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  3. I want to strangle someone...

I want to strangle someone...

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  • V Vikram A Punathambekar

    Daniel Turini wrote: "I don't need to test it to know it doesn't work." WTF? :wtf: You can congratulate yourself for not having strangled him. If you had ;) , you'd have lost the order and got yourself a bad reputation. You haven't said in your post if you got the order or not, but at the very least, you made a very good impression. No wonder people applying for sales/marketing jobs have to go through stress interviews. :) Cheers, Vikram.


    http://www.geocities.com/vpunathambekar "It's like hitting water with your fist. There's all sorts of motion and noise at impact, and no impression left whatsoever shortly thereafter." — gantww.

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    Daniel Turini
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: You haven't said in your post if you got the order or not, but at the very least, you made a very good impression. A typical sales of our software takes one month: often, people want to try before they buy, and they'll try :) I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

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    • J J4amieC

      If thats in english remember to use "can not" instead of "can't" (or the typo caunt - prey you dont double-typo that word) One thing I hat to see on CV's is abbreviations, and concatenations.... the latter are for oral english not written.

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      C Offline
      cyberience
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      Well as far as gamatics you are correct, and the word caunt is my own made up word, but just to put your mind at rest, I don't actually say that on the CV, I say that I am a person who beleives that nothing is impossible, and tanacious in seeking out the solution and completing the projects. I have to rely on the spell checker though due to my Dyslexia, though minor, does cause me some embarresment. Thanks for your insite though! :)

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      • D David Wulff

        I hope one day to have your level of restraint. I would have lasted the first time, but the second time he tried it on then I would have blown it: "Well in just the five minutes you been here you seem to know the capabilities of our software more than I do in the five years I've been working with it, so perhaps you would be so kind as to come up here and give the demonstration for me? I'd be really interested to know what my own software can and cannot do." That's why I'm not a salesman...


        Ðavid Wulff Audioscrobbler :: flickr Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen (QT)

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        Daniel Turini
        wrote on last edited by
        #13

        David Wulff wrote: I hope one day to have your level of restraint. It comes only with a lot of training, a few years ago, I'd have jump on the table and grabbed him. David Wulff wrote: "Well in just the five minutes you been here you seem to know the capabilities of our software more than I do in the five years I've been working with it, so perhaps you would be so kind as to come up here and give the demonstration for me? I'd be really interested to know what my own software can and cannot do." LOL. May I save that for future use? :) I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

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        • L Lost User

          I agree about abbrevistions on a CV, you want to look your best there, but for other general writing, and most of that being e-mail these days, can't is OK, its also used heavily in novels, for both spoken and descriptive parts. Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception. || Nunc est bibendum!

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          J4amieC
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          Yeah, Im lax on Messenger and Email too - but for official writing on things like documentation, CV's & articles I personally prefer not to see things like can't..... aside form the fact that we english speakers can never quite agree on our apostrophe useage :D

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          • D Daniel Turini

            For the last few months, I'm working both as a development director and as a sales director. It's the first time in ~15 years working that I do something that's not programming or programming related, and it's being generally fun, although not half as fun as programming. But I digress. Yesterday, I went to this bank to sell our product. I'm used to IT people get scared of our product (I'm selling a credit assessment software to a bank that only does credit, people get concerned about their jobs), but this guy made me want to strangle him during the presentation. I started showing our software in a meeting with 10 people from various departments, for over an hour. Everyone loving the software, and how it would help them. Then, a guy from the software development department enters the meeting (just one hour late for the meeting), and become clearly upset. Every single feature I demonstrate needs to pass through this 10 minute ritual: - "This doesn't work" - "Yes, it works, I can show you." (I click here and there and demonstrate it working). "See? It's working!" - "No, it doesn't" - "Sorry, I don't understand. Are you calling me a liar? You're seeing this working right now!" - "Yes, but working is one thing. Stability is another one". - "We have this running in a lot of huge companies for over 5 years now. None of them with stability problems. I can get you in touch with them, if you don't believe me." - "Yes, but none as big as ours" - "No, you're wrong: some are 20 times bigger than yours" - "Yes, but those are not banks" (as if this meant something) - "No, you're wrong: we have banks using our software that are 4 times bigger than yours" - "HA! Weren't they 20 times bigger than our bank?" - "I meant the other companies" - "I don't care the other companies. Neither the banks. We have tried this here and I know that this doesn't work. Your software will stop working at least 5 times a day" - "You can run our software for 15 days as a demo. If it fails only once, you can forget about us and I pay you a beer" (trying to be a nice guy) - "I don't need to test it to know it doesn't work." - "Ok, so I think we should finish our presentation here" - "Oh, no, please, continue, I'm just pointing that this specific feature doesn't work" Then, this ritual repeated for every single feature (including the beer part) I demonstrated over 2 hours. After the meeting ended, and this guy went away, a girl (the user) came to us and said: "Your software is great! It will be very helpful here, as we have been asking

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            ColinDavies
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            Wow, what restraint you have. I would have walked out telling everyone that their IT team was screwing them through incompetence. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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            • J J4amieC

              If thats in english remember to use "can not" instead of "can't" (or the typo caunt - prey you dont double-typo that word) One thing I hat to see on CV's is abbreviations, and concatenations.... the latter are for oral english not written.

