Archive for March 19th, 2009
Q&A: Keeping Sales People Motivated During Difficult Times

Q&A’s are excerpts of questions I have answered as part of Sales Laundry or other forums that I am apart of. If there is a relevant sales message for the masses I post it here to share, gather feedback and discuss.
Q: What is the best way to keep a (commercial printing) salesperson engaged and motivated during these tough times?
A: A small dose of Progress taken daily can wipe out a whole room full of “it’s hopeless.” Retreat as needed.
I approach it like the old adage “How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.”
I don’t want my team focused on the big picture Armageddon talk with all of the accompanying noise. Quite the opposite, I want them focused, and therefore engaged on what they need to do each day to keep methodically working toward their goal.
One other thought. How about creating some of your own print business?
I don’t know what objections your sales guys are getting, but I assume one of them is “we don’t have the money right now.”
If you have several small businesses that don’t have the budget to print flyers or marketing materials, but need the exposure, maybe you can bring a different value add.
Maybe you can solve a larger problem for your customer that will allow them to take advantage of your services.
Maybe your sales guys, with a database full of local contacts, can help out the small business community by developing a single marketing piece that features a few companies that are not direct competitors and have a similar target market.
The result could be that the small business gets the marketing they need, at a price they can afford, you have a new unique product, your guys get paid, and you can keep the presses running.
Q&A: New Sports Technology Struggling to Launch
Q&A’s are excerpts of questions I have answered as part of Sales Laundry or other forums that I am apart of. If there is a relevant sales message for the masses I post it here to share, gather feedback and discuss.
Q: Help! I am marketing a new sports bat training device through independent sales reps, sales are improving, but slowly, and I need to speed up the process. Any suggestions?
A: Congratulations on getting from patent to production. That is no small accomplishment.
It sounds like sales are happening, but each sale is happening in a vacuum, and not having much of an impact on overall sales velocity.
Pick a niche in your target market. Maybe it is college baseball, high school baseball, or pro, maybe it is rehab facilities, or possibly coaches, and put your available resources toward owning that niche (ala Crossing the Chasm) to begin to create some leverage out of each sale, that will make the next sale just a little bit easier.
That should start to give you the multiplier on existing sales you are looking for.
The next key is finding the right individuals in your selected niche that can add another multiplier to your existing sales with their credibility and influence.
Look at that niche market and find the people who have influence over the potential customers in that niche. Instead of focusing your sales on anyone that will buy one, focus on the handful of guys that carry enough influence to multiply the leverage benefit of each individual sale.
Where do you find these guys? Look at trade organizations, governing organizations, boards of directors and consultants for major baseball sporting goods manufacturers. Or it could be as simple as finding that old guy that everybody knows who has been around the game forever and knows everybody who is or was anybody in the game. Look to one of the statesmen of the game along the lines of the late Buck O’Neil as a fine example.
I would also look to entrepreneurial ex-baseball players with hall of fame reputations. Look for the guys that are out of the game, have the contacts you need and are building business empires of their own. Nolan Ryan is one that comes to mind.
I had to make a lot of assumptions here, but I hope that helps.
