Recruitment HQ
Are you a commodity or are you human?
Most of us at some point consider selling something. That first part-time job in retail to get the employee discounts, door to door during college (Cutco anyone?), and finally whenever we are tossed out into the employment pond and need something (hello auto, insurance, and real estate industry). For me it was all three, and I am still selling myself today.
Why does going into sales have such a stigma? If you are scanning through job ads, are you skipping over the selling opportunities? Waiting to exhaust applying to every office, government, and manufacturing job, and then sending out applications to some sales job ad while you wait for your dream opportunity?
Depending on how you can answer this next question you should either skip "trying" sales, or put it to the top of your list and forget any other career.
Are you a commodity or a human?
I know the knee-jerk answer by everyone is to say they are a human, who wants to think of themselves as a commodity? The honest answer is that many job seekers intend to be a commodity. A commodity is an interchangeable product or service and its value is usually set based on supply and demand. This is most commonly used to describe things bought and sold in quantity that do not have individualistic merit.
How does this relate to people scanning job boards and thinking, "I might just have to try sales"? Many people that are dipping their toe into sales have the thought that if they simply follow the process manual that the company is going to sell things and they will get paid. Circuit City tried this, hire the least expensive help, give them red shirts and a manual, and the public will just buy our stuff. It was one of the most epic fails in modern sales history, Circuit City went from the leader in electronics sales to out of business in under three years. They hired commodities.
I thought this way when I first started in sales. My manager tells me to walk and talk this way, all I need to do is follow the direction and it will all work out. I was almost fired in my first 90 days selling. I was confused and depressed, I am saying what they want me to say, following the steps I was told to take, why isn't this working? As a last ditch effort I accidentally became a human.
What I am calling being a human is deciding to simply interact with people as your natural instincts dictate, to be an individual. Within the borders of professionally presenting your product, show compassion, understanding, and yes even love for the people you are lucky enough to get to meet on a daily basis.
I saw a great example of this only yesterday in Starbucks (stereotypical sales, I am a coffee addict). In Starbucks the salespeople are called Barristas, and they have a pretty well formatted process. Most days I walk into the shop and can fairly predict just about every interaction in the store, it is simple people walk in wanting coffee, Barrista asks them to buy more expensive coffee and pastry. Today was slightly different, in front of me an older woman was walking into the shop and next to her an employee was emptying the trash. She stopped, turned to the woman, and told her she looked fantastic and asked where she had bought the dress she was wearing. Not in a I get paid to say nice things way, but in a true human to human contact. She then walked the woman to the counter and helped her decide what to order, like they were best friends picking out some new and exciting thing to try together. This salesperson is not a commodity!
If you have the self-esteem to be a true person to people you have never met, to let them see the caring side of you even though you might be rejected, you are a human and should run to the nearest sales opportunity. The world needs you!
Greg Gershman - Managing Partner @RecruitmentHQ
If you need help deciding if sales is right for you, or advice on hiring your next forever employee inbox me. Have a prosperous day :-
Recruitment HQ
Are you a commodity or are you human?
Most of us at some point consider selling something. That first part-time job in retail to get the employee discounts, door to door during college (Cutco anyone?), and finally whenever we are tossed out into the employment pond and need something (hello auto, insurance, and real estate industry). For me it was all three, and I am still selling myself today.
Why does going into sales have such a stigma? If you are scanning through job ads, are you skipping over the selling opportunities? Waiting to exhaust applying to every office, government, and manufacturing job, and then sending out applications to some sales job ad while you wait for your dream opportunity?
Depending on how you can answer this next question you should either skip "trying" sales, or put it to the top of your list and forget any other career.
Are you a commodity or a human?
I know the knee-jerk answer by everyone is to say they are a human, who wants to think of themselves as a commodity? The honest answer is that many job seekers intend to be a commodity. A commodity is an interchangeable product or service and its value is usually set based on supply and demand. This is most commonly used to describe things bought and sold in quantity that do not have individualistic merit.
How does this relate to people scanning job boards and thinking, "I might just have to try sales"? Many people that are dipping their toe into sales have the thought that if they simply follow the process manual that the company is going to sell things and they will get paid. Circuit City tried this, hire the least expensive help, give them red shirts and a manual, and the public will just buy our stuff. It was one of the most epic fails in modern sales history, Circuit City went from the leader in electronics sales to out of business in under three years. They hired commodities.
