Skip to main content

"All of Life is a Trade": The Lesson School Forgot to Teach Us

 There is a quote from the book "369 Hours of Punishment" that perfectly captures our modern daily lives:

"In schools, they don’t teach us how to be good at this craft, but our whole life is a trade."

Most of us cringe when we hear the word "sales" or "trade." We imagine pushy representatives or people trying to talk us into something we don't need. But the truth is, trading isn't just about exchanging money for goods. It is the psychological art of mutual exchange.

Why We Are All "Traders" 

While school was testing us on South American capitals, nobody prepared us for the fact that from the moment we wake up, we step onto the "marketplace." Here are a few examples from real life:

The Job Interview: You are the "product," and the employer is the "buyer." Your skills are the features, and the solution to their problem is the benefit you are selling. Your CV? That’s just your advertising brochure.

The First Date: You dress well and try to be charming. Congratulations! You just ran a marketing campaign for yourself to "buy" the other person’s interest.

Personal Relationships: Even choosing a movie on a Friday night is a negotiation. You offer arguments (value) to gain agreement (a deal). Compromise is a masterclass in trade negotiations.

Social Media: Your profile is your storefront. You "sell" an image to gain attention or influence.

The Craft That Makes the Difference

Why do we often see less qualified people land higher positions? Because they have mastered "the craft." Traditional education emphasizes facts, but life requires soft skills:

Empathy: Understanding what the person across from you actually wants.

Resilience: Hearing "no" ten times before you get to a "yes."

Communication: Turning an idea into something so attractive that the other person wants to be a part of it.

You don't need to become a manipulative salesperson. You just need to realize that the best trade is the one where both parties win.

School might be over, but the real training in "trade" begins every morning. The question isn't whether you are selling, but how good your "merchandise" is and whether you know how to tell its story. 

                                                    

Author Sezgin Ismailov

Comments

  1. All the secrets of business are in knowing something that no one else knows.

    Aristotle Onassis

    ReplyDelete
  2. The first rule of business is to do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

    Charles Dickens

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sell ​​a man a fish and it feeds him for a day, teach a man to fish and you have lost a great business opportunity.
    Karl Marx

    ReplyDelete
  4. “Everyone lives by selling something.”

    Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish novelist and poet

    ReplyDelete
  5. “Nobody likes to be sold to, but everybody likes to buy.”
    Earl Taylor, salesman

    ReplyDelete
  6. “Sell, don’t tell. When you talk, you don’t sell.”

    Robert Nadeau, American Aikido teacher

    ReplyDelete
  7. “Value the relationship (with the customer) more than meeting the sales quota.”

    Jeff Jitomer, author

    ReplyDelete
  8. “Sales relationships are like fish. They stink after three days.”

    Thomas Roy Crowell

    ReplyDelete
  9. “People buy emotionally, but they defend their choices logically.”

    Jerry Acuff,

    ReplyDelete
  10. “Sales success comes when you push your limits every day.”

    Omar Perreau,

    ReplyDelete
  11. “When selling, never answer a question that hasn’t been asked.”

    Jeff Tull

    ReplyDelete
  12. “Customer contact is what business is all about.”

    Jay Leno

    ReplyDelete
  13. “In sales, there are usually four or five nos before you get a yes.”

    Jack Canfield,

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment