with the views, listed A - H. • For each extract, decide which v
TASK ONE - VIEW • For questions 13 - 17, match the extracts with the views, listed A - H. • For each extract, decide which v
admin
2010-01-31
41
问题
TASK ONE - VIEW
• For questions 13 - 17, match the extracts with the views, listed A - H.
• For each extract, decide which view the speaker expresses.
• Write one letter (A - H) next to the number of the extract.
A Clients’ choices are driven by quality more than price.
B You should never criticise your competitors when talking to clients.
C Clients value a fully positive attitude in sellers.
D You should never forget the importance of cost,
E Clients may require you to include apparently unprofitable incentives.
F You should develop a relationship with clients before attempting to negotiate,
G Clients appreciate the social benefits of doing business,
H You should find out as much as possible about a client’s business.
*
Speaker 1
I love selling- I think it’s the essence of business. Two competitors can have products of equal quality but the one with the better sales force will win out every time, But it’s a complex operation, negotiating successfully, especially since you’re often having to pitch without having as much information at your fingertips as you’d like about the client’s business. And sometimes you need to set aside fixed ideas about price and maybe meet demands to add in some extras, ways to secure the deal that might seem to damage your margin. Of course, you can get it wrong sometimes - once I approached a client very demandingly, pushing him to give me responses without accommodating his very different attitude to negotiating, and it just alienated him.
Speaker 2
I’m learning all the time about how to improve techniques, but there’s only so much you can control on a technical basis. I mean, the price and quality you’re offering are probably a given, and your client’s going to be making their own calculations about how they compare with the competition. So a lot of it comes down to how you put yourself over, and if that’s confident and presuming a good outcome to your discussions, I think you’ve got a winning approach. But you still have to stay alert to the possibility of making mistakes. I was once so involved in all He toing and froing you get in dosing a deal, you know, all the phone calls, that I forgot to keep or ask for proper notes, and they were able to really sting me,
Speaker 3
You can read all the books you want, but they won’t tell you how to deal with any particular client. Some people spend so much time studying their competitors that they almost seem to know more about them than their own products, and it’s a waste of time, cos you have to se//your plus points, not their minuses - that’s something you don’t refer to. For all you know, your client’s already got a good relationship with your strongest rival. Never assume anything. I really misread a client once. I was talking away, listing all Our special features in far too much detail, and completely missed the point that the client just wasn’t in a hurry He wanted to take it nice and slow, and was dropping hints about good dinners which passed me by at the time, cos most customers aren’t so interested in that.
Speaker 4
Despite what anyone says, you’ll never really know how your client runs their business, only what they tell you, and they may tell you all sorts of things to try and bring down the price, upgrade the offer, and so on, within your margins. You can’t know what discussions they have already been in with your competition either So you need to work on building up an understanding between you, to give you some kind of a basis to work from. Which is, of course, easier said than done. The larger the deal, the more anxious you can become, and once I got overwhelmed by that, so much so that the client clearly thought that not only was I an idiot, but that my firm must be pretty useless too. Not my most successful day!
Speaker 5
Selling is a science, not an art-form. The easy bit is cost and calculation, which anyone can do, but your offerings don’t mean anything in themselves, you have to see them in context, and that means how the client sees them. So if you don’t do your homework on the client’s set-up, you’re talking to the wind - information is power Mind you, I’ve taken that logic a step too far in the past. I’m still embarrassed when I remember the time I was so keen to make the client understand all the particular ways in which my offer suited him so very perfectly that I didn’t stop to consider the fact that he was basically saying yes already I actually prolonged the process so much that I ended up in danger of blowing the whole thing!
选项
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/0SYsFFFM
本试题收录于:
BEC高级听力题库BEC商务英语分类
0
BEC高级听力
BEC商务英语
相关试题推荐
Whattypeofbusinessdoesthespeakerhave?
Wheredoesthisconversationtakeplace?
Wheredoesthisconversationtakeplace?
Wheredoestheconversationtakeplace?
Wheredoestheconversationhappen?
Wheredoesthisconversationtakeplace?
Whatistheman’sbusiness?
Whatistheman’sbusiness?
Askingquestions征询
随机试题
在普通工程中,搭接接头正面焊缝的强度是按________进行计算的。这种方法是假定性的,而且是近似的。
以下词人的风格是“雄劲豪迈,悲壮沉郁”的是()
26岁,女,结婚3年不孕。月经周期不规则,刮宫组织学表明为有排卵的宫内膜,应是
有关药物血浆半衰期的叙述中,正确的是()。
银行业从业人员的下列行为中,不符合“岗位职责”有关规定的是()。
下列关于有限合伙企业的特征,下列表述正确的是()。
西欧中世纪教会学校分为()三个层次。
材料:下面是某老师的一段回忆:一年级时,她时常一个人呆坐在教室的一角,不跟别的孩子交流和玩耍。三年级时,她还是经常一个人坐在那里,怯生生地看着周遭。后来几年,她喜欢独自到图书馆读书,极少跟同学交往。许多年后
ThepopulationoftheUnitedStatesisonly6%oftheworld’spopulation,butAmericans【21】______onethirdofalltheener
Whydosomepeopleabusedrugs?
最新回复
(
0
)