I thought this way when I first started in sales. My manager tells me to walk and talk this way, all I need to do is follow the direction and it will all work out. I was almost fired in my first 90 days selling. I was confused and depressed, I am saying what they want me to say, following the steps I was told to take, why isn't this working? As a last ditch effort I accidentally became a human.
What I am calling being a human is deciding to simply interact with people as your natural instincts dictate, to be an individual. Within the borders of professionally presenting your product, show compassion, understanding, and yes even love for the people you are lucky enough to get to meet on a daily basis.
I saw a great example of this only yesterday in Starbucks (stereotypical sales, I am a coffee addict). In Starbucks the salespeople are called Barristas, and they have a pretty well formatted process. Most days I walk into the shop and can fairly predict just about every interaction in the store, it is simple people walk in wanting coffee, Barrista asks them to buy more expensive coffee and pastry. Today was slightly different, in front of me an older woman was walking into the shop and next to her an employee was emptying the trash. She stopped, turned to the woman, and told her she looked fantastic and asked where she had bought the dress she was wearing. Not in a I get paid to say nice things way, but in a true human to human contact. She then walked the woman to the counter and helped her decide what to order, like they were best friends picking out some new and exciting thing to try together. This salesperson is not a commodity!
If you have the self-esteem to be a true person to people you have never met, to let them see the caring side of you even though you might be rejected, you are a human and should run to the nearest sales opportunity. The world needs you!
Greg Gershman - Managing Partner @RecruitmentHQ
If you need help deciding if sales is right for you, or advice on hiring your next forever employee inbox me. Have a prosperous day :-
No Comments
Recruitment HQ
Three simple steps to get college grads to consider your job
I posted a question on an automotive forum two days ago, asking what are some of the most motivational pay-plans around the country for sales staff. It has gotten five pages worth of comments, and it all seems to boil down to one question/problem; how do the traditional commission industries attract the new generation of college graduates and young professionals?
There are three driving psychological factors that need to be met to usher in the next generation of sales professionals:
- Risk Aversion
- Culture
- Inclusion in a group movement
My Grandmother was always chastising me about any waste, even went so far as to give me a what-for over a large package of chocolate chip cookies I had bought our son while visiting her. I can still hear her barking, "he is never going to finish those, and you are not throwing them out". Anyone in my age group, I am 43, has an older relative that acts as the financial conscience. We all know where that comes from, The Great Depression. My Grandmother's generation was stamped with the psychological damage from this financial collapse decades later.
The Gen-Yer's, have now lived through the second largest financial decline in our nation's history, and it is completely shaping their view on financial risk. When I began as a commission salesperson there was never any thought in my head of the potential problems that could arise from working in a commission only industry. It seemed that while I was young, and short on large financial commitments, it was the perfect time to take a job that had a high ceiling even if there was this chance of not earning a living. This is not how today's graduates are viewing the world. They have seen the product of the 80's and 90's willingness to step into risk, and it was the Crash of 2008.
This doesn't mean industries like the automotive industry can't be viable options for a career. We just need to cater to this insecurity. Here is a small example of being creative to help talented newcomers consider the sales floor. I suggested a college loan repayment program for new hires with an associates or above. Have a predetermined maximum amount per month, and duration limit and use this as an incentive to get the brightest minds to choose your business.
Culture is word that everyone keeps throwing around, in regard to businesses that are the most desirable to work for, but there is very little talk about what that means. One of the key elements of this culture we are all seeking is brand identity. More specifically how one is viewed based on their association to a business or product. It shapes who applies to our business.
There has been a sharp change how products and stores are presenting themselves. When I grew up we had Crazy Eddie screaming about Christmas in July sales. He would jump around, yell like a maniac, and be INSANE!! (reference to how he described his sales, for those that never saw it) What have been the biggest sale announcements today? Steve Jobs standing on a stage alone in a black mock turtle neck, while a small crowd quietly waits to applaud. This is what this generation has associated with the most successful companies.
Loud, crazy advertisements aren't working any longer to drive in sales, and they are counter-intuitive to the brand image that this next generation of employees wants to associate themselves with. It is time to make our employees the face of our company, they are the greatest advertisement for the sales floor and possible incoming employees. Seemed to work out well for Apple.
