Treat Me Like a Customer, Louis Upkins, Jr.
Treat Me Like a Customer, Louis Upkins, Jr.
List: $22.99 | Sale: $16.09
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Treat Me Like a Customer
Using Lessons from Work to Succeed in Life

Author: Louis Upkins, Jr., Bob Buford

Narrator: Louis Upkins

Unabridged: 5 hr 42 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Zondervan

Published: 01/05/2010


Synopsis

Be As Successful at Home As You Are at WorkSo many professionals work non-stop to secure the next rung on the corporate ladder. Why then do they struggle to enjoy their success even at the peak of their career? According to entrepreneur Louis Upkins, by using a simple customer-service principle, you can learn how to be just as successful at home as you are at work. Fulfill your calling as a parent and spouse by treating those closest to you as well as you would treat your customers.Powerful stories and clear, practical teaching help leaders at every level reorder their priorities and bring their lives back into balance in this unabridged audio download of Treat Me Like a Customer. You will learn: • How to balance the demands of work and home • What your loved ones really want • How to regain trust and build integrity • Why a good fight isn’t the end of the world • How to protect your family from competition By applying these and other tactics explained by Upkins, you will reconnect with your family and experience the same success at home that you enjoy at work.

About Louis Upkins, Jr.

Louis Upkins, Jr. lives in Franklin, Tennessee with his wife, Charita; son, Caleb; and daughter, Zoe. He is an entrepreneur widely known in the corporate world for successfully creating beneficial strategic alliances and partnerships with Fortune 500 companies in the sports and entertainment industries.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Edward on October 06, 2013

Louis Upkins is a Christian man and has written his book with this target audience in mind. Others can benefit from the general principles that he offers. However, that is his background and it is the history that he draws from in expressing his message. And his message is simple and largely sensible......more