What Happens If You Put Two People In a Meeting and Try to Outsell Each Other

To continue along the topic of having conversations, let’s talk about meetings.

Depending on how the meetings go, they can add on to the relationship, or they can burn the bridge you have with the other person.

I’ve seen meetings go sour, and they weren’t the most enjoyable to witness.

There was one meeting I was shadowing that resulted in the office visitor getting up and leaving in the middle of the meeting. Didn’t even bother to shake hands before parting ways because he was just too frustrated.

You might be wondering, what went wrong?

Well, let’s just say there was a misunderstanding. Both parties of the meeting were trying to sell each other and playing a game of ‘who caves into the other person’s offer first.’

That is truly a one-of-a-kind moment that I’ll laugh at many years later and an unforgettable business lesson.

Thankfully, I rarely get into meetings with those types of people. I can sense them from miles away thanks to my spidey-business senses and instantly reject them.

Though I will admit, some of them are pretty good at hiding it, which I actually respect because that tells me they’re doing something right.

But part of it also has to do with where you look too.

There are certain places where you’ll find hordes of people who are desperate to sell something to anything that breathes.

From my experience, Lunchclub is one of those sanctuaries that keeps those people out. Instead of going out to networking events, Lunchclub will set up one-on-one meetings with relevant people for you.

And if you have my book, How to Become an Email Titan, and apply what I teach in the “How to Be the Unforgettable Networker” appendix, then you’re going to have a great, profitable time.

As far as I know, Lunchclub still has a waiting list. But if you use my link below, you’ll be able to get in instantly.

Here you go:

https://lunchclub.com/?invite_code=ellisen

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