Tuesday, November 6, 2007

The Power of Prospecting

Reps who shift their focus find no shortage in ad business

Imagine the scene: a newspaper advertising team is gathered for an end-of-day celebration. They form a semi-circle around a large whiteboard. There are cheers and jeers as each rep reports prospecting success and sales results for the day. Kathy, a long-time real estate rep writes $15,000 on the board as her results for the day. She turns to the group and says, “There’s a lot of business out there from people who are not going to call us.”

For years I have worked with advertising reps to help them improve their sales effectiveness, and recently we’ve all seen how the marketplace has changed. Today newspaper leaders are recognizing that reps are spending too much time servicing existing accounts and not enough time prospecting for new business.

The competition—alternatives to newspaper advertising—have focused on prospecting for a long time now. Perhaps it’s because their product did not give advertisers the ROI that newspapers provided. Maybe advertisers weren’t calling and the reps had to prospect just to stay in business.

I have known radio sales managers who didn’t allow their reps to be in the office between mid-morning and late afternoon. That was prospecting time. I’ve seen others require their reps talk to at least 10 potential advertisers daily. These might have been tough policies, but perhaps they were necessary to survive!

My experience in working with newspaper clients has shown me that today’s market holds a tremendous number of sales opportunities for newspaper reps who go out and get them. What’s more, the competitive landscape has changed, making it essential for newspaper reps to spend more time prospecting, and consequently win more business.

So here are some tips for newspapers that want to capture more advertising dollars:

1. Communicate compelling expectations to reps. Most reps tell me they are too busy servicing existing accounts to do much prospecting. Tell them that the competitive landscape has changed, and that spending more time prospecting is not optional.

2. Communicate specific, measurable, actionable prospecting goals.

3. Inspect what you expect. If the goal is to call 30 non-advertisers a day, inspect the call sheets regularly.

4. Celebrate successes. In 1955 no one believed a human could run a four-minute mile because no one had ever done it before. But when Roger Banister reached this goal, 16 other runners achieved it within weeks. Celebrating advertising sales successes will have the Roger Banister effect on your team.

5. Don’t blink. Your people are not going to like prospecting. They will come up with every excuse imaginable to avoid it. If you accept a rep’s excuse for not reaching prospecting goals, you’ve not only blinked—you’ve also lost business!

Newspapers whose reps are prospecting have discovered that, despite changes in the competitive landscape, the advertising dollars are out there to win. So the message for reps is, don’t wait for the calls—go out and get your share!

High return on investment

Newspaper with growing circulation points to the value of follow-up on service errors

Recently I’ve been working in the customer service department of a large newspaper that holds the distinction of growing circulation. Sure, it has the benefits of a growing market and a good product, but the same is true for many newspapers with declining circulation. So what makes the difference? This newspaper might be considered downright fanatical about following up on all service errors, except that the results make their emphasis on follow-up quite rational.

Missed paper? A replacement arrives within 30 minutes. Same time the next day, a rep calls the subscriber to make sure that day’s paper arrived.

If a subscriber cancels for poor service, the district manager follows up to solve the problem and win back the business.

The newspaper empowers its customer service reps to make sure every problem gets fixed. They can call carriers themselves. They follow up personally on each service error call to make sure the issue is resolved.

Every district manager rides with new carriers for the first full week of delivery and for the first two Sundays.

I run a call center that makes outbound retention calls on behalf of newspaper clients to subscribers who are late in grace. By the time we get the records and make the calls, theses subscribers have made up their minds that they are going to quit the paper. It is our job to win them back. I listen to several hundred of these calls each week. Here’s what I hear regularly:

• “I got a new subscription and it was delivered OK for two weeks and then it stopped. When I called to complain, nothing was done. If you can’t deliver the paper, just never mind.”

• “I got a bill that was wrong, I asked for a corrected one, it never came. I refuse to pay this incorrect bill.”

• “I paid for a year in advance, and you have not given me credit for the payment. Now you have stopped my paper. If you can’t keep things straight, I don’t want to deal with you.”

• “We moved, but we never got the paper at the new address. You seem to be able to mail a bill to my new address, but not my newspaper! I have called three times, and still no delivery.”

Every one of these problems and hundreds like them would be solved—relatively easily and inexpensively—with a service error follow-up call. Yet newspaper executives tell me daily that their team members just do not have time or resources to follow up with subscribers to make sure their problems were fixed.

In response, I point to the newspaper I have cited here that requires its staff to make the time and invest the resources. Without a doubt the apparent returns to their bottom line and circulation figures have far exceed their investment of time and resources.