Product Details
How to Build a Network of Power Relationships

How to Build a Network of Power Relationships
By Harvey Mackay

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


11 new or used available from $20.53

Average customer review:

Product Description

SUCCESS CAN BE YOURS WITH HARVEY MACKAY'S HOW TO BUILD A NETWORK OF POWER RELATIONSHIPS

RELATIONSHIPS + NETWORKING + LITTLE THINGS = SUCCESS


The world's foremost producer of personal development and motivational audio programs now brings you the skills for building the relationships that will help you to be your best.

Author of the #1 New York Times bestsellers Pushing the Envelope, Swim With the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive and Beware the Naked Man Who Offers You His Shirt, Harvey Mackay knows what it takes to get ahead in today's business world. In How to Build a Network of Power Relationships, he reveals that success in business and in life is embodied in the interpersonal relationships we make. Developing the people skills and communication strategies you need requires conscious effort and repeated practice; in this innovative and dynamic program, Harvey Mackay shows you the way, explaining:

  • Why caring is contagious and how it creates a self-fulfilling prophesy in networking
  • Ways to beat one of the greatest human fears: rejection
  • That little things don't mean a lot, they mean everything in dealing with people
  • How to tackle the job market

    Learn how to make your own personal network work for you -- today.


  • Product Details

    • Amazon Sales Rank: #750426 in Books
    • Published on: 2002-11-01
    • Formats: Abridged, Audiobook
    • Original language: English
    • Number of items: 2
    • Binding: Audio CD

    Editorial Reviews

    About the Author
    Harvey Mackay is an internationally sought-after public speaker who has advised Fortune 500 companies and corporate leaders around the world. He is the author of the #1 New York Times bestsellers Swim With the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive, Pushing the Envelope and Beware the Naked Man Who Offers You His Shirt. He is also the chairman and the chief executive officer of Mackay Envelope Corporation.


    Customer Reviews

    Save Your Money1
    This is merely common sense stuff folks. I really felt cheated when I listened to it. It bored me out of my skull. I would prefer listening to Jack Welch 50 times in a row than have to hear the plodding, mono-tone, comon sensical tripe that's on these. Nothing new or innovative. Save your money.

    Good Ideas but Alittle Out-dated3
    I think this audio cassette gives some good ideas and reasons for keeping in touch with people and learning how to network. I think alot of the ideas talked about are really worthwhile things to put into practice.
    But the basis of this is the author's Rolodex. He lightly touches on Outlook or computers as ways to keep in touch with people. I would like to see this updated with more ideas for using computers and the internet for putting the author's ideas into practice.

    Makes it clear why you need to build your own network!5
    I had thought I had read and/or heard just about everything
    by Harvey Mackay (SWIM WITH THE SHARKS WITHOUT BEING
    EATEN ALIVE is one of my favorite self-help books of all time),
    but somehow I missed his cassette program, HOW TO BUILD
    A NETWORK OF POWER RELATIONSHIPS . . . what a shame,
    too, in that it's great!

    It makes it clear why there's a need to build your own personal network,
    then shows you how to go about getting it off the ground . . . the ideas
    contained can be used in countless business situations, as well as
    in your personal life.

    There were only two cassette tapes in the program . . . yet they
    contained so many valuable tidbits in them that I found it hard
    just trying to select these few to cite:

    * Call somebody on his or her birthday. You'll do a lot of business
    that way.

    * Find what a person is most proud of.

    * You don't have to know everybody as long as you know people
    who do.

    * Remember something about everybody you meet. Then find a creative
    way to keep in touch with that person.

    * 70% of all jobs are from networking, 2% are from sending out resumes,
    10-12% from want ads, and 4% from people creating their own.

    * Acid test of hiring: Within 10 minutes of an interview, I'd ask
    myself, "How would I feel if that person was working for my
    competitors?" And if I'm not worried, that's the end of the interview.