Tuesday, December 6, 2011 | Edited by Daniel Moores
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How Marketers Get Inside Your Head to Get You to Stuff Your Stockings
Keywords: Christmas | Consumer Behavior

With a Study of Seasonal Psychology, Brands Find the Right Mix of Price and Emotion in Ad Messages

Consumers claim they're keeping a close eye on holiday budgets, so how to explain this year's record-breaking post-Thanksgiving retail sales?

The secret is landing on the right marketing message, but it's no simple feat. For retailers, planning for the Christmas ads just now airing kicked off months ago.
 


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"Sell More Digital" Webinar This Week!

Every year brings new ideas for making money with digital. Next year will be no exception.

Join RAB's Brandeis Hall for this information-packed webinar, where you'll learn the hottest digital trends for 2012, predictions for the growth of digital advertising, and strategies your station can use to generate more revenue from this increasingly important source.

This presentation will be offered today at 3 PM (Central), and again on Thursday at 10 AM (Central). For more information, click here.

Tell Us About Your Ad Campaigns

If you are hosting a local event or promotion for any mass retailer including Walmart, Kohl's, J.C. Penney, Amazon, Best Buy, Toys "R" Us, Macy's, Walgreens or Target, we want to hear about it.

Please click the link below and send us an email. Be sure to include a brief summary and campaign highlights. Send your email to: retailpromotions@rab.com.



Study: Think Python, Not Buying Funnel

No Begging Here: Pet Food Makers Grow Appetite for Sponsorship

Pickups: America Falls Back in Love

Restaurants Sales at All-Time High as Recession Fades

Why Car Prices Vary From City to City

 

Holiday Travel Expected to be Up This Year
Keywords: Vacations | Christmas

It's that time of year again, and more Americans are saying they will take a trip of at least one night during this holiday season, a recent survey found.

Nearly 60 percent of adults were confident they would take a holiday trip this season. That's up from 50 percent last year and more comparable with 2009 levels (61 percent), according to a poll conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs on behalf of Mondial Assistance USA, which sells travel insurance and assistance services.

 

Two-Thirds of Americans Drink, but Tastes Vary by Region
Keywords: Liquor/Wine Retailing | Beer

In Manhattan, Millie Tourtelot keeps an eye out for restaurants with good wine lists or innovative cocktails. "I really like to enjoy what I'm drinking," says Tourtelot, 32. In Chicago, Mike Flanagan, 24, has a few beers in his apartment before downing a few more at a neighborhood bar with friends. Meanwhile, down in Grapevine, Texas, Jim Richards, 58, steers clear of alcohol entirely. He runs the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention, which in 2007 banned its leaders from drinking.

 

     

Research Quick Hits


Daily Sales Tip: Making Sure Your Team Has the Tools to Succeed

As any coach of a sport will tell you, you have to be confident that your team has all the tools they need to win every time they step into the arena. I believe that there is a similar parallel in business, and within sales team management in particular.

I'd be willing to guess that, if you're like most, you probably take a good percentage of that confidence for granted when managing a sales team. Very often, companies assume that everyone has mastered the corporate playbook and they should instinctively know how to do their job. After all, it's what you hired them to do, right?

But, that's where the problem often lies. To be successful, teams can never take anything for granted. It's why they spend countless hours on the practice field in preparation to get it right on game day. And in business, you need to look at it the same way. Here's how:

Have a game plan. Developing a clearly defined sales process that employs all of your best practices is worth the time and effort. When your team knows the landscape and the milestones, you dramatically improve their chances of success. They'll now know what to do, where to expect the typical hurdles, and the best ways to overcome them.

Drill them on the fundamentals. Most sales professionals know how to sell effectively, but are you confident they know how to sell YOUR product well? Don't just dump sales sheets and brochures on them, or tell them to read the website. Develop "drills" that encourage and challenge them to know your product inside and out. The sales axiom of "it's easy to sell what you know" is never more appropriate. Make them know your products in their sleep. It's really worth their time -- and yours.

Give them the skills/tools they need. Companies spend millions every year hiring outside consultants to train salespeople to "sell smarter" or whatever the latest buzzword is. But more often than not, it's about learning a technique and not how it fits with your product. Like I said earlier, many salespeople already know how to sell. But, your people will deliver much more if they're shown the best practices for selling YOUR products. That's where having a defined sales process comes in and where sharing what you've learned over time will make a significant difference. When you share knowledge, everyone benefits.

Source: Kary Zate, Marketing Communications Manager at LandslideCRM


Job Postings

Account Executives, CBS - Washington, DC
General Manager/Sales Manager, OHIO
Local Sales Manager, Neuhoff Communications - Springfield, IL
General Sales Manager, CBS/WJFK - Washington, DC
General Manager, Renda Radio - Punxsutawney, PA

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