Boniva Reps Suck !!

Anonymous

Guest
Boniva Sales Representatives are true Pharmaceutical talent, having no talent at all. Sorry to hear they are now carrying Xolair, but as difrection top down has it, they don't even make calls as they are going to be gone in less than year. Boniva reps - what a joke! Sample droppers! Its these type of salesman/saleswoman that gave the industry a bad name in the first place along with all the smiling cute faces.
 






Are you kidding me, you're gonna try to separate yourself from the Boniva Reps with your dedicated abilities as a drug Rep??? I'm not a Boniva Rep, but I know the industry probably far better than you and you can't blame any Rep for the product mix of any of the companies. Reps respond to what their companies give them. If their drugs take no effort then that's what the company gets. You are not special!!!
 


















Reading this thread is humorless. Most, but not all of the people who launched drove and promoted Versed and Rocephin to the top of their classes are gone. They were people that could promote 5 to 8 products at one time effectively discussing pharmacokinetics and disease state. We were speciality sales reps selling to 3 or 4 different specialists. This was before disposable sales forces. You were Roche in 20 or 25 zip codes or 5 to 8 hospitals with all the products in your bag. This was a time when companies repsected their people and the employees were loyal over all. Now you have cut away sales forces with narrow minded well educated numb skulls that really don't have a clue. This is how society in general is moving and it is a very negitive a BAD evolution or de-evolution. So be it. I wish my old Roche counter parts well and the Genentech group the same. Good luck and good selling, work hard but smart!!!! Laugh Out Loud
 






Interesting...Those same Boniva reps were great when they had Rocephin.

If you didn't; know this man, talk to him, get information for your ID physicians and P&T committees, but promoted Boniva you didn't make Rocephin the success it was................

Robert "Bob" Mulhall may God be with him and his soul at rest.

Robert "Bob" Mulhall of Madison, N.J., 86, passed away on Wednesday, Nov. 17, 2010, at home, following a long illness. Funeral service will be held on Saturday, Nov. 20, 2010, at 9:30 a.m. at Burroughs, Kohr & Dangler Funeral Home, 106 Main St., Madison, N.J., followed by a Funeral Mass at 10:30 a.m. at Holy Family Church, Orchard Road, Florham Park, N.J. 07932. Entombment will follow at Gate of Heaven Mausoleum in East Hanover. Visiting will be on Friday, Nov. 19, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Bob moved to Indianapolis, Ind., at age nine. He lived in Morristown and East Hanover, N.J., for 17 years before moving to Madison 12 years ago. He graduated from Cathedral High School in Indianapolis, Ind., and attended Butler University. Bob served in the U.S. Army as a staff sergeant and medic with the 65th Infantry. He received two Bronze Stars and served in Europe from 1943 until 1946, during World War II. He worked in pharmaceutical sales and marketing for Roche Laboratories in Nutley for 27 years before retiring in 1987. Following his retirement, he began his own business, Educational Techniques in Business, a pharmaceutical marketing and consulting firm. Bob was a 3rd degree member of the Knights of Columbus, Florham Park, and a member of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. He served as a lector for over 50 years, most recently with Holy Family and St. Margaret's churches. He is survived by his wife, Frances (nee Hall) Mulhall, and his children, Kathleen and Bruce Kostic of Wilton, Conn., Mark and Nancy of Morris Township, Matthew and Lynn of Union Township, and David and Donna of Lake Worth, Fla. He is also survived by his beloved grandchildren, Melissa, Katie, Erin, Andrew, Dennis, Brian, Danny, Emily, Ryan, Connor, Michael, Zach and Kylie. Bob is also survived by his former wife, Elizabeth Mulhall of Morristown. He was predeceased by his son, Christopher, in 1981, and his sister, Trudy Poett, and brother, Francis X. Mulhall. In lieu of flowers, donations in Bob's name can be made to your favorite charity. Bob Mulhall will be long remembered for his devotion to God, country and family.
Published in Star-Ledger
 


















Boniva Sales Representatives are true Pharmaceutical talent, having no talent at all. Sorry to hear they are now carrying Xolair, but as difrection top down has it, they don't even make calls as they are going to be gone in less than year. Boniva reps - what a joke! Sample droppers! Its these type of salesman/saleswoman that gave the industry a bad name in the first place along with all the smiling cute faces.

Why cant you get over the fact that Roche owns this company. Boniva reps are the last of the great Roche reps that called on all kinds of doctors and accounts at the same time. you may be gone to in less than a year!