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              R Offline
              Roger Wright
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              J4amieC wrote: preay you don**'**t ;P "...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley

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              • C CP Visitor

                Weiye Chen wrote: Anyway, i think they can disband their IT department. No one would trust the people there anymore. What would you do if you were invited to the presentation of a product that claims to make your job superfluous? :~

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                David Wulff
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                Ask them if they're hiring.


                Ðavid Wulff Audioscrobbler :: flickr Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen (QT)

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                • D Daniel Turini

                  For the last few months, I'm working both as a development director and as a sales director. It's the first time in ~15 years working that I do something that's not programming or programming related, and it's being generally fun, although not half as fun as programming. But I digress. Yesterday, I went to this bank to sell our product. I'm used to IT people get scared of our product (I'm selling a credit assessment software to a bank that only does credit, people get concerned about their jobs), but this guy made me want to strangle him during the presentation. I started showing our software in a meeting with 10 people from various departments, for over an hour. Everyone loving the software, and how it would help them. Then, a guy from the software development department enters the meeting (just one hour late for the meeting), and become clearly upset. Every single feature I demonstrate needs to pass through this 10 minute ritual: - "This doesn't work" - "Yes, it works, I can show you." (I click here and there and demonstrate it working). "See? It's working!" - "No, it doesn't" - "Sorry, I don't understand. Are you calling me a liar? You're seeing this working right now!" - "Yes, but working is one thing. Stability is another one". - "We have this running in a lot of huge companies for over 5 years now. None of them with stability problems. I can get you in touch with them, if you don't believe me." - "Yes, but none as big as ours" - "No, you're wrong: some are 20 times bigger than yours" - "Yes, but those are not banks" (as if this meant something) - "No, you're wrong: we have banks using our software that are 4 times bigger than yours" - "HA! Weren't they 20 times bigger than our bank?" - "I meant the other companies" - "I don't care the other companies. Neither the banks. We have tried this here and I know that this doesn't work. Your software will stop working at least 5 times a day" - "You can run our software for 15 days as a demo. If it fails only once, you can forget about us and I pay you a beer" (trying to be a nice guy) - "I don't need to test it to know it doesn't work." - "Ok, so I think we should finish our presentation here" - "Oh, no, please, continue, I'm just pointing that this specific feature doesn't work" Then, this ritual repeated for every single feature (including the beer part) I demonstrated over 2 hours. After the meeting ended, and this guy went away, a girl (the user) came to us and said: "Your software is great! It will be very helpful here, as we have been asking

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                  M Offline
                  Michael A Barnhart
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  For a sales man, not killing himself due to unknown company politics, is a challenge. My first place of employment after college had one guy who just did not get it right. One day after a meeting I and a fiend (also a new hire) were venting on how stupid his directions were. After a few minutes our secretary politely (and very quietly) said, ok you two, every one knows you are right, but remember he is my cousin. We shut up not to offend her. Later one of the leads stopped by and said, You probably should be aware that K's maiden name is xxxx (oh! daughter to our VP!) need I explain the relationship to the idiot? I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that I can think of.

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                  • C ColinDavies

                    Wow, what restraint you have. I would have walked out telling everyone that their IT team was screwing them through incompetence. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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                    Daniel Turini
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #19

                    ColinDavies wrote: I would have walked out telling everyone that their IT team was screwing them through incompetence. In this case, I'd playing his game. It was my first presentation there, and no one knew me yet. This would ruin my image, and he would win. By defeating each claim he made, and proving things work, I gained the other people, the users, who are those who pays the bill :) I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

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                    • J J4amieC

                      Yeah, Im lax on Messenger and Email too - but for official writing on things like documentation, CV's & articles I personally prefer not to see things like can't..... aside form the fact that we english speakers can never quite agree on our apostrophe useage :D

                      C Offline
                      C Offline
                      Colin Angus Mackay
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      J4amieC wrote: aside form the fact that we english speakers can never quite agree on our apostrophe useage I didn't know there were any arguments on apostrophe usage. The apostrophe is in place of missing letters.


