Archive for July, 2009

Oh please… don’t make it easy!

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

I’m looking at a website from a high end top name retail brand (who shall remain nameless but the first name is an LA burger joint and the last name is an island) making their way into our industry. They announced the triumphant entry into our market (how we managed to survive without them for this long must be a mystery to their management) with a supplier blast offering 50% off samples.

Of course, as a retailer’s line, they are typically paranoid. Guys like this usually are when they jump into the promotional market trying to bolster flagging retail sales. In their core business they are kings, and as such, pass gas through silk. You know what they say… “It’s good to be King!” So they can be excused for stupid business decisions. After all, Kings can do what they want… right?

Well, no, that’s not how it works in the New World. These guys are probably seeing a dramatic decline in the $100+ shirt market in resort wear and need to find alternatives to keep their jobs. Like high end retail lines before them, they probably view the promotional market as ripe for the picking. After all, we’re the place that the people who like to wear those shirts live and work. Add the fact that we have 30,000+ sales outlets and our value increases immeasurably.

So why am I ragging on them if they are so good? Well, I’ve been here and done this before. Away back in the last century, a prominent golfwear designer brought a prominent golfing actor into the limelight of the garment business. They had great success in the green grass food chain and decided to leverage it into our business. They hired a very competent sales manager to teach us how to sell expensive clothing. He lasted a few years and was released, I think, because he knew what he was doing and they didn’t agree with him.

Within a three year period, I represented them plus a major sports manufacturer and a major shoe company who brought their “must have” goods to the market. Ten years later, two are gone completely and one is simply coasting on tepid sales. All three subscribed to the policy of arrogance that these companies tend to adopt, thinking that we simply have to sell their high priced product. They don’t know that there are a lot of good quality products for sale at reasonable prices, regardless of the label.

Last week I received a call from my cousin for this exact brand. Since I didn’t know that they were ready to premier the line to the thirsty crowd, I steered her to another well known industry (but not retail) brand. They will be very happy with their selection and they will save thousands of dollars as well. More importantly, they will love the fact that the shirt they ordered will be in their hands very quickly because it will be embroidered in house instead of having the supplier do it.

I’m always reticent to let a blanks provider do the embroidery. Years ago I bought shirts from a very high end sports clothing company for my company’s tradeshow use. I had to use their embroidery, which, frankly, sucked. They totally destroyed a sixty dollar shirt with a two dollar stitch job. I wound up buying thirteen shirts from a friend at her retail location and took them to my embroiderer who really did a spectacular job. So, while I have seen this new player’s massive multi-thousand stitch embroidery on the retail rack, I don’t trust anyone who has not made it a point to digitize a piece of crappy art and turn it into a silk purse like we have to do every day in this business.

Lest you think I’m being prissy, to be fair, if we provide a letter on our letterhead stating that we will embroider it, they will allow us to do so. If you wonder why they do this, it is probably because they don’t want to sell a $100+ sample at 50 back on the chance that one of us will buy it for personal use. (Oh, perish the thought… we might actually wear what we sell!)

Contrast that with the Indian sounding line name I represented in the nineties when the intelligent sales manager remarked that I looked a little ratty and maybe I’d like to buy some samples to replace my wardrobe and show off how good his clothes look. (I bought about a thousand dollars in samples and still wear some of the things I can still fit in today.) In the meantime, any time someone asks, I tell them the line name and extol their virtues.

I never wish anyone ill so I won’t say that I will raise a toast to the arrogant and stupid if and when this line drops off the supplier charts. But, I probably will use them as an example of what not to do in some of my classes.

If I were to take the reins of their sales effort for a day I would do the following things:

1) I would cheerfully offer the sample sale to all comers and encourage them to wear the samples on sales calls as well as display in showrooms. (Oh, wait… how many of us have showrooms anymore? Silly me… WE are the showroom!)

2) I would fix the website and make selecting men’s and women’s matching styles easier. Unlike the resort market, we frequently need to source matching styles and colors for corporate events and meetings. Many (if not most) suppliers treat me and women as separate and distinct entities and make it a chore to look for coherence in the line.

3) I would let anyone embroider the shirt. If they screw it up, I would cheerfully sell them replacements at the same price I sold them the first order of blanks.

4) I would do pretty much anything I could to counter the impression that my company is run by a bunch of retail clothing snobs and pricks.

5) I’d then move a lot of goods out the back door and fill the increasing number of orders as fast as I could ship.

That’s what I’d do.

Happy Selling!

A New Way?

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Is the world really changing? Yes, I read the same papers you do and hear the same talking heads that you see on TV but I wonder, “How different, really, is the New World from the Old World?”

As sellers, we live and die by “The Contact,” the one who buys or recommends the purchase that we need to sell to exist. Business book shelves are awash in titles that give us method after method on ways to meet, greet, find, schmooze and work The Contact to achieve a sale. Since business book titles tend to fade quickly from the shelves, (the classics by authors such as Zig Ziglar, Dale Carnegie and a few others excepted) people like me offer up the latest and greatest ideas for your perusal on how to work The Contact and win at the selling game.

In my newest incarnation as a salesman, I am tasked with adopting New World tools and techniques that are in stark contrast to the last 32 years of selling in the Old World. These include the telephone, computer, GoToMeeting, the Internet and other high tech, low touch tools. I am becoming more expert at using “social media” and the various cute name products like Twitter and Facebook.

Yesterday at our farewell lunch on my way to the airport, my boss, a co-worker and I discussed my new incarnation. Since my co-worker doesn’t control my very existence, I only really care what my boss thinks and in his opinion, I am a dinosaur in the New World. My way of doing business has expired. The “Use by” date passed at least two years ago, if not earlier. This should raise some red flags in my mind but it does not (although, my reasoning is subject to debate). The reason is that I am surfing the wave of change in real time.

I taught my “Building and Maintaining Relationships in the Digital Age” class last week to 54 industry sales professionals and there were only two under the age of 40. The class stresses (as I stressed to my boss) that the New World Order needs Old World skills to prosper. While we may make individual purchases over the Internet from many unknown sources, we form enduring relationships with our buyers by cultivating them. While I talk a good game, however, there are many strong buying relationships in our business between people who have never met each other in the flesh. I know that while it’s possible to forge strong business relationships using Old World tools, the New World tools are more efficient, if not better.

In real terms, if we get proficient in the new ways of selling, we may even make more personal income from smaller sales volume simply by reducing expenses and increasing efficiency. And, since we score our efforts on a dollar scale, the more dollars in our pocket means we’re doing better in our profession. That is a good thing, too.

Happy Selling!

An unlucky start

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Monday the 13th

The 13th is a volatile number. Considered unlucky since “Triskaidekaphobia” was inducted into our culture, perhaps in 1780 BC, it survives today in a number of iterations. When I lived in Manhattan 25 years ago, many buildings didn’t have “13” on the elevator list. Imagine my surprise when I counted the floors from the outside and the 25 story building only had 24 floors! (Yipes, that same math is again at work on Wall Street!)

Today, however, I’m simply facing 13 critical items on a 25 item Things To Do list and I only have time to do 10 of them because of this darned computer. No, it isn’t having problems (unless you consider “Operator Malfunction” a computer problem) but the operator has become mired in the Social Network.

It is 9:12am and I booted up at 7:32 this morning. In the intervening hour and a half I have checked my email three times, my Twitter account once, my Facebook twice and now I’m relating my inability to do honest work on my blog. Jeeze…

In my defense, I only took 1 minute 40 seconds to Google the unlucky 13 and find cites that fueled this missive. However, if I don’t take control of the process, that minute forty will escalate into a major waste of a day’s work for a day’s pay.

Since I started working from home on my computer and cell phone, my productivity has dropped by an estimated 15%. In real terms, that means that I have had contact with 30 fewer prospects each week while saving $22,000 in expenses.

Is it worth it? Saving money, I mean?

Not sure yet. If I accomplish most of my tasks and save the 30 grand I expect to this year then I suppose it is. It just feels wrong. Sort of like Judas must have felt when he was the 13th disciple to be seated at the table of the Last Supper.

Take a look at how you use your Social Networking tools. Do a “time waster” inventory on your day. If you are at all like me, you will find that you can get an extra hour of productive selling time on the 14th by exercising some discipline.

Happy Selling!