Gitomer: To improve, follow the masters
JEFFREY GITOMER Jun 5, 2015 | 11:00 am
3 min read time
680 wordsBusiness Record Insider, Sales and MarketingI began this year in retrospect by reading a 60-year-old book on the masters of selling. The book, titled “America’s Twelve Master Salesmen,” was written and published by B.C. Forbes & Sons in 1953.
The book was based on the fact that each one of these master salespeople had one extremely powerful overriding principle or philosophy upon which his or her success was based.
Not that it was their “only,” but rather were the words they stood for. For example: When you think of Martin Luther King – you think of “I Have A Dream.” He stood for those words. When you think of Patrick Henry – you think of, “Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death.” When you think of Richard Nixon – you think “I’m Not a Crook.” (and you’d be thinking wrong)
It is amazing how self-truths become self-evident truths after 30 or 40 years of exposure – one way or the other.
Back to the book. Suppose you could adopt (or adapt) all of these master’s single best characteristic into your own set of capabilities. That would be power.
And so, to challenge your 2015 thinking, here are the master’s philosophies from 1953. And yes, I have added my own to the list – even though in 1953 I was a mere child.
1. James A. Farley (corporate executive) Principle: “Idlers do not last long.” Starting as a door-to-door salesman, rising to vice president of sales for Universal Gypsum, and ultimately a board of director for several large companies including Coca-Cola, Farley believed that doing several things at once was the key to accomplishment. His secret was doing new things at the same time he was following up and building relationships. Often sending 100 letters a day, he was renowned for making and keeping friends.
2. Max Hess, Jr. (retail store chain owner) Principle: “Strive for a specific goals.” Hess’s father used to say, “There’s no fun or excitement in just running a store. That way it’s drudgery. The fun and excitement come out of always figuring ways to stay ahead of the other fellow.” He believed in the stimulating power of keeping Hess Brothers forever exciting – exciting not only for the people who shop there but for those who work in the store.
3. Conrad N. Hilton (hotel owner) Principle: “Make them want to come back.” “It is our theory that when a hotel is in the top-glamour category … you just can’t make it too luxurious. You heap it on. You never stop pondering the question, ‘What aren’t guests getting that they might be getting in the way of elegance and personal attention?’” Hilton knew that one hotel is like any other hotel. The difference is in how you treat the guests.
4. Alex M. Lewyt (manufacturer of the Lewyt vacuum cleaner) Principle: “Believe in your product and love it.” So will the world! He was an engineer that was convinced he had built the world’s best vacuum cleaner. Advertised it before production was finished. Created a demand in the market with no product (a market vacuum if you will pardon the pun). When the cleaner finally emerged on the market, it was swept up (sorry again). Four million sales in four years.
5. Mary Margaret McBride (radio broadcaster and columnist.) Principle: “Honesty is the best policy.” “If I am convinced in my heart and mind that I’m speaking the truth, I approach the job as I would a sale — with zest and interest,” she said. “And in my heart I know that I am actually performing a service on behalf of my listener — who is in reality, my customer. Honesty breeds loyal customers.” Her values made her a fortune.
When you hear a corporate message like: “To serve you better…” or an employee says, “We’re doing the best we can…,” no matter how you want to defend those words, they’re lies.
The Orison Swett Marden quote: “No substitute has yet been found for honesty,” is a benchmark that everyone will read and agree with — yet very few will follow.