Jan 30

Let me explain what I mean by this- I used to sell Cutco knives back in the day and nothing I’ve done since has given me the same “jolt of learning” with regards to salesmanship as that first visceral first experience of sitting in my neighbor’s kitchen with my stomach in knots and asking him to shell out nearly a thousand dollars for a set of knives and then having the guts to ask for a list of all his friends so I could try and sell them too. Many people that know me are well-aware that I used to slang cutlery because odds are that if they were friends with me back then, they got the pitch at some point. It was one of those “MCI Friends & Family-type” arrangements where as the salesperson you would supposedly raid your own address book, pitch all your friends on these knife sets and then at the end of the demo try to get them to give you referrals so you could go and try to sell knives to their friends. Theoretically you could network like this indefinitely and make good money on commission. BTW, the knives are actually extremely good quality (or at least the Manchurian candidate brainwashing we received in our sales training is still effective because I actually still have my set and use them daily ten years later). You can’t sell something you don’t believe in and I actually had the honor of “Fast start Record Breaker” having sold $3k worth of knives in my first week. ooooohhhh, ahhhhh so yea I believed in the product. Lemme tell you though that there is nothing more scary than sitting down for the first time with a complete stranger who has let you in his/her house on a friend’s recommendation and then trying to convince that person within 30min to purchase $683 worth of cutlery from you (why $683 you ask? well this magic number is forever imprinted in my brain as being the sale price before tax of the Homemaker +8 Classic handle knife set – the big kahuna that you always go for when closing a client before you try to upsell with gift sets and extras). Anyways, I promise I do have a point with where I’m going in all this…

So I’m on chapter five now of my Fasttrac book digging into the section titled “Entering and Capturing the Market” and it’s talking about basically all the steps involved in sales- the process of identifying your market, analyzing the segments, how you market to each differently and how the sales funnel works and ultimately how you close deals. One thing it has not mentioned though is the role of humor in diffusing awkward moments. When I sold knives, I worked directly under this guy Don Gerould who happened to be the kingpin for the west coast (like zone division manager or something). He was a phenomenal sales person and one thing he did well was utilize this technique I call “over-reaching and retreating” to diffuse a potentially-awkward situation. So a typical scenario would go like this:

Don – “Great, so I’m glad you chose to buy three of the Homemaker +8’s… there’s just one other thing I could use your help with…”
Customer (incredulous at this point) – “ummm, yeaahhhhh…”
Don – “Well as you know I work on referral. You obviously found value in the knives I showed you here today, if I could just get you to fill out my notebook with 100 names of your closest friends that would appreciate…”
Customer – “100 Names!?! Are you crazy!!!”
Don – “Awww, alright I’m just kidding. Ten will be fine.”
Customer (scratching head) – “Oh is that all? Well, yeah, I suppose I could do that.”

That technique alone translated to probably fifty extra customers for me. Granted, it would be out of place if you had not established good rapport by that point in the conversation, but I can tell you that the value of that type of initial expectation-setting and then retreat is something that I will never forget. Had I gone in asking for the ten names each time, I’m quite sure that I would have been turned down many of those times. Using this tension-shattering technique was priceless. And really if you think about it, nobody ever wants awkwardness- neither the salesperson nor the buyer. Like any technique, delivery and appropriateness for the moment is everything – used correctly it discharges the tension that builds like static electricity during the closing when you are asking someone to pull out their checkbook or give you referrals. Here’s another quick example:

This lame sign was probably responsible for 30% of the total take from a yard sale I threw two weeks ago. I finally moved out of my house and turned it into a rental. I had six years of accumulated junk in the garage (stuff like napkin dispensers, computer parts, roommates’ hubcaps and these weird wrought-iron holders of some type that I don’t even know what they were, but they sold). My house was a good five turns off the main road and in running this yard sale (even though I had an article in the paper, a post on craigslist and signage everywhere) a real concern of mine was that people might bail after the third turn out of boredom trying to find my place. I made a progression of strategically-placed signs that created a dialogue with the buyers before I ever even met them. There was probably 300 people in all that showed up that day and I must have gotten 20-30 different comments from people on how much they liked the signage. The simple, light-hearted curve ball that was tossed to people as they snaked their way through the turns in my subdivision was enough to put most people in a good mood and create a favorable buying environment. The lesson I extracted from that day was that even minor efforts to humanize the buying situation by using conversational English and humor can result in massive returns- and this undoubtedly applies to ecommerce and not just face-to-face sales. Think Flickr before Yahoo acquired them as a good example. And forget what your high school English teacher might have told you about the importance of formality- if the message is for public consumption then the strengthened connection you have with the buyer from using informal, conversational style trumps any type of alleged respect you might garner by demonstrating that you can write near-Shakespearean-style prose.

