Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
Sam observed dryly, "I was sure of that. Now, about the subject. I've
talked to Eli Camperdown and what he and others would like is for you -to
describe some of your selling experiences-from a feminine point of view.
There's a suggested title: 'A Woman Looks at Pharmaceutical Detailing.'"
"I can't see it on a movie marquee," Celia said, "but it'll do,"
"You should keep your talk light, possibly humorous," Sam continued.
"Nothing heavy or serious. Nothing controversial. And ten to fifteen
minutes should be enough."
Celia said thoughtfully, ". - - I see."
"If you like, you can submit a draft. Then I'll go over it and make
suggestions."
"I'll remember that offer," said Celia, who already had ideas about her
speech and had no intention of submitting anything.
"Sales in your territory have been excellent," Sam complimented her.
"Keep it up!"
"I intend to," she acknowledged, "though some new products would help,
By the way, what happened to the one Mr. Camperdown talked about a year
ago-Thalidomide?"
"We dropped it. Gave it back to Chemie-Griinenthal. Said thanks but no
thanks."
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"Why?"
"According to our research people," Sam explained, "it wasn't a good
drug. They tried it out in those old people's homes, as you arranged. As
a sleep aid it didn't seem to work."
"And that's the end?"
"So far as Felding-Roth is concerned. I just heard, though, that the
Merrell Company has taken Thalidomide on. They're calling it Kevadon and
they plan a big launching here and in Canada." He added, "With all the
success Thalidomide has had in Europe, that's not surprising."
"You sound unhappy," Celia said. "Do you think our company made a
mistake?"
Sam shrugged. "Maybe. But we can only sell what our research department
approves, and this is one they didn't." He hesitated, then said, "I may
as well tell you, Celia, there are a few people around here who are
criticizing you because our testing of Thalidomide was limited to old
people and wasn't more widespread -as Vincent Lord originally wanted."
"Are you one of the critics?"
"No. At the time, if you remember, I agreed with you."
"I do remember." Celia considered, then she asked, "Is the other
criticism important?"
"To you?" Sam shook his head. "I don't think so."
At home, during the evenings and weekends which followed, Celia worked
on her sales meeting speech. In the quiet, comfortable study-den she and
Andrew enjoyed sharing, she surrounded herself with papers and notes.
Watching her one Sunday, Andrew observed, "You're cooking up something,
aren't you?"
"Yes," she admitted, "I am."
"Will you tell me?"
"I'll tell you later," Celia said. "If I tell you now, you'll try to talk
me out of it."
Andrew smiled and was wise enough to leave it there.
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7
"I know that most of you are married," Celia said, looking out over the
sea of male faces that confronted her, "so you know how it is with us
women. We're often vague, we get mixed up, and sometimes forget things
altogether."
"Not you, sharp girl," someone near the front said softly, and Celia
smiled swiftly, but continued.
"One of the things I've forgotten is how long I'm supposed to speak
today. I've a vague notion of someone mentioning ten to fifteen minutes,
but that couldn't possibly be right, could it? After all, what woman
could make herself intimately known to five hundred men in that short
time?"
There was laughter and, from the back of the convention hall, a broad
Midwestern voice. "You can have as much of my time as you want, baby!"
This was followed by more laughter, wolf whistles, and cries of, "Same
here!", "Take all you need, kiddo!"
Leaning closer to the microphone in front of her on the speakers'
platform, Celia responded, "Thank you! I was hoping someone would say
that." She avoided meeting the eyes of Sam Hawthorne, watching her
intently from a few seats away.
It was Sam who, earlier that day, had told Celia, "At the opening of a
sales meeting everybody feels their oats. That's why the first day is
mostly hype. We try to get all the guys worked up---tell those who are
in from the field how great they are, what a topnotch outfit Felding-Roth
is, and how happy we are to have them on the team. After that, for the
next two days, we get down to more serious business."
"Am I part of the hype?" Celia had asked, having observed from the
program that she would be speaking during the after-noon of the first
convention day.
"Sure, and why not? You're the only female we have actively selling, a
lot of the guys have heard about you, and all of them want to see and
hear something different."
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Celia said, "I must try not to disappoint them."
At the time, she and Sam had been walking on Park Avenue, shortly after
breakfasting at the Waldorf with several others from the company. In an
hour the sales convention would begin. Meanwhile they were enjoying the
mild and sunny April morning. Clear fresh breezes were sweeping through
Manhattan and springtime proclaimed itself in massed tulips and daffodils
on Park Avenue's central malls. On either side, as always, were noisy,
never ceasing streams of multilane traffic. On sidewalks a tide of
hurrying inbound office workers swirled around Sam and Celia as they
strolled.