Inclusion in a group movement is an underrated, but extremely important part of what attracts employees. A recent example is the Tea Party Movement and the Walk on Wall Street. Having the ability to claim ownership of an ideal, and feeling empowered to have an effect are key motivational elements.
This doesn't mean you need to align your business with a political cause (as a matter of fact it is probably suicide), but you need to let applicants know how you impact the community and their potential role in that. When hiring for my company, much of our communication with applicants was about having the ability to help connect the millions of unemployed in this country with opportunities that could help them feed their families. We are a recruitment company that specializes in using personal phone interviews instead of electronic screening to help employers and applicants. Our employees are passionate about the idea that every applicant gets a real personal interview that applies, because they understand how awful it is to send out a hundred resumes and never talk to a person. This is a cause they can get behind, and puts our business a cut above the rest competing for young talent.
I hope this gives some of my colleagues around the country a little insight into speaking to the next generation. We would love some other thoughts and examples from businesses around the country.
Please feel free to comment, love or hate, or inbox me with a question for your business. Have a prosperous day :-)
Gregory Gershman, Managing Partner, Recruitment HQ
No Comments
Recruitment HQ
Three simple steps to get college grads to consider your job
I posted a question on an automotive forum two days ago, asking what are some of the most motivational pay-plans around the country for sales staff. It has gotten five pages worth of comments, and it all seems to boil down to one question/problem; how do the traditional commission industries attract the new generation of college graduates and young professionals?
There are three driving psychological factors that need to be met to usher in the next generation of sales professionals:
- Risk Aversion
- Culture
- Inclusion in a group movement
My Grandmother was always chastising me about any waste, even went so far as to give me a what-for over a large package of chocolate chip cookies I had bought our son while visiting her. I can still hear her barking, "he is never going to finish those, and you are not throwing them out". Anyone in my age group, I am 43, has an older relative that acts as the financial conscience. We all know where that comes from, The Great Depression. My Grandmother's generation was stamped with the psychological damage from this financial collapse decades later.
The Gen-Yer's, have now lived through the second largest financial decline in our nation's history, and it is completely shaping their view on financial risk. When I began as a commission salesperson there was never any thought in my head of the potential problems that could arise from working in a commission only industry. It seemed that while I was young, and short on large financial commitments, it was the perfect time to take a job that had a high ceiling even if there was this chance of not earning a living. This is not how today's graduates are viewing the world. They have seen the product of the 80's and 90's willingness to step into risk, and it was the Crash of 2008.
This doesn't mean industries like the automotive industry can't be viable options for a career. We just need to cater to this insecurity. Here is a small example of being creative to help talented newcomers consider the sales floor. I suggested a college loan repayment program for new hires with an associates or above. Have a predetermined maximum amount per month, and duration limit and use this as an incentive to get the brightest minds to choose your business.
Culture is word that everyone keeps throwing around, in regard to businesses that are the most desirable to work for, but there is very little talk about what that means. One of the key elements of this culture we are all seeking is brand identity. More specifically how one is viewed based on their association to a business or product. It shapes who applies to our business.
There has been a sharp change how products and stores are presenting themselves. When I grew up we had Crazy Eddie screaming about Christmas in July sales. He would jump around, yell like a maniac, and be INSANE!! (reference to how he described his sales, for those that never saw it) What have been the biggest sale announcements today? Steve Jobs standing on a stage alone in a black mock turtle neck, while a small crowd quietly waits to applaud. This is what this generation has associated with the most successful companies.
Loud, crazy advertisements aren't working any longer to drive in sales, and they are counter-intuitive to the brand image that this next generation of employees wants to associate themselves with. It is time to make our employees the face of our company, they are the greatest advertisement for the sales floor and possible incoming employees. Seemed to work out well for Apple.
Inclusion in a group movement is an underrated, but extremely important part of what attracts employees. A recent example is the Tea Party Movement and the Walk on Wall Street. Having the ability to claim ownership of an ideal, and feeling empowered to have an effect are key motivational elements.
