105 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
105 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
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WHY JOHNNY CAN'T SELL
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A Business Report
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It starts out in the early years. Your son or daughter becomes involved in a
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project to raise funds for some activity or another and comes home with boxes
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of candy, cookies, chocolate bars, pens, keychains or raffle tickets.
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Light-years later, the kid is finished with school and gets a job selling
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telephones, insurance, swamp land, cars or home appliances.
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It doesn't matter: Seven years old or twenty-seven, most Americans are
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involved in selling something for a large part of their lives. First, for a
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group project; later for a living. No matter the product or seller's age, the
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techniques used in sales are the same.
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So why can't Johnny sell?
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No question that an adult salesperson has been conditioned by juvenile
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experiences. If Johnny didn't sell forty boxes of chocolate bars when he was
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twelve, he probably isn't going to be very successful selling forty boxcars of
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kale later on.
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Also no question that most of us are involved in sales for long periods of
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time. The product may be a personal service or skill; it may be a big ticket
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item or a low-cost one; the product may even be an idea or concept of the
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world.
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Still sales.
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In fact, it is not the product which makes the difference in sales; rather, it
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is the sales presentation made by the seller which determines success or
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failure. Technique, if you will. Just imagine this scenario:
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<knock, knock>
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Hi! I'm Johnny and I'm really excited about these candy bars because they
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taste good and if you buy one, my school band will be a little closer to its
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goal of playing at halftime in the Super Bowl next year.
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Uh, Johnny, aren't you a little old to be in a high school band? You look like
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you're pushing forty.
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Forty? Heck, I'm forty-two! And I'm not selling candy bars, either. I'm
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selling micro-widgets. The school band is the one my kids will be in if I can
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afford it in a few years.
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I'm lost, Johnny. Is there a psych unit close by?
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No. The point is that you need a micro-widget about as much as you needed a
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candy bar the last time I saw you, oh, twenty-five years ago.
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Wait a sec'! You, you're Johnny! How ya' doing?
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Fine. Just fine. You look good, too! So how about a micro-widget?
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No.
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Why not? Don't you like me any more? Is it because I'm not a cute little
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mop-headed pre-pubescent entrepreneur? Is it the beard?
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Wait. You expect me to buy one just because I bought those candy bars so your
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soccer team could buy uniforms?
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Well, I haven't hit you up for a quarter century. It's about time you chipped
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in again.
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The answer is absolutely, definitely--how much do these gadgets cost?
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Twenty five hundred smackeroos.
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Sorry, I can't afford it.
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Look, you can lease these babies for a hundred bucks a month, 48 month term,
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and a dollar buy-out at the end. Who cares if you need one? Listen, I'll let
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you in on a secret: I never turned in the money I raised selling candy bars
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from the time I was eight until I graduated high school. As a matter of fact,
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this is my first job--I finally ran out of money.
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That's outrageous! How could you? HOW COULD YOU???
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Hey, it was a great racket, what can I say? So. Sign here.
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<scribble, scribble>
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Thanks. See you at your funeral!
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But what about my micro-widget?
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Send it to you in the mail, bub. Gotta run!
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Why can't Johnny sell? Well, the Johnny above COULD sell and he's now retired
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and living on Bimini, in the Caribbean. But most of us aren't nearly so
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stuffed full of it as our friend above.
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The key word is fear.
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Our Johnny wasn't afraid to continue with something which worked well and
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became successful. The other Johnnies of the world would hesitate to the verge
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of inaction, and do so--every day.
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It's not the product; it's the pitch. So. Read the National Satirist every
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week or we'll set fire to your trash can.
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