                      My: Blog | Photos WDevs.com - Open Source Code Hosting, Blogs, FTP, Mail and More

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • D Daniel Turini

                        For the last few months, I'm working both as a development director and as a sales director. It's the first time in ~15 years working that I do something that's not programming or programming related, and it's being generally fun, although not half as fun as programming. But I digress. Yesterday, I went to this bank to sell our product. I'm used to IT people get scared of our product (I'm selling a credit assessment software to a bank that only does credit, people get concerned about their jobs), but this guy made me want to strangle him during the presentation. I started showing our software in a meeting with 10 people from various departments, for over an hour. Everyone loving the software, and how it would help them. Then, a guy from the software development department enters the meeting (just one hour late for the meeting), and become clearly upset. Every single feature I demonstrate needs to pass through this 10 minute ritual: - "This doesn't work" - "Yes, it works, I can show you." (I click here and there and demonstrate it working). "See? It's working!" - "No, it doesn't" - "Sorry, I don't understand. Are you calling me a liar? You're seeing this working right now!" - "Yes, but working is one thing. Stability is another one". - "We have this running in a lot of huge companies for over 5 years now. None of them with stability problems. I can get you in touch with them, if you don't believe me." - "Yes, but none as big as ours" - "No, you're wrong: some are 20 times bigger than yours" - "Yes, but those are not banks" (as if this meant something) - "No, you're wrong: we have banks using our software that are 4 times bigger than yours" - "HA! Weren't they 20 times bigger than our bank?" - "I meant the other companies" - "I don't care the other companies. Neither the banks. We have tried this here and I know that this doesn't work. Your software will stop working at least 5 times a day" - "You can run our software for 15 days as a demo. If it fails only once, you can forget about us and I pay you a beer" (trying to be a nice guy) - "I don't need to test it to know it doesn't work." - "Ok, so I think we should finish our presentation here" - "Oh, no, please, continue, I'm just pointing that this specific feature doesn't work" Then, this ritual repeated for every single feature (including the beer part) I demonstrated over 2 hours. After the meeting ended, and this guy went away, a girl (the user) came to us and said: "Your software is great! It will be very helpful here, as we have been asking

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                        X Offline
                        Xiangyang Liu
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #21

                        Daniel Turini wrote: After the meeting ended, and this guy went away, a girl (the user) came to us and said: "Your software is great! It will be very helpful here, as we have been asking this for 2 years for our IT department and they kept saying 'it can't be done'. Now we saw it working" Instead of strangling the guy, hug (and kiss if permitted) the girl. :-D[

                        My articles and software tools

                        ](http://mysite.verizon.net/XiangYangL/index.htm)

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • M Michael A Barnhart

                          For a sales man, not killing himself due to unknown company politics, is a challenge. My first place of employment after college had one guy who just did not get it right. One day after a meeting I and a fiend (also a new hire) were venting on how stupid his directions were. After a few minutes our secretary politely (and very quietly) said, ok you two, every one knows you are right, but remember he is my cousin. We shut up not to offend her. Later one of the leads stopped by and said, You probably should be aware that K's maiden name is xxxx (oh! daughter to our VP!) need I explain the relationship to the idiot? I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that I can think of.

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                          Vikram A Punathambekar
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #22

                          :confused: I think I'm the idiot, I haven't understood it. :~ Can you spell it out for me? Cheers, Vikram.


                          http://www.geocities.com/vpunathambekar "It's like hitting water with your fist. There's all sorts of motion and noise at impact, and no impression left whatsoever shortly thereafter." — gantww.

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                          • V Vikram A Punathambekar

                            :confused: I think I'm the idiot, I haven't understood it. :~ Can you spell it out for me? Cheers, Vikram.


                            http://www.geocities.com/vpunathambekar "It's like hitting water with your fist. There's all sorts of motion and noise at impact, and no impression left whatsoever shortly thereafter." — gantww.

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                            M Offline
                            Michael A Barnhart
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #23

                            Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: Can you spell it out for me? :sigh: You expect me to spell correctly? She was the VP's daughter, so her cousin was the VP's nephew. His sisters child. All in the family and no wrong shall be seen. I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that I can think of.

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                            • C ColinDavies

                              Wow, what restraint you have. I would have walked out telling everyone that their IT team was screwing them through incompetence. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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                              L Offline
                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #24

                              I think the best thing is to get the sale and let the users find out how bad their IT department is. Elaine :rose: The tigress is here :-D

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                              • M Michael A Barnhart

                                Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: Can you spell it out for me? :sigh: You expect me to spell correctly? She was the VP's daughter, so her cousin was the VP's nephew. His sisters child. All in the family and no wrong shall be seen. I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that I can think of.

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                                V Offline
                                Vikram A Punathambekar
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #25

                                Ok, now I understand. The 'K' part threw me off the track. :-O Cheers, Vikram.


