Optimism is a seed sown in the soil of faith; pessimism is a seed hoarded in the vault of doubt.
– William Arthur Ward
E
verything I learned about selling I learned in one afternoon from my father, at his furniture store in New Era, Michigan. I was 12 years old then.
I was sweeping the floor when an elderly woman entered the store. I asked Dad if I could wait on her. “Sure,” he replied.
“May I help you?”
“Yes, young man. I bought a sofa from your store. Its leg just felt off. I want to know when you’re going to fix it.”
“When did you purchase it, ma’am?”
“About 10 years ago.”
I told my father that she thought we were going to fix her old sofa for free. But he said to tell her we’d be there that afternoon.
After screwing on the new leg with her old coach, we left. On the ride back the store, Pop asked, “What’s bothering you, son?”
“You know that I want to go to college. If we drive around fixing old sofas for free, we’ll go broke!”
“You had to learn how to do that repair job anyway. Besides, you missed the most important part, did you? You didn’t notice the store tag when we flipped the couch over. She bought it from Sears.”
“You mean we did that job for nothing and she’s not even our customer?”
Dad looked me in the eye and said, “She is now.”
Two days later, she returned to our store and bought several thousand dollars worth of new furniture from us. When we delivered it, she put a gallon jar filled with change, singles, fives, tens, twenties, fifties and hundreds on the kitchen table.
I’ve been selling for 30 years since that day. During that period of time, I have had the highest closing average in every organization I have represented because I treat every customer with respect.
- Michael T. Burcon