Yup, it's Girl Scout Cookie time in our part of the world. [And, yes, my English teacher DID tell me never to start a sentence with the word "Yup."] For those of you who are unfamiliar with the sights, tastes, and overall experience of helping your daughters sell Thin Mints, Samoas, and Do-Si-Do's, you're missing a fundamental and wide-ranging education about the dynamics of sales, selling, and salespeople.

Here are some points I've garnered while helping my daughter, Nicole, age 12, and Troop 429, make their sales numbers. These pointers are hard-earned, field-tested, and as applicable to you and your business as they are to Nicole and hers.

1.  It's who you know. It's true: the cookie business is a relationship business. Our next-door neighbor bought 9 boxes - Bam! Neighbors on the other side, 2 boxes, then 3, then more. Why? Because Rebecca had something to sell. What's your personal brand doing these days? If you switched products, services, or companies, would people buy from you JUST BECAUSE IT'S YOU?

2.  It's not about the product. It's time to get the lawyers upset. Ready? Girl Scout Cookies, for the most part, taste terrible [Thin Mints are the one exception, in my humble opinion]. And they have enough fat, calories, and cholesterol in them to power a small Japanese alternative fuel vehicle. You want good cookies? Buy Oreos, Mallomars, Ginger Snaps, Nutter Butters, Grasshoppers, Deluxe Grahams, Fudge Sticks, etc. etc. Yet Girl Scout Cookies sell like crazy, year after year, donating millions to the bottom line of Girl Scouts of the USA.

3.  It's not about price. Girl Scout Cookies cost $3 a box. The smallest box, by weight, is 7 oz. and the largest is 10 oz. Most retail cookies come packaged in a "small" size of around 12 oz. and cost about $2.49. Girl Scout Cookies even give premium brands, such as Pepperidge Farm, a run for their money when it comes to high cost. Did I mention one of our neighbors bought 9 boxes at a clip?

4.  It's not about competition; it's all about contacts and referrals. So who is selling to all those customers who "have Girl Scout Cookies at home - more than they need?" Naturally, it's their Girl Scout. What are the chances of Rebecca selling a box of cookies to someone whose daughter is also selling the same cookies for the same price? You got it: less than zero. Is Rebecca going to bang her head against the wall bemoaning those lost sales?

Of course not.

She's going to tap into her network of networks - neighbors, cousins, kids and parents at the Y where she plays basketball, my former colleagues at my old job who have become good family friends (and Rebecca's customers in previous years). Do you know how to fill your pipeline when things seem dry? Do you know how to move your prospects along to becoming customers, satisfied customers, and then customers-for-life - not of the product or service you're selling today, but of YOU and whatever value proposition you might be offering now and in the future?

5.  When times are tough and things look quiet, that's the time to push harder than ever. Cookie sales end at a certain time each year. Right now, we're about two weeks away from the ending date, and there are Girl Scout Cookies being sold everywhere you look. We'll probably have 10-12 boxes left over by the time the deadline comes. Are we depressed that we didn't meet our goal? Are we failures as salespeople?  

Only if we quit when it's over.  

Don't you see that as soon as everyone else stops selling, stops marketing, and stops with the "Cookie Shop" setups -- these cookies move up from a commodity to a valuable asset? It's the same thing in your business: when the market is down, your competition has pulled their ads, it's "hunker-down" time, get back to basics, and cut, cut, cut! However, that's the worst time to cut - you have everyone's attention! There's actually much less noise out there for your message to compete against.  Push now and you'll be heard!!!

What does this all mean to you and your business?

It's simple -- now is the time to get back in the saddle and ride your sales and marketing activities harder than ever. You've got the floor. You've got more relationships and more people rooting for you than you realize, and if you cut through the old excuses about your product, price, competition, the economy, and all the rest of it, you'll see the sales breakthroughs that lie ahead.

Why waste another minute?

Maverick Rules!

 
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8 Comments on You Sell Like a "GIRL"!

MAY
18
230,762 Points 9 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Good points.  I don't see Girl Scout email blasts, post cards, Facebook, Twitters, Newspaper ads.  This is in your face selling.  As technology increases we tend to forget the basics that will always work.

Go sell a cookie........

4:09pm • #2
1 Featured Post Outside Blog

What a great post!  I love the comparisons...all are so true!  I completely agree with you...most Girl Scout cookies are pretty low on the taste totem pole but we buy them anyway!! ;-)

4:16pm • #4
219,687 Points 4 Featured Posts

They are all packing!  but some of them are just DELICIOUS, you just need to pick your fav's!!

I wish boyscouts sold the cookies, would be so much easier than the fund raisers that the Boyscouts are stuck with.

4:45pm • #5
179,195 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor

Hi Dave ~ Thin Mints are awesome!! I can inhale a box in no time flat.  And I think the peanut butter (the regular ones - not any newfangled version) are very good too. 

Liz

8:49pm • #6
MAY
19
156,121 Points

Dave: Your title really grabbed me, I was ready to see what selling like a girl was about, cute post, now go & sell cookies.

12:35am • #7
102,206 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor

Dave - Good mindset.  Thanks for the awareness.

4:17am • #8

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Dave Park "The Maverick Builder"

Raleigh, NC

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Advantage Inspection Raleigh

Address: 4020 Wake Forest Road #111, Raleigh, NC, 27609

Office Phone: (919) 850-2526

Cell Phone: (919) 796-1141

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Mentoring by creating business platforms and structures that foster ideas and innovation. Advice on Real Estate sales strategy development through visualizing innovation and streamlining its implementation. Sales and Marketing tips for the Home Inspection Industry.


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