This doesn't mean you need to align your business with a political cause (as a matter of fact it is probably suicide), but you need to let applicants know how you impact the community and their potential role in that. When hiring for my company, much of our communication with applicants was about having the ability to help connect the millions of unemployed in this country with opportunities that could help them feed their families. We are a recruitment company that specializes in using personal phone interviews instead of electronic screening to help employers and applicants. Our employees are passionate about the idea that every applicant gets a real personal interview that applies, because they understand how awful it is to send out a hundred resumes and never talk to a person. This is a cause they can get behind, and puts our business a cut above the rest competing for young talent.
I hope this gives some of my colleagues around the country a little insight into speaking to the next generation. We would love some other thoughts and examples from businesses around the country.
Please feel free to comment, love or hate, or inbox me with a question for your business. Have a prosperous day :-)
Gregory Gershman, Managing Partner, Recruitment HQ
No Comments
Recruitment HQ
Get Complete Buy-In from Your Staff in Just 45 Minutes
Ever wish your employees cared the way you do about your dealership? They had the willingness to work to master their craft; ambition to stay those few extra minutes to get the job done; have enough pride in the business to become evangelists in the community?
Quarterly business meetings are the pathway to having the staff engaged in a way you never have. By sharing leadership level information you give your employees the ability to buy in to the course of your dealership.
Here is a small example:
A service manager calls all his technicians together and lets them know he has to take away their day off next week because we have another one of “those mailers”. Staff grumbles, gets blue flu, and performs poorly. Even worse they have to go home and explain to their spouse how any plans they had next week are cancelled because the store did another one of “those mailers”.
Another dealership is having the same mail sale and makes it part of their quarterly meeting. Well in advance they proudly let the entire dealership know they going to spend thousands of dollars to motivate clients in the week of -------, because they care about the technicians having work and being able to feed their families. Technicians plan accordingly for the time, and get their family on board, explaining how this is going to add a boost to their paycheck.
Which of these mail sale events is going to be the most successful? A little bit of engagement and communication goes a long way to getting motivated employees.
Quarterly meetings can be as short as 45 minutes, and only need to involve your department. They should cover; how the dealership is going to help generate traffic; topics that made an impact on the business from the daily 20 minute meetings; team members that either made significant improvement or achieved a level of excellence; the employees role in and the state of the overall mission statement for the business.
Now relate your willingness to financially invest in advertising to the hard work the staff has put in to perfecting the “Reservation” and “Active Delivery”, as an example, have resulted in higher hours per repair order.
In the meeting reference the times over the quarter that these two topics were worked on in the Daily 20 Minute Meetings, and the people that are superstars in this process.
As a reward the dealership is going to invest in an advertising campaign to increase foot traffic, since we are so confident you can make full use of our investment. We forecast that this will increase sales by 10% and give everyone a large financial opportunity!
No Comments
Recruitment HQ
Get Complete Buy-In from Your Staff in Just 45 Minutes
Ever wish your employees cared the way you do about your dealership? They had the willingness to work to master their craft; ambition to stay those few extra minutes to get the job done; have enough pride in the business to become evangelists in the community?
Quarterly business meetings are the pathway to having the staff engaged in a way you never have. By sharing leadership level information you give your employees the ability to buy in to the course of your dealership.
Here is a small example:
A service manager calls all his technicians together and lets them know he has to take away their day off next week because we have another one of “those mailers”. Staff grumbles, gets blue flu, and performs poorly. Even worse they have to go home and explain to their spouse how any plans they had next week are cancelled because the store did another one of “those mailers”.
Another dealership is having the same mail sale and makes it part of their quarterly meeting. Well in advance they proudly let the entire dealership know they going to spend thousands of dollars to motivate clients in the week of -------, because they care about the technicians having work and being able to feed their families. Technicians plan accordingly for the time, and get their family on board, explaining how this is going to add a boost to their paycheck.
Which of these mail sale events is going to be the most successful? A little bit of engagement and communication goes a long way to getting motivated employees.
Quarterly meetings can be as short as 45 minutes, and only need to involve your department. They should cover; how the dealership is going to help generate traffic; topics that made an impact on the business from the daily 20 minute meetings; team members that either made significant improvement or achieved a level of excellence; the employees role in and the state of the overall mission statement for the business.