Of course there are a bunch of other great sales techniques I learned that summer from Don but this is probably enough rambling for one night. What are some anecdotal sales experiences that you have?

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Jan 22

I spent the day today producing a DVD for my aunt who is an extremely talented pastel artist. She was interviewed recently by an arts program on PBS and wanted to use the piece as promotion for getting gigs at museums and art shows. I’ve done one DVD before this using Adobe Encore so it wasn’t hard to step back into it and re-acquaint myself with the interface (using an Adobe interface is about like riding a bike in terms of how it all generally comes back). One issue that popped up, though, was that my sound track was not syncing up with the video track and unfortunately it wasn’t simply off by a consistent delay, it was inconsistently off so that it was impossible to timeshift the track to fix it. It turned out that for whatever reason re-ripping the original video file as an .mpg rather than an .avi fixed the prob. I use a $30 shareware program called AVS Video Converter to rip video media and it works well. I used Encore to put the DVD together and generate the .iso file. Then I use the version of Nero that came w/ my burner (6.6 I think) to burn that image to DVD. With all the ripping, decoding, transcoding, re-encoding that went on today, it’s sure surprising they haven’t been able to make this a simpler process. It ended up taking nearly all day to get it right. From what I understand the Mac DVD burning software is idiot-proof and makes the whole thing a snap. Yet another reason I now have in order to make the switch and get one of those new Mac laptops…

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Jan 19

Anagram is a must-have commercial mini-app that runs in the systray of Windows (sorry no version exists for Mac yet). It functions at an OS level and is invoked via a keyboard shortcut you setup (I mapped mine to ctrl-cc). You highlight a block of text on a web page, pdf, word doc, whatever… invoke anagram and it intelligently parses the text to determine whether it’s a contact or an event. It will pop open your Outlook or Palm Desktop and populate a new record with all the appropriate fields filled out. I’m assuming it uses some kind of regex on the backend but it’s very intelligent. For instance, if I were to use it on this phrase:

Meet me at the park on Washington and 1st in Phoenix, AZ next Thursday at noon.

Anagram would recognize it as an event, apply whatever the date is next thursday and put “Washington and 1st” in the notes field. Likewise, if I run it on someone’s sig file:

John Doe
Blah Corporation
Assistant middle manager of nothing
1234 Main St.
Anywhere, Anytown USA
phone (555)555-5555
fax (555)455-5555
john@blahcorp.com

It will intelligently parse all that into the correct fields of a new contact record. I know, it almost passes the “indistinguishable from magic” test which is why it’s so cool. I use this app every day with Outlook and I have found it to be the “tipping point” for storing useful info that I might have otherwise just skipped out of laziness. It works with Palm Desktop, Outlook and Salesforce.com. I could see it being even more useful for salespeople that deal with many leads and appointments scoured from emails and web pages. It’s the little timesavers like this applied over many uses that simplify life and for $30 this is definitely one of them.

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Jan 18

I had my second night class last night of the FastTrac Tech program put on by Stealthmode Partners in Phoenix and so far I’m impressed. I missed their kickoff class because I was still down in Mexico but the first two classes have already yielded some good ideas and solid connections. This is actually the first time this particular program has been offered anywhere – the course materials we received last night were _literally_ "hot off the presses" (they were still warm from the printers). In a true agile fashion they had xeroxed draft copies of the first two chapters from the book and distributed them and as well put their instructors through accelerated facilitator training to offer the course as early as they did.

