Los Banos Rotary Club History
Sales
Executive Gives Tips On New Personnel
The important
place of sales personnel in tomorrow’s business world was emphasized to
members of the Rotary Club Tuesday noon by J. T. McElroy, sales manager of the
San Joaquin Power division of the P. G. & E. Warning that continued growth
and prosperity of this nation depends on full employment, full production and
efficient distribution of goods, McElroy emphasized the part that salesmanship
must take toward this end, and the importance of proper and exacting selection
of the people who must sell the goods produced.
Before the war, the
speaker reminded, this country produced more goods than could be sold, tributors
again catch up with the necessities of the people, business will again turn from
a seller’s to buyer’s market.
Describing the particular
attributes that constitute the basis of a good salesman, McElroy listed as of
first importance maturity plus the ability to get along with people, stability,
perseverance, leadership, ambition, industriousness, loyalty, and the ability
to solve problems concerning people.
Concluding with a few suggestion and
word of advice to the salesman, McElroy declared the secret of success can be
summed up in exactly seventeen words: know your stuff; call on a lot of people
and ask them to buy; use common horse sense.
The speaker was introduced
by M. D. Wheat, Los Banos district manager of the P. G. & E., Wheat himself
was guest speaker at the Rotary club luncheon a week ago, giving an entertaining
reminiscence of the years he participated in major league baseball, of his personal
experiences and his impressions of some of baseball’s great players. Wheat
said that Babe Ruth was, in his opinion, the greatest ball player of all time,
who not only could hit further and more often than any other man but who amassed
a surprising number of single, double, and 3-base hits as well as establishing
an enviable record for stolen bases. For pitching honors, Wheat’s choice
was Walter Johnson.
Doctor Leo Lymp, who took over as custodian of the Rotary
Rabbitry last week, is continuing the honors this week as there were no absentees
from the last meeting. The rabbits, which form the basis of a year-long attendance
contest, must be cared for and nurtured from week to week by such member as might
be listed for non-attendance.