Now relate your willingness to financially invest in advertising to the hard work the staff has put in to perfecting the “Reservation” and “Active Delivery”, as an example, have resulted in higher hours per repair order.
In the meeting reference the times over the quarter that these two topics were worked on in the Daily 20 Minute Meetings, and the people that are superstars in this process.
As a reward the dealership is going to invest in an advertising campaign to increase foot traffic, since we are so confident you can make full use of our investment. We forecast that this will increase sales by 10% and give everyone a large financial opportunity!
No Comments
Recruitment HQ
How a Daily 20 Minute Meeting will completely change employee retention.
Daily 20 minute meeting is the way we tie together the Mission Statement, Core Values, and Job Responsibilities to make them part of our daily lives. Meetings show our commitment to our employees success on a daily basis and build retention.
Sometimes it can feel like our day is so overstuffed that carving out even an additional 20 minutes is a near impossibility. Here is why it is a must!
What happens to a car that hasn’t been maintained? Catastrophic breakdown. Your staff is just like servicing a car regularly; daily doses of encouragement and improvement remove the risk of poor performance or even worse termination of employment.
Communication isn’t just for when an employee mishandles something. Having a consistent vehicle for communication ensures continuity through the staff, and stops large declining trends from taking root in the dealership.
There are four areas to cover in the 20 Minute Meeting; Mission, Score Board, Recognition, and Skill Sharpening. By touching on each category every day employees are kept on task.
Every meeting should be guided by your corporate mission statement that we spoke about earlier. In the example it is, “How we provide the Concierge Experience at our dealership”. So all the remaining portions of the meeting relate to this mission.
Next is a short score board; staff many times are so engaged in the daily grind that they lose track of the measuring sticks for your business. In this meeting we have Financial Performance, Customer Satisfaction Indicators, & Performance Challenges.
One of the factors that drive employee negativity is the feeling that management only finds the things that aren’t done correctly. Daily recognition lets employees know you are watching for the things that go right too like, Service Awards, Anniversaries, Personal Milestones, Accomplishments, or Things Done Right.
Skill Sharpening is one of the trickiest points to tackle, but will, if done well, have the highest return on time. The key is to empower and engage your staff. Guide the topic, but allow your employees to present the problem and deputize the best of your staff to offer solutions. Employees take the word of a top of the board teammate as gospel. Let the weakest staff member role play with the best of the best.
Elect a time keeper, and empower them to stop the meeting on time. Keeping the interaction short and not making it about you ensures employees leave the meeting with the most information to have the highest impact on your business.
7 Comments
theBDCtrainer.com
I absolutely agree! Once a week Saturday morning Sales Meetings aren't enough and in my opinion can cause a disconnect.
Recruitment HQ
Thanks Colin for jumping in! Motivation and skill fine tuning are daily tasks. Your staff actually wants the interaction. Ever wonder why the sales team has ten times the amount of appointments for Saturday's, compared with the rest of the week? If you are only running a once a week meeting for Saturday, you are showing them that is the only day you care about.
AutoStride
Yes, it's called Scrum in the software development world, part of the Agile methodology. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrum_(software_development) Scrum is better than nothing.
Recruitment HQ
@Alexander, funny how quality methodology works regardless of industry. Time to stop thinking "this is the car biz", and learn to adopt processes that have solid ROI from other industries.
AutoStride
Yes, software being one of the strictest. Thanks for your thoughts!
Recruitment HQ
How a Daily 20 Minute Meeting will completely change employee retention.
Daily 20 minute meeting is the way we tie together the Mission Statement, Core Values, and Job Responsibilities to make them part of our daily lives. Meetings show our commitment to our employees success on a daily basis and build retention.
Sometimes it can feel like our day is so overstuffed that carving out even an additional 20 minutes is a near impossibility. Here is why it is a must!
What happens to a car that hasn’t been maintained? Catastrophic breakdown. Your staff is just like servicing a car regularly; daily doses of encouragement and improvement remove the risk of poor performance or even worse termination of employment.
Communication isn’t just for when an employee mishandles something. Having a consistent vehicle for communication ensures continuity through the staff, and stops large declining trends from taking root in the dealership.
There are four areas to cover in the 20 Minute Meeting; Mission, Score Board, Recognition, and Skill Sharpening. By touching on each category every day employees are kept on task.