The written content thus far has been good and fairly consistent with what I’m getting from the Rhonda Abrahams book Simple Business Plan (which is also very good). The speakers though have exceeded my expectations. The qualifications for presenting at FastTrac are apparently that you must first be a successful entrepreneur yourself. The combination of their anecdotal stories and the ability to ask them questions during class and chat with them afterwards is priceless. There’s also the benefit of being exposed to this material in the presence of fifteen other like-minded individuals who are there for the same reason you are. You get to see the questions they ask and hear about their business ideas and, as our teacher Ed Nusbaum says, "you can see the water in their fishtanks and it gives you insight into what’s in your own."

Last night we conducted an interesting exercise: At the first meeting I attended we had gone around the room and had to give our 20sec elevator pitch for our idea. When you’ve been working very close on something it’s extremely difficult to distance yourself enough to provide a concise, memorable soundbyte that summarizes the idea to an outsider. I floundered with mine a bit at the first meeting and rattled off something that was probably a bit to technical and convoluted of the guts of Grid7. Last night in a surprise twist we were told to point at a random person across the room and ensure that we were their only pointer. We then went around and had to summarize _that_ person’s business. It was interesting because it showed just how much (if anything) other people took from that person’s first pitch (mine was clearly very unremarkable as the guy who summarized mine thought I was a media production company). We then were asked to give our refined spiel. The exercise helped cement this notion that "your pitch is only as good as what other’s are able to retain and regurgitate." My partner Kimbro gave a bangup verson of the pitch and unfortunately neither one of us remember what he said. My second was much better than the first:

Grid7 is an incubator for startup ideas that takes advantage of the “unutilized work cycles” in the same way that grid computing exploits unutilized CPU cycles. It allows internet professionals to participate early in ventures and break out of the “renter’s dilemna” and instead receive compensation primarily in the form of equity.

On a completely unrelated note- I learned a major lesson yesterday on the ABC extranet project. It’s been a 5mo contract thus far to develop a massive extranet for them and simplify the process by which they house homeless mentally-ill people. My role in the project is to handle legacy integration and that means writing the code that interfaces with four legacy systems from their social workers, housing providers and federally-mandated HMIS system. We had built something which essentially automated the process of data entry and would connect to an AS400 to grab all housing applicants and sync them with our internal database. Unfortunately the 3rd-party company which we’re dealing with (they will remain nameless) announced yesterday that this initiative no longer met their "strategic priorities" and had therefore been suspended indefinitely. What a shame… a few hours worth of work on their part would mean a MASSIVE improvement to the process and eliminate the repeated volleys of faxes that is the current process. This unfortunate development severly undermines the system we’ve created. We still have some ideas on how to salvage the project but the lesson learned is this: "when doing a project for a client that will require participation from a 3rd party in order for it to work, you MUST get total commitment from that 3rd party first and make sure the right people on their team are convinced of the value of the project to THEIR organization." Anyways, we will persevere on the ABC project- it’s just a major setback and the timing is crappy as we just finished the XML integration of this piece. I suppose the upside is that exercises in oppressive beaurocracy like this one just fuel my passion for the Grid7 model that much more.

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Jan 17

a trippy thought, huh? In all likeliehood there’s a fifteen-yr-old kid somewhere right now with a MySpace account who is building out his/her friend network and talking online about stuff fifteen-yr-old kids talk about. What’s interesting is that with the plummeting cost of disk storage and the Wayback Machine’s and Google Cache’s of the world, this kid’s MySpace page will probably be preserved in some publicly-accessible archive somewhere until the day he/she becomes President (at which point the data will be accidentally lost in a freak harddrive crash or better yet, mistakenly highlighted with a sharpie)..

