Happy Friday, everyone!
Here's this week's poll question:
Do you ever invite your clients to speak at your sales meetings? If so, who and when?
Looking forward to reading your answers.
Once a month we invited a local agency for an early morning breakfast at the station. They spoke and took questions for twenty minutes. It was usually informative. After a year and a half we ran out of agencies! Tip: Before the meeting load up with plenty of breakfast goodies from Starbucks and Panera.
My station does not do this mainly because right now our sales department consists of Me...Party of One! It is a great idea. I do attend our local chamber of commerce meetings a couple of times a month in order to keep up with what is going on locally.
Julie M. Slanaker
KFMJ 99.9 FM
Yes i do, we organise workshops for this,we are brand believers and the more we learn about the brand the more we develop better marketing strategies , in addition radio is a heart to heart bussiness therefore we sieze any opportunity that will make us get closer to the client. Finally, clients are also marketers and salesmen , we share experiences.
Having justs returned to Small Market Radio after a "brief" 30 years away, I have not had the chance to do anything recently.
However, we used to invite a client every month or so to come to our Sales Meetings. We started out inviting our best clients, thinking that since they used the station a lot, they would have good input as to what we do right and why they like our station. They were always great sessions, we ate a lot of donuts and patted ourselves on the back for the wonderful job we were obviousl doing. Jim Williams, late of the famous/infamous The Welsh Company) suggested we get out of our comfort zone and invite the people who were most against using our station. The thinking was they would tell us the truth, and that truth might be painful. But those ended up being our best sessions because usually the client would give us a laundry list of the things he felt we were doing to keep him from using our station. Afterwards we would take all out notes, figure out what he was saying and then turn around and use those notes to sell the client. It is amazing how many of them became good clients and when we asked them about why they changed their minds we were usually told that for the first time the client felt we were Listening insted of Telling. I believe that benefit is just as appropriate today as it was in the dinosaur driven 1980's.
David,
I think you are soooooo right! I am learning more and more that listening is the key. Sometimes, listening to what we are not giving the client is hard to take, but in the long run, makes them a much better, more dedicated client.!
Joel,
We did this when I worked in Winona back in the late 70's and I thought it quite instructive. We weren't permitted to pitch or argue with guest speakers (for obvious reasons), word of which got around over coffee and what-not, and it was a good thing. Don't know if the station is still doing it, but what a great idea.
"I thought it was very worthwhile, so I stopped doing it?" We could probably apply the same test to using spec spots regularly, too... ;>)
Have a super weekend!
-Rod
Hazel,
Just a thought: why not invite on-air, production, and other personnel to such a meeting? Theoretically, every member of the station team is, at the very least, part of a sales-support network. You'd personally derive more of a direct benefit, but it would almost certainly make the client feel good about your station and all the people associated with it. Good spinoff of your Chamber experience, too.
-Rod