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Frank Bettger

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Batting average
  
.202

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Frank Bettger


Runs batted in
  
6

Home runs
  
0

Children
  
Lyle Bettger

Frank Bettger How iraisedfromfauliretosuccessinsellingfrankbettger

Died
  
November 27, 1981, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, United States

Grandchildren
  
Paula Bettger, Lyle Bettger, Jr., Frank Bettger

People also search for
  
Lyle Bettger, Josip Kozarac, Mary Rolfe, Paula Bettger, Lyle Bettger, Jr.

Books
  
How I raised myself fro, How I Multiplied My Incom, How One Idea Multiplied, How I Learned the Secre, Benjamin Franklin's Secret of

Frank Bettger: How I Raised Myself from Failure to Success in Selling Book Summary


Franklin Lyle "Frank" Bettger (1888–1981) was a self-help author and the father of longtime actor Lyle Bettger.

Contents

Frank Bettger TOP 19 QUOTES BY FRANK BETTGER AZ Quotes

Baseball

Frank Bettger httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen00dFra

He played Major League Baseball with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1910 under the name Frank Betcher and was demoted from playing time. Disappointed, he asked the manager why he was demoted. The manager responded that he lacked enthusiasm. Bettger told the manager: "I'm just trying to hide my nervousness." The manager advised: "Try something else. That's not working." From that moment on, he played with vigorous enthusiasm until his baseball career was cut short by an arm injury.

Business career

After his brief baseball career, Bettger returned to his native Philadelphia, where he started collecting accounts for a furniture store on a bike. He then started selling life insurance for the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania but was not initially successful, and considered quitting after 10 months. During a moment of reflection, he remembered what his baseball manager told him about his lack of enthusiasm. So he made a commitment to himself to start acting enthusiastically in his insurance presentations.

He also met a successful salesman and took his advice to read the Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. A light went on in his mind when he realized that Franklin's Socratic method of asking "key" questions might work with selling policies. He tried it, it worked, and Bettger began to perfect his technique with great enthusiasm.

Writer and lecturer

After succeeding in life insurance sales and becoming Top Salesman for 20 years with Fidelity Mutual, he met Dale Carnegie. Carnegie encouraged Bettger to write his first best-selling books: How I Raised Myself from Failure to Success in Selling and How I Multiplied My Income and Happiness in Selling. How I Raised Myself... was translated into over a dozen languages, including British English, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Spanish, and Swedish. Bettger also gave a series of lectures to Jaycees organizations nationwide with Dale Carnegie.

Frank Bettger wrote a last book, entitled How I Learned the Secrets of Success in Selling, in 1960. The book focused on his life and lessons he learned during his short baseball career, and reflected how those lessons learned at an early age helped mold him into the success he became.

Bettger held insurance policies that would have benefited his wife after he died, but he lived into his 90s. Consequently, he and his wife outlived their assets. Members of the National Speakers Association contributed to help the couple meet their financial needs. After Frank died, Mrs. Bettger repaid the money from insurance proceeds. The money was then put into a fund dedicated to others in need, thus providing the original funding for the Professional Speakers Benefit Fund (PSBF). The mission of the PSBF is to help other members who may be indigent, face catastrophic health emergencies or losses, or outlive their assets.

In the Mad Men (season 6) episode, "A Tale of Two Cities", enthusiastic account man Bob Benson is shown listening to a recording of Bettger's first book and later taking actions that earn him increased responsibilities.

References

Frank Bettger Wikipedia