This has interesting implications as the voters will be able to read firsthand what this kid was doing from a very early age. It’s cool in the sense that it would be great to have seen what Lincoln and Kennedy’s Myspace pages would have looked like but it has pretty huge implications in terms of the transparency of this person’s life and the psychological profiling that can be done by opponents. Makes me think of something I recently read to the effect of "recognize that what you write now on your blog will be someday read by a future employer or potentially a future mate." Pretty weird…

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Jan 07

is an amazing place. My friend Benny and I just got back from a 2wk trip there and took a bunch of good pictures. It was our first time and both of us are now looking into buying property there. Having been to quite a few places in MX (Mazatlan, Guadalajara, Puerto Penasco, Cabo San Lucas, Loretto, Rosarito, Ensenada, Tijuana, Nogales, Laredo) I can say that of every spot I’ve been so far Playa is definitely my favorite. It has a high concentration of European tourists and is also apparently a popular tourist spot for Mexicans so you end up with this melting pot effect of non-local Mexicans, Italians, Dutch, Spanish, Kiwis and Norweigans mixed in with a handful of Americans. With the recent devastation of neighboring Cancun and Cozumel from hurricane Wilma, I really think it’s poised to explode in value. It reminds me a lot of how Puerto Vallarta used to be ten years ago when it was still an undiscovered gem . I’m glad the closest major airport is an hour away because it should help keep it “inconvenient enough” to deter the typical gringos and attract only the more mellow travelers.

Observations and Reflections

Mexico trips are always these rejuvenating experiences and before the excitement of the trip wears off and and the daily grind resumes, I want to write about the random things we observed and experienced. It’s surprising how after only 2wks of not driving an automobile, it feels completely foreign. Other stuff that seems strange right now:

  • throwing your toilet paper IN the toilet. Seriously. They are all on septic down there so you have to put it in the waste basket (which sounds gross but it’s just the way it’s done). Try doing that for 2wks and I promise you that you will have to make a conscious effort to actually drop it in the bowl when you come back.
  • drinking fountaiins: we take them for granted. All of Mexico’s water system is non-potable and used only for washing purposes. It’s odd to come back and be able to drink from the tap or a public drinking fountain.
  • the air and food are not as fresh here which is so funny because the stereotypical image of Mexico tends to be a dirty town like Tijuana and that’s just not representative of the rest of the country. Phoenix in the winter has a bad pollution problem with the inversion layer that traps our smog close to the ground. Both Benny and I noticed we felt significantly healthier day to day down there and that the air in Phx actually has a bad taste that is only noticeable when you come back to it. Same goes with produce and poultry, in Playa it’s all grown right there so it’s tough to beat the freshness.

PDC is not perfect- it’s definitely humid and supposedly their summers are unbearably hot with 100deg temperatures and 100% humidity. There’s a very real possibility though that you could set up a small office there for six months out of the year. Their internet connectivity was actually very good. I ran a traceroute from an internet cafe and there were surprisingly few hops to my server.


Actually I wasn’t intending to check email at all but we came back to the hotel one morning to find an note the hotel staff had posted on our door relayed from an ex-FBI detective who was working with my father on a big case in Florida. He needed server logs to confirm a hypothesis and I was able to assist his investigation remotely by providing by using RDP to get in and give him what he needed. Remote access is great.

I read two Paulo Coelho books down there (Eleven Minutes and The Zahir). Coelho books are ideal vacation reading material and while neither one was as good as my favorite Coelho book of all time, The Alchemist, they were both good. The Zahir hit very close to home and made me realize I have a zahir of my own right now, a face indellibly etched in my thoughts that refuses to leave. Coelho is the latest addition to the smart people list- he writes with a simplicity and honesty that nobody else does. Probably the greatest testament to his skill as a writer is that his books have been translated into every known language. If you’ve never read the Alchemist, you owe it to yourself to check out that book.

