salesman

(noun)

A man whose job it is to sell things, either in a shop / store or elsewhere.

Related Terms

  • close
  • presentation
  • marketing
  • prospect
  • follow-up

Examples of salesman in the following topics:

  • Managing Personal Selling

    • For example, a salesman might mention that his product is popular with a person's neighbors, knowing that people tend to follow perceived trends.
    • In automobile dealerships, a "closer" is often a senior salesman experienced in closing difficult deals.
    • Coverage of the latter is popularized in works such as Death of a Salesman and Glengarry Glen Ross.
  • Preapproach

    • A salesman's product must be relevant to his prospect.
    • The salesman must establish on the outset whether the prospect can afford to buy.
  • Employee Ownership

    • Commission – Consider a car salesman.
    • This salesman now has a direct stake in the organization's revenues, and is motivated to contribute to the bottom line due to an extrinsic reward (the commission).
  • Job Design

    • Consider a salesman.
  • Perspectives on Motivation

    • For example, a salesman with a quota to fulfill would be best paired with an achievement-oriented manager, as such a goal-oriented approach toward, for example, a specific number of sales would be highly motivating.
  • The Cold War

    • FDR's address to the delegates was well received—he called himself a "traveling salesman for peace" and preached "mutual safety. " The Lima Declaration adopted at the International Conference of American States in 1938 reinforced inter-American solidarity.
  • Goal-Setting Theory

    • For example, sales personnel may be tasked with selling a certain number of units per quarter (e.g. a car salesman may have a goal to sell one car a week).
  • Closing the Sale

    • For example, a salesman might mention that his product is popular with a person's neighbors, knowing that people tend to follow perceived trends.
  • The "Good Neighbor" Policy

    • FDR's address to the delegates was well received—he called himself a "traveling salesman for peace" and preached "mutual safety. " The Lima Declaration adopted at the International Conference of American States in 1938 reinforced inter-American solidarity.
  • Value and Relative Value

    • Not only do the two different buyers have a different value on an object, the salesman puts his value on it, and the original manufacturer may have put yet another value on it.
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