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Media is to Fuel as the Recession is to Fire - How Does it Impact the Sales Force?

  
  
  

Dave Kurlan is a top-rated speaker, best-selling author, sales thought leader and highly regarded sales development expert.

The media - they didn't cause the banking crisis but they have surely capitalized on it, dramatized it, chronically reported every devastating development and turned a serious but contained fire into a wildfire.

I don't want to hear how many jobs have been lost.  Who does that help?  I don't want to hear what happened to the Dow - I can look it up if I want to know how much money I lost.  I don't want to hear who is going into bankruptcy.  It doesn't affect me.  I don't want to know the latest store closings, whose sales are off for the quarter, how lousy the auto makers are doing or whose house is being foreclosed.  The point is, it doesn't help me, it doesn't help you and it doesn't help anybody, anywhere, to listen to this never-ending, negative drama.  In fact, it hurts.  It depresses people, it scares people and it causes people to stop buying things. It is causing businesses to lay-off employees, not because they have to, but because they have an excuse to, and it's causing people to wonder if it's ever going to improve.

I don't want to know who was murdered last night either.  And I don't want to know who got killed in Iraq or Afghanistan. This doesn't impact me either.

In fact, let's roll the news back to just 30 minutes, let's give the meteorologist and sports anchor a few more minutes, and let's hear some news that is really news.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average isn't news.  A company's earnings shouldn't be news.

Let's hear about the good that companies are doing. Let's hear about the good that people are doing.  Let's hear about the things organizations are doing to improve our economy.  Let's hear about the things being done to improve health care, the environment, our lives, our world, our universe.

Tell us about the latest developments in space, under water, in remote places.  Tell us something good.  Tell us something positive.  Tell us something to take our minds OFF of what's going on and help us to put some normalcy back into our lives.

For those of us who consult, train, coach, evaluate and motivate executive teams and sales organizations, this would surely help us to help them.  We need to get people buying and nothing gets people buying like good salespeople who aren't selling into the most resistant marketplace in the history of selling.

I will tell 250 sales development experts, 10,000 subscribers to Baseline Selling, and the thousands who visit this blog to boycott the news.  And if they each tell someone, who tells someone, who tells someone we could actually have an impact. How about calling this initiative something like 3M2P -  Media Motivating the Masses 2 Prosper?  Seriously, it's not an initiative, it's not an organization, it's not more than one person's frustration. But what if it was?

I've never asked for my articles to be forwarded but I think this is the one I have been saving that request for.  Please forward the link to anyone you think will agree with this.

(c) Copyright 2009 Dave Kurlan



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Posted by Dave Kurlan on Wed, Mar 11, 2009 @ 07:25 AM

COMMENTS

AMEN. You couldn't have put it better. Maybe this should be sent to all the news media including the media posts and blogs. It is time for all of us to be positive, to think positive and quit listening to the "doom sayers". They help nothing and no one. Maybe if we all stop listening they will go away or at least begin to talk to us with positive news.

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 8:19 AM by Ed Kleinman


Dave, I couldn't agree more. My wife and I have stopped watching the talking heads at night and are spending our time on positive activities. Just think what would happen if everyone did this!

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 8:25 AM by Steve Garshaw


Great points, Dave (as usual). I seriously believe the media frenzy has an overall impact on productivity, attitude, and behavior. Unfortunately the smart people who run the media outlets or advertise with them believe that their constituents prefer to know about bad news.

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 8:52 AM by Duncan Law


Good ideas! One more idea: the reason the media produces the doom-and-gloom material is because it draws viewers who are targets for the advertisers (ergo revenue to the media). As long as we're sending messages, let's send messages to the advertisers, that we want them to sponsor more positive and enriching news stories! Stop giving the advertisers the perception that we want to hear bad news by speaking directly to them!