Every meeting should be guided by your corporate mission statement that we spoke about earlier. In the example it is, “How we provide the Concierge Experience at our dealership”. So all the remaining portions of the meeting relate to this mission.
Next is a short score board; staff many times are so engaged in the daily grind that they lose track of the measuring sticks for your business. In this meeting we have Financial Performance, Customer Satisfaction Indicators, & Performance Challenges.
One of the factors that drive employee negativity is the feeling that management only finds the things that aren’t done correctly. Daily recognition lets employees know you are watching for the things that go right too like, Service Awards, Anniversaries, Personal Milestones, Accomplishments, or Things Done Right.
Skill Sharpening is one of the trickiest points to tackle, but will, if done well, have the highest return on time. The key is to empower and engage your staff. Guide the topic, but allow your employees to present the problem and deputize the best of your staff to offer solutions. Employees take the word of a top of the board teammate as gospel. Let the weakest staff member role play with the best of the best.
Elect a time keeper, and empower them to stop the meeting on time. Keeping the interaction short and not making it about you ensures employees leave the meeting with the most information to have the highest impact on your business.
7 Comments
theBDCtrainer.com
I absolutely agree! Once a week Saturday morning Sales Meetings aren't enough and in my opinion can cause a disconnect.
Recruitment HQ
Thanks Colin for jumping in! Motivation and skill fine tuning are daily tasks. Your staff actually wants the interaction. Ever wonder why the sales team has ten times the amount of appointments for Saturday's, compared with the rest of the week? If you are only running a once a week meeting for Saturday, you are showing them that is the only day you care about.
AutoStride
Yes, it's called Scrum in the software development world, part of the Agile methodology. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrum_(software_development) Scrum is better than nothing.
Recruitment HQ
@Alexander, funny how quality methodology works regardless of industry. Time to stop thinking "this is the car biz", and learn to adopt processes that have solid ROI from other industries.
AutoStride
Yes, software being one of the strictest. Thanks for your thoughts!
Recruitment HQ
How to get big SEO for your job ad.
Here is the daily hiring and getting hired tip:
Employers how would you like big SEO on Google search for your job ads, and to have your employment ads completely stand out above every other posting?
Start adding video to your employment ads. A short minute and a half take on why your store is the best, and the merits of the opportunity. Even better have an employee say why they love working there. Video is a game changer.
If anyone needs help getting it done with the best keywords, inbox us.
5 Comments
Kijiji, an eBay Company
This actually is a really smart idea. Do you have an example to share?
CBG Buick GMC, Inc.
Great tip and something that is SO simple but can make a Huge difference. I would really like to see an example as well.
Recruitment HQ
Here is a link to one of our completed ads. Blows everyone out of the water. If your store, or someone you know needs an employment ad, definitely let me help them. http://automotiveretailsalescareers.com/job/sales-representative-holmes-honda/
Remarkable Marketing
Love this! Always looking for new ways to recruit new, smart, young blood. Thank you for sharing!!
Recruitment HQ
Thanks Grant! We actually can get higher organic search results from our job ads for some dealers, than sales ads in the market.
Recruitment HQ
How to get big SEO for your job ad.
Here is the daily hiring and getting hired tip:
Employers how would you like big SEO on Google search for your job ads, and to have your employment ads completely stand out above every other posting?
Start adding video to your employment ads. A short minute and a half take on why your store is the best, and the merits of the opportunity. Even better have an employee say why they love working there. Video is a game changer.
If anyone needs help getting it done with the best keywords, inbox us.
5 Comments
Kijiji, an eBay Company
This actually is a really smart idea. Do you have an example to share?
CBG Buick GMC, Inc.
Great tip and something that is SO simple but can make a Huge difference. I would really like to see an example as well.
Recruitment HQ
Here is a link to one of our completed ads. Blows everyone out of the water. If your store, or someone you know needs an employment ad, definitely let me help them. http://automotiveretailsalescareers.com/job/sales-representative-holmes-honda/
Remarkable Marketing
Love this! Always looking for new ways to recruit new, smart, young blood. Thank you for sharing!!
Recruitment HQ
Thanks Grant! We actually can get higher organic search results from our job ads for some dealers, than sales ads in the market.
No Comments