Celia, who had driven in from New Jersey early that morning and would
stay for the next two nights at the Waldorf, had dressed carefully for
this occasion. She had on a new tailored jacket and skirt of navy blue,
with a white ruffled blouse. Celia knew that she looked good and that the
combination was a happy blend of business crispness and femininity. She
was also glad to have shed the glasses which she had always disliked;
contact lenses, suggested by Andrew on their honeymoon, were now a
permanent part of her life.
Sam said suddenly, "You decided not to show me a draft of your speech."
"Oh dear!" she acknowledged. "It seems I forgot."
Sam raised his voice to be heard above the traffic. "It might seem that
way to others. But not to me, because I know there's almost nothing you
forget."
As Celia was about to reply, he silenced her with a gesture. "You don't
need to answer that. I know you're different from others who work for me,
which means you do things your own way, and so far you've mostly done
them right. But I'll offer just a word of warning, Celia-don't overreach.
Don't leave caution too far behind. Don't spoil a damn good record by
trying to do too much, or move too fast. That's all."
Celia had been silent and thoughtful as they turned, crossed Park Avenue
on a green light, and headed back toward the Waldorf. She wondered: would
what she had in mind for this afternoon be overreaching?
Now, with the sales convention under way, and as she faced the entire
sales force of Felding-Roth in the Waldorf's Astor Room, she realized she
was about to find out.
Her audience was mostly salesmen--detail men-plus supervi-
59
sors and district managers, all from outposts of the company as far apart as
Alaska, Florida, Hawaii, California, the Dakotas, Texas New Mexico, Maine
and places in between. For many it was their only direct contact, every
other year, with their superiors at company headquarters. It was a time for
camaraderie, the reviving of enthusiasm, the implantation of new ideas and
products, and even -for some--a renewal of idealism or dedication. There
were also some boisterous high spirits directed toward womanizing and
drinking-ingredients found at any sales convention of any industry anywhere.
"When I was invited to speak to you," Celia told her audience, "it was
suggested that I describe sonie of my experiences as a detail woman, and I
intend to do that. I was also cautioned not to say anything serious or
controversial. Well, I find that impossible. We all know this is a serious
business. We are part of a great company marketing important, life-giving
products. So we ought to be serious, and I intend to be. Something else I
believe is that we who are working on the firing line of sales should be
able to be frank, honest and, when necessary, critical with each other."
As she spoke, Celia was conscious not only of the large audience of
salesmen, but of a smaller one which occupied reserved seats in the front
two rows: Felding-Roth's senior executives-the chairman of the board,
president, executive vice president, vice president of sales, a dozen
others. Sam Hawthorne, his near-bald head standing out like a beacon, was
among the others.
Eli Camperdown, as befitted the president and CEO, sat front and center.
Beside him was the board chairman, Floyd VanHouten, now elderly and frail,
but who had led and shaped the company a decade earlier. Nowadays
VanHouten's duties were mainly limited to presiding at directors' meetings,
though his influence , mained strong.
"I used the word 'critical,' " Celia said into the microphone, "and
that-though some of you may not like it-is what I intend to be. The reason
is simple. I want to make a positive contribution to this occasion and not
be merely ornamental. Also, everything I shall say is within the limits of
the title I was handed, which is in the program: 'A Woman Looks at
Pharmaceutical Detailing.' "
She had their attention now, and knew it. Everyone was silent, listening.
That had been her worry earlier-whether she could hold this audience.
Coming off Park Avenue this morning and entering the
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crowded, smoky, noisy anteroom where the sales force was assembling, Celia
had experienced nervousness for the first time since agreeing to be a
convention speaker. Even to herself she admitted the Felding-Roth sales
convention was, at least for the time being, essentially a male exercise
with its backslapping bonhomie, crude jokes, inane loud laughter, all to
a background of unoriginal conversation. Celia lost count of the number
of times today she had heard, "Long time, no see!" mouthed as if a novel,
just-invented line.
"Just as you do," she went on, "I care very much about this company we
work for and the pharmaceutical industry of which we are a part. Both
have done fine things in the past and will do more. But there also are
things that are wrong, seriously wrong, especially with detailing. I
would like to tell you what, in my opinion, these things are and how we
could do better."
Glancing down at the two executive rows, Celia detected unease on several
faces; one or two people were fidgeting. Quite clearly, what she had said
already was not what had been expected. She looked away and gave her
attention to other portions of the hall.
"Before we came in here this morning, and again this after-noon, we all
saw the banners and the booth which feature Lotromycin. It's a
magnificent drug, one of the great breakthroughs in medicine and 1, for