Zingers

Showing posts with label zingers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zingers. Show all posts

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Technology: A Door Or A Window?

Technology: A Door Or A Window?

In business or personal relationships, two things have been key to success for at least 9,000 years. Stop and write down what you think they are, then continue reading and when you are finished, see if you were correct.

Sears, the retail giant, was known for the helpfulness and service of its salespeople. They were ever present to answer questions, give advice on wearability or to find an item in the storeroom if the shelf or rack was empty. When Sears bought point of sales computer technology, the cost was offset, by replacing salespeople on the floor, with strategically located checkout locations. The customers had to search . . .

Read the June, 2008 Zinger to see if you were correct on the two keys to success and the results of the Technology decision at Sears, once the retail giant of the world.

Zingers is a monthly newsletter subscription that includes the first two issues free. You may purchase this month's newsletter individually for $5.47 without subscribing to the monthly newsletter subscription.



Buy Technology: A Door Or A Window?

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Pricing - Are Your Prices High Enough?

Pricing - Are Your Prices High Enough?

Pricing

Are Your Prices High Enough?



One of the most difficult decisions for anyone, in business, is pricing the product being sold. Remember, you are in business when you perform a service for a fee, sell products in a store, a catalog, on the Internet, or from a stand on a street corner. This subject has come to mind from two happenings in the last week.

This the opening paragraph in the latest Zinger.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Zingers

The latest copy of the Zingers Newsletter will be out next week.

Read about the latest Zinger here:

A Tree Grows From The Bottom Up


The Perception of a Difference


The Power in Buying, Marketing, Selling, Customer Care


Wes Zimmerman


Subscribe to Zingers Newsletter:

Only $5.47 per issue



Sunday, February 24, 2008

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Zingers

Zingers - January 2008 Zinger - "Renewal? Which Policy? On What?"

There is a new Zinger teaser posted for January.

If you subscribe to the Zimmerman's Zingers Newsletter, you will get this issue.

If you are not currently a paid subscriber, you can order just this edition or you can subscribe and get the next two Zingers free.

Subscribe today and see what you have been missing.

Zingers - "Renewal? Which Policy? On What?"

Friday, January 4, 2008

Zingers

Zingers # 1207



December 2007 Zinger

Zingers - December 2007 Zinger


"You'd have thought he was buying the company."

"He is."

Part two of "The Perfect Job. . . Ended Too Soon"

Last month's Zinger did not address my friend's question, what did I do wrong? Instead it addressed what the employer, the CEO, did not realize about himself, which ultimately caused him to fire my friend.

In this Zinger we learn what my friend did not realize he was actually doing when he accepted the job, and what he could have done if he had.

Wes Zimmerman

Zingers is a monthly newsletter subscription that includes the first two issues free. You may purchase this month's newsletter individually for $5.47 without subscribing to the monthly newsletter subscription.





Buy The Perfect Job Part Two











Thursday, November 29, 2007

The Perfect Job

This month, Wes Zimmerman's Zingers Newsletter is about losing a dream job and is called:

The Perfect Job

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Surprising Search Terms

Surprising Search Terms - How Do I Find Thee?

(... Let me count the ways ...)

I began writing blogs because it was a way to share thoughts that do not fit the Zingers format or a book. Writing is fun for me and it is another tool to use in helping people. I believe that is calling; what I am supposed to do with my life. If it isn't, it certainly gives me daily satisfaction. I do not do it to gain fame, which I don't have, or wealth, which I also do not have: I do it a very selfish reason: It gives me joy and pleasure and helps me over the rough spots.

Every month, my web master friend, Bill Austin, sends me the statistics on this blog and our web site readership. The internet is a magic world populated with gremlins, spiders and other search engines that pick up words, phrases and maybe even full sentences and stuff them into hidden directories you and I never see. These are then picked up when a person puts some of the words into the search box of Yahoo, Google or some other search engine.

You have to scroll down the statistics to see them and they can be surprising. In October, for instance, one visitor arrived at the site when the search engine thought he said, "my mind is fried." Others included; "Oldsmobile," "hair zingers .com," "en-my," "ferarri," and "examples of perjury." My mind is fried and examples of perjury came from a blog article, but none of the others did.

Of course there were many words that I used in blogs and Zingers and even the book excerpts on the site. There were several variations of my name, also. The one that really makes me laugh is "who is wes zimmeman." The first five search results on Google were about me, even when the name was spelt wrong.

That one intrigues me....

Wes Zimmerman

Monday, October 8, 2007

New Evidence! It Happens After The Fifth

Zingers Promos

In March we began an email promo campaign to acquaint folks with and acquire email subscriptions to Zimmerman's Zingers, a monthly publication consisting of a true story, a few questions and perhaps a moral, that will help business owners and anyone managing people. Our first effort, three mailings that described the Zingers and what people said about them, was a statistical failure.

For our second effort we have been emailing actual Zingers. The first mailing is a Zinger with a "click below to subscribe" box, the second, four weeks later, is a Zinger with a few more words added to the "click to subscribe" box. Three weeks later we send a two-sentence email saying watch for the Zinger coming in seven days. In seven days it arrives with a message above the "Click to Subscribe" box saying we can't continue sending these free, forever.

Three days after that mailing I visited Ron Cortez, founder of Cortez Coffee Company, to buy really great tasting coffee. He has been receiving this latest Zinger Promo mailing. In the roasting room he asked,

"Do you believe in the barter system?

"Yes, I use it regularly."

"Good, I am really enjoying your Zingers and want to keep getting them. I will keep you supplied with coffee, you put me on the Zinger paid subscriber list. Ok?"

"Done! And thank you."

"The latest Zinger, about the gasoline filling station, proves that we all buy from an individual, not a company. I have always believed this; the Zinger proves it. Every coffee house owner needs to know this. "Wes, every coffee house owner needs the Zingers. The information is invaluable and so easy to read and understand the message. Send the promo to all of them."

This is the third Zinger in the promo; the first two ask for the order in a very low-key, manner. The third is also a, low-key, request with a statement that gets your attention; as in get off your duff and do it now. I will continue the effort for up to a total of five, maybe six, Zingers and two additional separate reminders, which will make a grand total of eight contacts, or sales calls with each person, before I stop the effort. It will take five, almost six months before I stop.

Why continue so long, you ask.

My experience and that of countless sales professionals, shows that at least fifty percent (50%) of all buying decisions are completed after the fifth contact with the sales person. Ron's is the first order from this promo effort, and it comes after the third contact/call. I'm betting there will be more and more for two key reasons. The Zingers are doing the talking on each call and each call is valuable to the prospect: Cardinal rule of selling, deliver value on each contact. Secondly, buying and selling are educational processes during which a trusting relationship develops. It gets stronger each time and is realized after the fifth contact.

The tools we use to educate each other in the buying selling process have changed with technology, but our brains, perceptive acuity, and humanness/human nature have not. We still buy from a person (s) we like and trust. It is the first immutable law of sales success.

Wes Zimmerman
Have you read my Sales Book?