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Showing posts with label Recognizing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recognizing. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

(SALES) Recognizing Your Superior Performers

3-18-2013

At Luce Performance Group, we continue to give out awards that recognize top performances in several categories from the various media companies that we consult. I remember one night when we gave out our awards tied to the Radio Advertising Bureau's national convention in Dallas, the president of our company, George Luce, put it best during the commencement of the LPG awards show that night: ?This is the most important night of the year for LPG.?

Not everyone is motivated by money. Research has shown that one in four top performers leave organizations every year because of lack of recognition. Whether it?s the Grammys, the Oscars, or the Radio Wayne Awards sponsored by Radio Ink, all you have to do is look on the faces of the people who get the awards. You?ll know why some who received their LPG awards responded, ?This is something I?ll never forget.?
Another benefit of giving awards and recognizing your top performers is that, in this day of mergers and acquisitions, it helps create loyalty to you and your people. Whether you?re a small media company in a small market, or have many media companies in a large market, you can, and should, recognize outstanding personal performances.

Here are some recognition awards that you can give to your sales reps. These could be plaques you hand out during an awards show. They could bring their significant other, which would really garner support from the home front also.

1) Rising Star: This award goes to the individual who has been in media sales less than two years and shows tremendous potential in sales and leadership inside the sales department. This person also shows the intangibles that separate average performance from great performance. The award identifies those individuals with a strong work ethic, ability to persevere, and dedication to their new career.

2) Rainmaker: Simply put, this person brings in more business to your company than anybody else in the sales department. To level the playing field, rather than rewarding people according to the total dollars of their orders, it rewards them on the number of new business accounts based on the average sales at your company. The more new business accounts sold, the greater the potential of turning those into larger accounts in the future.

3) Sales Rep of the Year: Most media companies award this to the person who puts the most business on the books. However, this doesn?t necessarily mean that this is the best rep. Several of the companies we work with award this according to a variety of criteria, not necessarily giving it to the rep who wrote the most business. Again, you want to level the playing field with all of your reps. You might want to consider the number of new accounts, percentage over budget or quota for the year, highest unit rate average, lowest level or attrition from year over year, and/or the number of testimonials brought in. Depending on the market, there are many tangible and intangible things that could determine your Salesperson of the Year. The most important thing is to award it.

4) Don?t Forget Other Departments: Make sure all departments in your organization are recognized. You don?t want it tilted just to sales. Everybody else will feel left out. You do yourself more damage than good by just recognizing sales reps. When I walk a property for the first time in any media company, I always look for the awards on the walls. If there aren?t any, then management needs to get going. It doesn?t matter that it?s March and this is something you have never done before. You can start today with Salesperson of the Month. Just go to the trophy shop and get a plaque that has 12 plates on it. Don?t make the ?Salesperson of the Month? criteria too complicated, or you will eliminate reps that might find the criteria burdensome rather than motivational.
This also is a great time to take some video and pictures. Some of the companies we consult have annual award celebrations. Every winner gets a 2- to 3-minute video of them receiving the award and their ?thank you? speech. Winners also receive a framed picture of themselves with the person that presented the award. Make it a night, or award them in a fashion they will never forget, literally. Take the pictures, and run the video and document it. These also are great recruiting tools to show potential recruits that you do in fact recognize beyond money and take care of your people.
Sean Luce is the Head National Instructor for the Luce Performance Group and can be reached at sean@luceperformancegroup.com

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Saturday, November 5, 2011

Recognizing Radio Greats

by Buzz Knight

As Radio Ink acknowledges current Programmers and legendary jocks of the past, I?d like to recognize three individuals who I had the pleasure of working with that made a difference in our industry and made an impact on me. John Mcghan, George Taylor Morris and Scott Muni.

John Mcghan was a former Programmer for NBC Radio and Taft Broadcasting who had a remarkable energy that connected with everyone he came into contact with. Somebody once described John as ?the PT Barnum of radio? and I think the description clearly fit. He LOVED the radio business and it showed!

John used to frequently remind everyone in the business around him that we were spoiled because we never had to wait on line to buy concert tickets to the hottest show of the year. He understood the power of the listener and treated them like royalty. John Mcghan believed that we should ?think like a fan and make everyone a star.? I miss John every day that I?m in the radio business and wish more people got to be around this? fabulous? personality.

John Mcghan passed away in the late 1980's. Pictured here from left to right are: John McGhan, James Young of Styx; David Benjamin, and Dick Ebersol. (Photo by Chuck Pulin)

George Taylor Morris (GTM) had an extraordinary career that included work at XM Radio, NBC Radio and Infinity Radio. He also hosted a legendary syndicated show called ?Reelin in the Years? for many years that ran across the country. GTM was an original.

He loved the beautiful details of the music he played and had a passionate memory for every last fact. George Taylor Morris approached his career as a craftsman who was constantly curious and never afraid of reinvention. Back in 1997, he discovered the odd musical synchronicity between Pink Floyd Dark Side of the Moon and The Wizard of OZ and the story went viral even before viral was as huge a buzz generator as it is today. George was a gentlemen in a business not always known for gentlemen and he?s not forgotten. Morris passed away in 2009

Scott Muni became the most famous Rock DJ in New York Radio for his work on WNEW-FM. ?Fats,? as he was lovingly known as was a larger than life character who made radio his life. Every afternoon for three decades, he poured his heart and soul into his show and he became the voice of progressive rock radio. Scott?s relationships with the artists allowed him to create endless interviews with the greatest names in rock and roll. He not only connected with the New York audience but he educated and helped them discover the music that shaped a generation. It was a joy to experience Scott?s energy. I wish he was here today to challenge us to love what we do every day. Muni died in 2004.

I?m sure many of you have your own list of great co-conspirators that you encountered in your career path that you won?t forget because they had the same type of traits as the three I described. All of these? gents? were true characters in the best sense of the word.

Buzz Knight is the Vice President of Program Development for Greater Media. He can be reached at bknight@greatermediaboston.com

Knight was named among ?Best Programmers? by Radio Ink Magazine in 2007 and 2010. He has served on the programming subcommittee of the National Association of Broadcasters(NAB) and is currently a member of the Arbitron Radio Advisory Council and the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) COLRAM Committee.

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