A. A career in sales
When Carl left school, he took the first job he was offered – in
telesales1.
He thought telemarketing2 sounded quite glamorous
but soon found that most of the people he phoned hated
cold calling3 and put the phone down when he tried the
hard sell4. However, he persevered
and found he became quite skilled at persuading customers to
part with their money5.
He then moved into a job on a
TV shopping channel6,
where he specialised in selling
merchandise7 for the leisure market.
He did so well that he set up his own sportswear company and hasn’t
looked back8 since.
- 1 selling or marketing goods and services by phone
- 2 selling or marketing goods and services by phone
- 3 phoning people who have not requested a call in order to try to sell them something
- 4 attempt to sell something by being very forceful or persuasive
- 5 spend money
- 6 a TV channel devoted to selling products
- 7 products that are bought and sold
- 8 has moved forward successfully
B. Buying and selling
A person’s purchasing power is the ability they have to buy goods,
i.e. the amount of money they have available.
If you shop around, you try different companies or shops to see which offers best value.
If you want to buy something, you need to find a shop that stocks it.
[keeps a supply of it; keeps it in stock]
If you trade something up, usually a car or a house,
you buy one that is of higher value than the one you had before. (opp. = trade down)
People sometimes make a purchasing decision based on brand loyalty.
[confidence in that particular make and a tendency always to choose it]
Supermarkets sometimes sell an item for less than it costs them in order to attract a lot of people into the shop,
where they will also buy more profitable items – the item being sold at a low price is called a loss leader.
For a company to sell its products, it has to price them appropriately. [give them a price]
If a company finds a niche market, it finds a specialised group of customers
with particular interests that that company can meet.
If an item is said to come/go under the hammer, it is sold at an auction.
[sale of goods or property where people make gradually increasing bids and the item is then sold to the highest bidder]
C. A career in business
A few years ago Tina started her own software development business, which turned out to be very
lucrative1. However, she got increasingly
irritated by all the red tape2 involved in the
administration3 of a business and when a larger company
contacted her with a proposition4, suggesting a
takeover5, she was interested. At first, the two companies
could not agree on all the details of the agreement but they managed to reach a compromise6
and hammer out a deal7 without too much delay. In many ways Tina was sad that her company had been
swallowed up8 but she has used the money raised by the sale of her
capital assets9 to invest in10
a business start-up11: an online holiday property letting agency12.
- 1 producing a lot of money
- 2 bureaucracy (negative)
- 3 organisation and arrangement of operations
- 4 formal offer
- 5 agreement in which one company takes control of another one (compare with merger, in which two companies join together to become one)
- 6 come to an agreement in which both sides reduce their demands a little
- 7 talk in detail until a business agreement is made
- 8 taken over by a larger company
- 9 buildings and machines owned by a company
- 10 put money into
- 11 new company
- 12 a business organising the rental of holiday houses and flats
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