A networking site for Radio advertising sales professionals.
Happy Friday, everyone!
Here is this week's poll question:
How does prospecting for new advertisers work at your station? Is it organized through your sales manager, or is it a "free-for-all"?
Looking forward to reading your answers!
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Permalink Reply by David Duffy on November 18, 2011 at 1:23am Hi Rebecca
Here in the UK there seems to be two schools of thought. The most dominant by far is where prospecting begins with the field sales person, usually under the direction of the Sales Manager, who has assigned 'territories' based on a sector specific (vertical) or geographical (horizontal) methodology. It only becomes a free for all when there is a lack of management direction. You can only imagine the damage this would cause in the marketplace with prospects being called by different sales personnel from the same radio station!
The other school of thought works on the priciple that field sales people are 'customer-facing' closers and are optimised by being kept in the 'field'. Hence a radio station is better seperating appointment making and closing. They outsource cold calling & prospecting to a company that can deliver appointments. Sure, if they don't qualify prospects properly you end up sending sales execs out on fruitless calls - but that doesn't last long, if you keep an eye on it.
Permalink Reply by Charles R. Wallace on November 18, 2011 at 5:59am When I began my career in radio, my sales manager told me that I should expect about 30% of my business will evaporate (for whatever reason.) Yikes! What did I get myself into? Start every year down 30%?
The only option for me was to commit to constantly prospect for new business. I found that the radio sales funnel for some prospects could be as quick as the first presentation and as long as up to two years (got that one this year.)
Permalink Reply by Michael T. Boldt on November 18, 2011 at 5:59am Like most stations, we monitor the competition regularly and bring lists in to the sales meetings to discuss. Most recently though, I assigned our office manager the task of going through the daily papers each day and recording in Excel format the Name of the Advertiser, Size of ad and the Theme listed by date. This has turned very beneficial for me because I can quickly see who's spending and how much... with it all on one sheet. Plus we can store this for future use and be proactive and actually beat the newspaper reps to the clients. As we all know most long-term newspaper advertisers are quite predictable and run the same ads/sales/themes each month each year. Now our reps can develop creative strategies for these specific events as part of their overall presentations.
Permalink Reply by Leslie Meyer on November 18, 2011 at 7:49am That's a great idea. I'm going to have to implement that for my staff.
The FIRST Salesperson who goes to the Sales Manager and asks for the account gets to write the Account on our Prospecting Chart and then has 30 days to make contact and conduct a C.N.A. and another 30 days to make a presentation and close the deal. If the sale is not made at the end of 60 days, the Account goes on the Open List.
If the Salesperson does not get prior approval from the Sales Manager, he/she will probably not get the first chance at the account, but that is up to the Sales Manager.
We have five salespeople and a market area that includes 5,000 businesses, so there are plenty of accounts to go around.
it is a total free for all, of course a few A-E's are protected, otherwise it is dog-eat-dog, unfortunately
Permalink Reply by Jane K. Ashley on November 18, 2011 at 11:53am Free For All - unless they are on the air with you or have been on the air with you in the last six months, you can prospect them. Amazingly, no one has killed someone yet, but there have been some "hissy" fits. If you are a good prospector, this lack of system works well. I've also worked where I had a territory, and your growth is limited. So with that being said, sales will grow more for the station and most of the reps with a "free for all."
Permalink Reply by Bob (The Bear) Villones on November 18, 2011 at 1:51pm I love the "free for all" method. it keeps my sales staff hungry. I challenge them to even out prospect me. I keep a close eye on the follow up and if an account doesn't seem to develop I'll assign it to a new AE.
Prospecting starts with discussions with the salespeople as a group... targeting a.) categories, e.g., dentists, chiropractors, etc., b.) season, e.g., tires in the fall, tanning in the spring, etc., c.) calendar, e.g., National Heart Month in Feb, Breast Cancer Month in October, etc. plus holiday driven categories, d.) station promotions or events, e.g., bridal show, Halloween bags, July 4 fireworks, etc. 1-3 months in advance we discuss what areas, categories should be targeted. We review the report for the same months 1 and 2 years ago - who was on, what they went on air for. Salespeople have learned to keep notes from previous meetings and pull up those contacts who were approached for any given month and did not buy - if it's logical they should be approached they should be approached and presented again. We develop a list and each salesperson leaves the meeting with who to contact, how the contact should be made, the rationale for the presentation.
Otherwise prospecting has been geographic - our signal area covers a number of towns, many of which have events for which we hit the street, presenting a co-op-type participation to promote a festival, high school team going to the playoffs, or other local event to which they hope to attract business from outside their immediate community. Cost is low, they each get a 10-sec message to run in rotation. We normally put these in a :60 w/open, close and 3-4 :10's back to back in the middle as a donut. A few of these contacts have turned into regular advertisers.
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