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March 13, 2007

On Good Vs. Great and Other Tips In Channel Sales Motivation

Several years ago, I entered a local Buick dealership to shop for a car. It was around 7:00 pm, and the slightly dingy dealership had only two salespeople on duty. The one assigned to me shuffled over and we walked back to his desk. He sat down, leaned back in his chair, and put his feet up on the desk! I talked to hom about 30 seconds, then got up and left (without tipping his chair over as I so badly wanted to do.) I thought things had changed since this happened to me...

Which leads me to a rant on sales and customer service in the form of a great posting on Seth Godin's Blog. Seth (for those readers not familiar with him) is a well-known author, speaker and consultant who is a passionate advocate for approaches to sales and marketing that are "customer-friendly" (like permission marketing) and that emphasize excellence. His latest blog is eerily like my story above, only all the more shocking because it involves Toyota.

Read: Good Is Not Almost As Good As Great

If you are a corporate reader with a large dealer network...this is scary reading. I have long advised clients on the importance of thinking about how dealers are trained, supported and treated...because behavior like this can undo all the value of great engineering and superior advertising when it comes to customer loyalty.

Do not say that "we have no control over dealer's sales beahvior..." Sending a link to a simple blog posting like this along with a sales tip and an acknowledgement/thank you for their commitment to excellence, can convey both a profound lesson and a boost of confidence that you care about their business.

When supporting sales channels...direct or indirect...it helps to continually remind people of the little things that make a big difference. Doing it creatively and supportively only makes the message more likely to be absorbed.

Posted by jcioban at March 13, 2007 6:42 PM

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