Donald John Trump (born June 14, 1946) is an American business magnate, socialite, television personality, and author. He is the Chairman and CEO of the Trump Organization, a US-based real-estate developer. Trump is also the founder of Trump Entertainment Resorts, which operates numerous casinos and hotels
across the world. Trump's extravagant lifestyle and outspoken manner
have made him a celebrity for years, a status which was only amplified
by the success of his NBC reality show, The Apprentice (of which he serves as host and executive producer). “If
you want to sell a car and you spend five dollars to wash and polish it and
then apply a little extra elbow grease, suddenly you find you can charge an
extra four hundred dollars,” says Trump, “and get it.”
In the fine art of deal making that Trump has mastered, perception is
often one of the most important factors that stands in the way of success. As a
good salesman, Trump found it crucial to control the perceptions he was
giving off to the other side. Aside from his all-important self-grooming in
order to look as professional as possible, Trump became an expert in keeping up
appearances when it came to his deals.
Trump’s success came from the fact that he was always able to maintain the
upper hand in making a deal. While he was often in an inferior position to be
making demands, Trump managed to convince property owners that his terms were
the only ones worth meeting. “If you want to buy something, it’s obviously in
your best interest to convince the seller that what he’s got isn’t worth very
much,” he says. By over-selling himself and resorting to tactics of fear and
guilt, Trump would always make himself appear as if he were the only man for
the job.
Trump had an ability to make people see things the way he wanted them to and
knowing this, used it to his advantage in making his multi-million dollar
business deals. “When I build something for somebody, I always add $50 million
or $60 million onto the price,” he says. “My guys come in, they say it's going
to cost $75 million. I say it's going to cost $125 million, and I build it for
$100 million. Basically, I did a lousy job. But they think I did a great job.”
When Trump was first starting out in the business, he had little experience
building the types of projects he was envisioning and no experience whatsoever
in a prime real estate market such as Manhattan. Thus, he encountered a lot of
resistance when proposing his plans. But, being a master of persuasion, Trump
did not let that stand in his way. In one of his very first negotiations to get
the rail yard property along the Hudson River, Trump recalls that when speaking
to the owner, “I couldn’t sell him on my experience or my accomplishment, so
instead I sold him on my energy and my enthusiasm.”
In a similar situation when Trump was working on transforming The Commodore
into the Grand Hotel, he instructed the architect to, “Make it appear that we’d
spent a huge sum on the drawings. A good-looking presentation goes a long way.”
Trump believed that a presentation that looked as if it were put together by an
established firm with a large budget would be more credible than a few sketches
done in Trump’s little, dingy apartment.
By making sellers believe that Trump was the best and only person to lead a
redevelopment project, he was able to manipulate and manufacture the terms of
his own success.
http://www.evancarmichael.com/Famous-Entrepreneurs/560/Lesson-4-Play-On-Perception.html