The Psychology of Salesmanship
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Psychology of Salesmanship, by William Walker Atkinson
TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:
The author's use of three asterisks ( ) to serve as ellipses has been preserved as printed in the original publication.
BY WILLIAM WALKER ATKINSON
L.N. FOWLER & COMPANY 7, Imperial Arcade, Ludgate Circus London, E.C., England
1912 THE ELIZABETH TOWNE CO. HOLYOKE, MASS.
Copyright 1912 By ELIZABETH TOWNE
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SALESMANSHIP
PSYCHOLOGY IN BUSINESS
Until the last few years the mere mention of the word psychology in connection with business was apt to be greeted with a shrug of the shoulders, a significant raising of the eyebrows—and a change of the subject. Psychology was a subject that savored of the class room, or else was thought to be somehow concerned with the soul, or possibly related to the abnormal phenomena generally classified as psychic. The average business man was apt to impatiently resent the introduction into business of class room topics, or speculation regarding the soul, or of theories and tales regarding clairvoyance, telepathy, or general spookiness —for these were the things included in his concept of psychology.
But a change has come to the man in business. He has heard much of late years re garding psychology in business affairs, and has read something on the subject. He understands now that psychology means the science of the mind and is not necessarily the same as metaphysics or psychism. He has had brought home to him the fact that psychology plays a most important part in business, and that it is quite worth his while to acquaint himself with its fundamental principles. In fact, if he has thought sufficiently on the subject, he will have seen that the entire process of selling goods, personally, or by means of advertising or display, is essentially a mental process depending upon the state of mind induced in the purchaser, and that these states of mind are induced solely by reason of certain established principles of psychology. Whether the salesman, or advertiser, realizes this or not, he is employing psychological principles in attracting the attention, arousing the interest, creating the desire, and moving the will of the purchaser of his goods.