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 9:12 AM by Rush Burkhardt


There is no difference in this respect between the best demagogue and the worst, both of them having to present their cases equally in terms of melodrama, there is all the difference in the world between the statesman who is humbugging the people into allowing him to do the will of God, in whatever disguise it may come to him, and one who is humbugging them into furthering his personal ambition and the commercial interests of the plutocrats who own the newspapers and support him on reciprocal terms. 
 
George Benard Shaw 
 

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 10:20 AM by Penny


AMEN brother! And let me extend that challenge to our President. Mr. Hope and Change quickly became Mr. Doom and Gloom. He needs to get on tv every day and tell us that things are getting better. It won't be the first time a politician lied to us but at least this time it may do some good!

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 12:43 PM by trish bertuzzi


I've been advocating the boycott of gossip & fear dressed up as "News" since before the election. News organizations are hemorrhaging cash because they are overly reliant on hammering at the fears of their audience to keep their attention. How many times has a derivative of this message been used every day? 
 
“How (you/your loved one) may be in danger if they use (x product) or spend their day at (x location). Right after this…” to keep you watching the commercial break. 
 
As more people wise up will stop listening/watching/reading those sources. All clicks/views online and time watching TV counts as revenue. Stop giving the fear attention & it will pass away. Keep it up!  
 

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 1:36 PM by Matt


That's why I haven't watched the news in 20 years. I would go further than you since I don't think we need the sports or weather either. there are other places to get that information. run old movies instead and let the talking heads get a real job that adds value to the world. Dan Caramanico

posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 10:08 PM by Dan Caramanico


How about the following positive economic bullet points from the past week, culled from dozens of negative ones. This is a practice I started so I can share them with my clients who desire a positive perspective. Dates as shown: 
 
3/12 Marriott International Inc. is looking past the current slump in travel by planning 130 new hotels in the next four years. About half of the new hotels will be built in emerging markets such as China, India and the United Arab Emirates. 
 
 
 
3/11 Telecommunications giant AT&T said Tuesday it’s investing $17 billion to $18 billion this year in preparation for consumer demand to escalate when the economy rebounds. AT&T expects to add 3,000 jobs this year as the company continues to meet growing demand for products supported by wireless broadband networks.  
 
 
 
Commercial building construction costs decreased 5.77 percent in the first quarter of 2009 compared with the fourth quarter of 2008, according to Turner Construction Co. 
 
 
 
3/10 Merck & Co. said Monday it will buy Schering-Plough Corp. for $41.1 billion in cash in the second pharmaceutical megadeal in recent weeks.The Merck deal follows Pfizer Inc.'s (NYSE:PFE) announcement late in January that it will pay $68 billion for Wyeth (NYSE) . 
 
 
 
3/6 After a housing collapse that has virtually halted new home construction, national builders are looking for and buying lots at fire-sale prices, a signal that they are out of new home inventory and plan to start building again. National builders can offer more for lots in good areas because they intend to build on them now, Hunt said. 
 
“I think this year is where we will see a lot of that going on,” Hunt said. “Builders are coming back on the market looking for good deals. The sellers of lots used to be developers. Now it is all banks.” 
 
 
 
3/5 Total sales for the four weeks ending Feb. 28 were $1 billion, a 3.6 percent increase compared with $971.6 million a year earlier, Menomonee Falls-based Kohl’s (NYSE: KSS) said. The company does not release a dollar figure for same-store sales. 
 
 
 
ExxonMobil said Thursday it plans to invest $25 to $30 billion annually over a period of five years on future growth initiatives. 
 
 
 
Life is what you make of it. Cheers!

posted on Thursday, March 12, 2009 at 10:38 AM by Mike Shannon


I completely agree with you on the negativity/positivity of the media. This is something which has always been a problem and should be changed regardless of the credit crunch/banking crisis. 
 
The media has us living in a culture of fear and it is unnecessary. 
 
Generally, I don't watch the news because it's always full of the same depressing BS. But if I was showered with positive stories from around the world when I tuned in, I would certainly tune in more and I like to think that a lot of people feel the same about this. 
 
I want to be inspired, not depressed.

posted on Friday, March 13, 2009 at 9:26 AM by J P


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