What worked well

  • Before we left, Benny and I hit up Walgreens and stocked up on a box of these $2 laser pens. It sounds funny but cheap electronic gadgetry is worth its weight in gold down in mexico and each night we went out we would bring a “super pluma” with us and invariably find a way to trade it for something worth more to us. They were practical in that you could point out stuff half a mile away or grab each other’s attention across the crowd. We both agreed it would be valuable to learn morse code as a means of communication. There were also countless other stupid uses for these pens.
  • Fortunately neither one of us lost any crucial travel documents and therefore didn’t have to rely on our remote backup plan but it was nice to know that we had it if we needed it.
  • The restaurants all hung these ziplock water bags above their outside tables. We asked why they were there and our waiter jokingly told us that it was in case we didn’t leave a good tip, they could shoot them and drench the gringos. It turns out they actually repel flies. I have no idea HOW it works but we did notice that the restaurants without them had significantly more flies. I would love to hear the explanation of why this trick works if anyone knows.
  • The iTrip came through big again and I used it to record an interview with the owner of one of the smaller hotels down there. We realized that there are a large number of hotels down there that don’t currently do online reservations. After talking with the owner of a small one we think there’s opportunity to mimic their current homegrown Foxpro booking systems that everyone seems to use and turn it into a local app that broadcasts availability to a central server. Their hangup on accepting creditcards is that it’s very difficult to get a merchant account in Mexico and their discount rate is like 6-7% (3x that of the US). We were thinking of ways to solve the online res problem in the face of these higher transaction fees. We came up with the idea of creating a type of escrow service based in the US that would allow people to book their res online by authing their card. The guest could then pay cash for their room and the hotel owner would still achieve full price without having to jack rates to cover merchant commission fees and at least the small hotels could capture the res online. . We thought setting up this service on a mac mini and selling it as a cheap appliance and taking a comission on the transactions we generate would be ideal. This could make an excellent Grid7 project. My friend John Blayter pointed me to this existing product which sounds to have a similar goal but appears to be a traditional reservation system and not the same escrow concept. Anyways, it’s an interesting idea. Here’s the interview for anyone interested.

Lessons learned for next time

  • Don’t change a light bulb while standing in the shower. This is obvious in hindsight but Benny nearly electrocuted himself in our cabana at La Ruina. He was knocked ten feet onto the bed and, fortunately so, because it broke the circuit and he escaped with just a shock.
  • Zip ties and carribeaners would have come in handy on a couple occasions for fastening stuff. We rolled with hiker packs and the trip would have been impossible with regular baggage. The mobility afforded by having a pack proved to be key when (due to a booking oversight on our part) we got kicked out of our hotel and had to find a new one at the apex of their tourist season on New Year’s eve.
  • _Never_ use a flimsy plastic bag as a carry-on with a bunch of stuff in it, it will turn your fingers into sausage links and you will arrive at your destination with zero perfusion and have pins & needles the rest of the night (notice the hand turning purple – not cool).

Here’s some cool videos :

Looking forward

My New Year’s resolution this year is to eliminate daily distractions and have laser focus on the things that matter. I’m actually resolving to read _fewer_ blogs (which is probably hypocritical because here I am writing my own huge post). I came back to 227 emails and 454 unread blog posts which really puts into perspective how much distraction I willfully subjecting myself to each day. Even with David Allen’s GTD method, it’s just a deluge of info that leaves your head spinning at the end of the day. As far as what’s going on for me now, I start classes at this entrepreneurial workshop called FastTrac on Tuesday with the goal of sponging off other entrepreneurs and ironing out the kinks in the Grid7 model. My office partner Kimbro is now my business partner and over the break he hashed out the skeleton of an immense side project he and I will be undertaking together that dovetails perfectly with Grid7. I know I’ve been talking it up for a few months now but February is the month this stuff all launches and we both have huge faith in this endeavor.

Other than that, I’m moving out of my house right now and converting it into a performing asset as a rental. It should cover itself plus my apartment rent which will nice. This is all part of a massive downsizing effort for me to sell off all my stuff, simplify, consolidate and become mobile for a big US working roadtrip I plan to take in August. This is a neat time of year because everyone has these bright hopes for the coming year. I share the same optimism but I’m always reminded of that lyric from the U2 song “nothing changes on New Year’s day.” It does and it doesn’t. It’s an arbitrary line in the sand but it helps us frame things and establish goals which is always a good thing.

I wanna end this post by paraphrasing this cool passage from The Zahir book. “Two firemen go into the woods to fight a forest fire. They both return only one’s face is covered in soot while the other’s is perfectly clean. Which do you think washes his face?” It’s like that cardgame “booger on the head” also called “indian poker” – you can see everyone else’s cards but your own. The fireman with the clean face will see his partner and assume he’s covered in soot and conversely the guy who really needs the bath will look at his partner and assume he’s clean as well. This was such a simple yet mind-blowing way to look at why some relationships fail unexpectedly.

Anyways, 2006- bring it. This image captures the essence of what I’m in for this year:

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