DavidEduardo said:The best way to explain this to someone who thinks sellers are somehow inferior to on-air and programming folks is to say that salespeople are best thought of as independent contractors. Their pay is based on what they bring in, of which they get a cut.
I understand how salespeople make their money. And it isn’t I who thinks salespeople are inferior to programming staff… but sales managers who ultimately run radio companies (programmers rarely do) think programming staff are expendable.
DavidEduardo said:Salespeople are at high risk. If they don't bring in enough to justify the training and supervisory costs, they get cut loose. If they don't get enough business from the accounts they are assigned, they get cut loose. If they don't do well in training, they get cut loose. If they don't follow through on each sales and give good service, they get cut loose. So a station will have as many sellers as is needed to cover all the potential business. If there are not enough, then a station misses out on business, and revenue is lower than it should be.
The problem is that you have too many salespeople working for one company going after the same pool of potential clients. Instead of a tight team of great sellers who bring in good money while fighting for the best value for their clients, your top sellers are fighting with a surplus of twenty-somethings who can’t sell very well and who are let go after their six-month guarantee is up because they don’t make budget.
Again, it’s about management not seeing how to build and invest in a product. They simply thought more salespeople would multiply the amount of money coming in. What they didn’t want to accept was that each town only has so many money trees. Adding more people to shake the branches doesn’t mean the tree yields more fruit. It just means each shaker brings home a smaller bunch.
DavidEduardo said:The commissions paid to sellers is very much related to what sellers can make selling the local cable system, the yellow pages, print, TV, deal of the day operators, etc. So what a good seller makes (and bad sellers don't make $100 k) is whatever it takes to make them interested in radio rather than some other medium or something outside of media.
The problem here with your reasoning is that local TV, the local cable system, the local print media and yellow pages still offer something that radio has been slowly (and is nearly done with) getting rid of: local compelling content. The sales force at the local TV station makes a heckuva lot of money selling spots during the Morning, 5:00 p.m., 6:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. news… especially the weather adjacencies. See how well the sales staff is doing at that one station in town with no news department and no real compelling first-run programming.
DavidEduardo said:What jocks and production people make is relative to what it would take to get a comparable person with the same qualifications. There is a bigger supply of programming people than good sellers. So guess who makes more?
Which is why programmers and talent get bonuses for ratings improvements and/or sustenance. Yet sales people can’t do shows that actually build and retain the audience that a sales force wishes to deliver to a potential advertiser. The sales folks in charge want to blame Pandora, iPods and everything else for the lack of listenership but never will they admit that they chose to spend less money building better programming. They’re too busy paying out six-month guarantees to underproductive superfluous salespeople who do nothing but make it harder for the good sellers to do good business.
DavidEduardo said:Sales management trains, assigns accounts, does 4-legged calls, checks competitive monitors, sets rates, analyzes inventory usage and conveys avail data to sellers, works on late pays and collection accounts, works with local and corporate on budgets, helps prepare sales material, takes calls to resolve client issues such as "my copy did not run..." or "your salesperson said I'd get lots of spots in morning drive." And lots more, too.
And it takes six executives to do this? Yet on the programming side, one person making 25K will be doing the legwork, the quality control, and the last minute production changes the sales staff needs done because the client changed his mind on the copy.
I actually had one GM in a MAJOR market (both an Arbitron major market and one of Clear Channel’s big markets) tell me that programming was the filler between the important stuff. And he wasn’t busting my chops. He was serious.
Now that’s offensive. And that is the prevailing attitude at that place. And it makes the whole business suck for the programming side and for the sales side.