                                http://www.geocities.com/vpunathambekar "It's like hitting water with your fist. There's all sorts of motion and noise at impact, and no impression left whatsoever shortly thereafter." — gantww.

                                M 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • J J4amieC

                                  If thats in english remember to use "can not" instead of "can't" (or the typo caunt - prey you dont double-typo that word) One thing I hat to see on CV's is abbreviations, and concatenations.... the latter are for oral english not written.

                                  D Offline
                                  D Offline
                                  David Crow
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #26

                                  J4amieC wrote: If thats in english remember to use "can not" instead of "can't" What do you have against contractions?


                                  "Ideas are a dime a dozen. People who put them into action are priceless." - Unknown

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                                  • D Daniel Turini

                                    For the last few months, I'm working both as a development director and as a sales director. It's the first time in ~15 years working that I do something that's not programming or programming related, and it's being generally fun, although not half as fun as programming. But I digress. Yesterday, I went to this bank to sell our product. I'm used to IT people get scared of our product (I'm selling a credit assessment software to a bank that only does credit, people get concerned about their jobs), but this guy made me want to strangle him during the presentation. I started showing our software in a meeting with 10 people from various departments, for over an hour. Everyone loving the software, and how it would help them. Then, a guy from the software development department enters the meeting (just one hour late for the meeting), and become clearly upset. Every single feature I demonstrate needs to pass through this 10 minute ritual: - "This doesn't work" - "Yes, it works, I can show you." (I click here and there and demonstrate it working). "See? It's working!" - "No, it doesn't" - "Sorry, I don't understand. Are you calling me a liar? You're seeing this working right now!" - "Yes, but working is one thing. Stability is another one". - "We have this running in a lot of huge companies for over 5 years now. None of them with stability problems. I can get you in touch with them, if you don't believe me." - "Yes, but none as big as ours" - "No, you're wrong: some are 20 times bigger than yours" - "Yes, but those are not banks" (as if this meant something) - "No, you're wrong: we have banks using our software that are 4 times bigger than yours" - "HA! Weren't they 20 times bigger than our bank?" - "I meant the other companies" - "I don't care the other companies. Neither the banks. We have tried this here and I know that this doesn't work. Your software will stop working at least 5 times a day" - "You can run our software for 15 days as a demo. If it fails only once, you can forget about us and I pay you a beer" (trying to be a nice guy) - "I don't need to test it to know it doesn't work." - "Ok, so I think we should finish our presentation here" - "Oh, no, please, continue, I'm just pointing that this specific feature doesn't work" Then, this ritual repeated for every single feature (including the beer part) I demonstrated over 2 hours. After the meeting ended, and this guy went away, a girl (the user) came to us and said: "Your software is great! It will be very helpful here, as we have been asking

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                                    T Offline
                                    Tom Archer
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #27

                                    Yep. Extremely standard situation. I always cringe when showing software to the dev head because in all probability it's something they either wanted to do or were supposed to have done. Therefore, they tend to be very antagonisitc and adversarial. You just need to go in knowing that there will always be at least one person in a meeting of that type with such an agenda and be prepared for it.

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                                    • D David Crow

                                      J4amieC wrote: If thats in english remember to use "can not" instead of "can't" What do you have against contractions?


                                      "Ideas are a dime a dozen. People who put them into action are priceless." - Unknown

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                                      R Offline
                                      Rhys Gravell
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #28

                                      OK, I'll dare you to ask a new mother that ;P Rhys A bus station is where a bus stops. A train station is where a train stops. On my desk I have a workstation... Vampireware /n/, a project, capable of sucking the lifeblood out of anyone unfortunate enough to be assigned to it, which never actually sees the light of day, but nonetheless refuses to die.

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                                      • R Rhys Gravell

                                        OK, I'll dare you to ask a new mother that ;P Rhys A bus station is where a bus stops. A train station is where a train stops. On my desk I have a workstation... Vampireware /n/, a project, capable of sucking the lifeblood out of anyone unfortunate enough to be assigned to it, which never actually sees the light of day, but nonetheless refuses to die.

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                                        David Crow
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #29

                                        Gotta love homonyms.


                                        "Ideas are a dime a dozen. People who put them into action are priceless." - Unknown

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                                        • M Michael A Barnhart

                                          Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: Can you spell it out for me? :sigh: You expect me to spell correctly? She was the VP's daughter, so her cousin was the VP's nephew. His sisters child. All in the family and no wrong shall be seen. I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that I can think of.

                                          D Offline
                                          D Offline
                                          David Crow
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #30

                                          Michael A. Barnhart wrote: She was the VP's daughter, so her cousin was the VP's nephew. His sisters child. All in the family and no wrong shall be seen. Wow! Nepotism at its finest.


                                          "Ideas are a dime a dozen. People who put them into action are priceless." - Unknown

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