Tuesday, May 16, 2006

One Egg or Two? Selling Multiples

The story of how F.W. Woolworth increased its lunch counter sales may be apocryphal, but its sales principle is tried and true.

F.W. Woolworth lunch counterIn its heyday, Woolworth was a nationwide chain of more than 3000 five-and-dime or variety stores, sort of junior editions of today's Wal-Mart stores. The Woolworth lunch counters, forerunners of today's food courts, served breakfast, lunch, and snacks.

Although Woolworth was never known for salesmanship, a directive to lunch counter managers embodied just that -- good salesmanship.

It required waitresses to ask "Would you like one or two?" whenever a customer ordered an egg.

The power and simplicity of the principle -- selling multiples -- is breathtaking. The customer is already sold on the item and the store and the person selling it. All that's required is to ask "One or two?".

The principle really works. I always devoted my first sales meeting in a new department, store or district to telling the story of One Egg or Two. And it always paid off in a 10-15% increment that stuck long after the larger increase from my pep talk had faded.

Of course, I always got objections. "We're not selling eggs here." "That won't work with washing machines." "Nobody needs two cars." "Our customers can hardly afford one."

But the fact is selling multiples works no matter who's doing it, where, or what's being sold from apples to zoot suits. It works because the product is presold, and because people often buy multiples to have a spare, as a gift, for a second home, to lock in a price, to save a trip to the store, etc.

Egg on you if you don't ask "One or two?"

Illustration created from photos found on Michael Strauch's streetcarmike.com.  Thanks Mike!

Thursday, May 04, 2006

The 11th and 12th Commandments

Roger B. MacDonald, GRI, associate broker with Realty Quest Inc. in Nashua, N.H. shares this experience in Realtor Magazine Online for 5/2/2006.

At least 30 years ago — when the world was young, and I was a lot younger than I am now at 84 -- I was showing homes to a young couple who had proven to be very hard to please. Through them, I learned about the 11th Commandment: "Thou shall not impose thy preferences upon a prospect."

I had shown the couple many homes in their price range, but nothing suited them. Finally, in desperation, I decided to show them a home that had been on the market for a very long time. The problem was that someone had painted all of the rooms in various patterns of black and white. There were squares, circles, polka dots, black ceilings, white ceilings, and decorated ceilings -- but everything was black or white. It was hideous.

Before showing them the property, I thought very hard about preparing them for the shock and telling them, "It's only paint. You can save a lot of money by just repainting it the way you like it once you own it." But I finally decided to let the house shock them first before I called attention to the odd decor.

We walked into the living room. The wife looked at the walls and ceiling and said nothing. We walked into the dining room. The wife looked at the walls and ceiling and said nothing. We walked into the kitchen. She looked at walls and ceiling and said, "I can't believe it -- this is me!"

It was a nice sale, and an even better lesson.

I had a similar experience, also about 30 years ago, when I was working at Radio Shack.

In those days, Radio Shack sold only its own Realistic brand products, many of which performed well, but were exceedingly ugly.

A customer asked to see a mid-price AM/FM portable radio. I demonstrated a black (silver was in), boxy (round was hot), too large, over-priced radio covered in simulated leather (metallic look was current) that sounded good, but which was understandably a "hard-sell."

And then I asked "How many would you like?"

The response, "I'll take six," nearly knocked me over.

Like Roger MacDonald, I learned the 11th Commandment -- not to impose my preferences. But I also learned the more important 12th -- to ask for the order, no matter what!

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Clothing Remarks

Checking around the quad this quarter, fashionable salesfolk were found wearing the latest in selling apparel:

  • a Company nametag (you're proud of who you are and where you work, aren't you?);
  • Snappy red tie
  • a pen for making notes and obtaining customer's signatures;
  • a "walking/talking" pad for copying down model numbers and for showing customers how "it all adds up";
  • a calculator for relieving cranial pressure; as they say, "it figures";
  • a couple of Company credit card applications for converting M/C and Visa people to the true way;
  • an extended service plan card for topping the sales pie;
  • a packet of business cards prepared to remind customers and prospects where and with whom to do business.

Are you dressed to turn a buck this quarter?

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Opening Remarks

When a customer has been greeted properly he feels comfortable, at ease, and almost always opens his next remarks with one of the following statements:

What He Says

What He's Telling You

I need a... Ready to buy.
I want a... Needs a gentle push.
I'm looking for a... Show and sell.
I'm thinking about a... Sell benefits, then close.
I'm interested in a... Needs full presentation.
I'm shopping for a... Ready all your ammunition.

By listening to the customer's opening remarks, you can determine how rapidly to proceed, what steps to skip, and what to emphasize. For example, the fellow who says "I need a fax machine," is ready to buy. You need only qualify and close. In contrast, the customer who says "I'm shopping for a fax machine," first needs you to sell yourself, and your company, before proceeding to determine his needs.

The moral: You'll close better if you attend to the opening.

Monday, February 20, 2006

First, Last and Best

In many stores, the best customers of the day are the first and the last.

First In Buy Fast.
The first customers of the day are almost always buyers who know what they want and, generally, it's a major purchase. These are the folks who decided last night to "get down to the store first thing, before the crowds."

Last In Take Time.
The last customers are also frequently big-ticket purchasers, but these are the procrastinators and the indecisives. The procrastinators put off the foray in part because they don't like shopping. They'll get what they need quickly and leave to put off something else. The indecisives are going to take some time. They've been checking out one store after another all day (or week, or month), unable to find the right deal or the right goods. But they need your product now, and it's come down to the wire. Be patient; they'll buy.

Too Busy Arriving?
But what about you? Are you ready for the first customer of the day? Or are you "running for coffee", making a lavatory stop, changing out of street clothes, or busy regaling coworkers with last night's exploits? Or are you too busy straightening your department, reviewing yesterday's orders, IMing a buddy, or reading the mail, email, newspaper, company bulletins, etc.?

Too Busy Leaving?
What about that last straggler? Are you going to leave him for another associate because (a) you've had more than your fair share today, or (b) you're cleaning up after a long, hard day, or (c) you're doing the paperwork or closing procedures--"so we can get out of here on time", or (d) you're too busy leaving to sell anyone?

Readiness is the Key.
It's really just a question of time management. Want to be first in sales with no great effort? Be ready for the first customer. Be ready for the last.

Selling Can't Wait.
No one else will get in your way as you jump to help these customers. But everyone will be jealous when you get off to a good start, and then again when you close the day with a bang. Nothing is more important than selling. Everything else can wait. Coffee, clothes, bathroom, paperwork, email, IMs all can be done after the customers leave. Selling alone can't.

Make it your business to be "up" for the first customers of the day as well as the last. Your sales will be up too!