This one is for the girls and boys on the front line, those out there building relationships with advertisers and prospects for advertising in our publications. It's a little bit like Dragnet...the stories you're about to hear are true, but some names have been changed or omitted to prevent embarrassment or lawsuits. These are just a few ideas and war stories that we can all learn from in today's hectic selling environment.
EXAMPLE 1: The fine line between use and abuse:
I shared this at our sales meeting last week. A good friend of mine who works for an area competitor sent me an e-mail, touting the benefits of doing business with one of her clients. "I'm sending this to all my friends. If you ever need (omitted) repair services, you should call (omitted). I know him and trust him and I'm sure you will too." I have no idea if her advertiser paid for this or if she was adding value or maybe just helping out a friend. All I know is (a) I didn't really mind receiving it even though (b) I never signed up for it and (c) was not given an opt out link. I don't mind being "used" a little...but I don't want to be "abused" either. I'll see what other e-mails the future brings but the lesson here is to be careful when crossing the business and personal address books in the interest of doing business with your clients. Be nice to your friends.
EXAMPLE 2: Ask questions before committing.
I know the person who made this goof, know him very well. His name rhymes with "me". Got in my car last week, drove 45 minutes to spend an hour with one of our representatives and one of her customers, helping develop a plan for their "spring campaign". (Then drove back, too). There are many things I am not very good at, but I think a do a pretty fair job of working with customers on a marketing analysis model and was pretty proud of the work I did for this client. What I didn't know (because I didn't ask) was that this customer runs the smallest ad he can and might bump up to the next bigger size based on our planning session. Bottom line: two of us invested the better part of a morning in a session that held little if any promise of growth, all because I didn't do my due diligence (nor did my colleague). Spend time with customers, call on everyone but invest quality time in direct relation to the results you might garner. Just makes sense.
EXAMPLE 3: If you don't have something good to say...
An auto sales pro I know shared a story about a salesperson for another print media outlet who visited their dealership recently. This person mentioned how well they were doing but pointed out that other area print outlets were not doing well to the best of his knowledge. He may have thought he was putting himself in a good light but the impact on the auto person was highly negative. I'm paraphrasing but the summation was "if the only thing good you can say is something bad about your competitors, then say nothing at all." Great advice...the salesperson didn't hear it, though. He won't get a chance to, either. Don't throw mud...you can't do it without getting your hands dirty.
I can't promise our advertisers that our salespeople will always be the answer to their needs, but I know we will knock ourselves out trying to find solutions. For more information, call us at 315-472-7825 or e-mail us at info@scotsmanmediagroup.com. Thank you!
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