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To Sell In Combo Or Not Essay

To Sell In Combo Or Not? Essay, Research Paper


To Sell in Combo or Not?


It was hot–hotter than usual for the first week in September,


and Ed Jefferson was not eager to go out in the heat and sit in his


car while the air conditioning cooled it off. He put his feet up,


stared out over the tree tops from his cool office and tried to think


of all of the alternatives he had for solving his problem.


Ed had been general sales manager of KRQZ-FM and KRQO-AM for


twelve years and he had never faced a more difficult, perplexing


decision: should he sell the two stations in combo or should he keep


the two separate sales staffs structured the way they were now? It


was budget time, and Ed had to make a decision within the next few


days so he could finalize next year’s budget. It was his budget, as


the new general manager, Tyler Saunders, had told him. Ed liked


working for Tyler, who was an ex-program director, and like the


freedom and autonomy Tyler had given him for the six months Tyler had


been general manager.


Ed Jefferson picked up the KRQZ/KRQO Weekly Sales Report,


Monthly Forecast Report and Miller-Kaplan Report (these reports


appear after page five, at the end of this case). He began examining


the reports carefully, for what seemed to him to be the thirtieth


time, trying to find the right questions to ask and some hints of


what some solutions might be.


KRQZ-FM’s revenue was running five percent ahead of last year’s


and was thirteen percent over budget, year-to-date. This situation


was quite gratifying to everyone (including corporate) because the


station had experienced some ratings declines in the past year. For


the last seven years KRQZ-FM, known by everyone as The Z, had


featured the same programming–a bright, personality-oriented Adult


Contemporary (AC) format with a highly recognizable, very funny


morning team. At one time the station had been a strong number-two


to the perennial market leader, KNNN-AM, an old-line news/talk


station with a huge but older-skewing audience. However, The Z’s


audience had fallen off in the last year as several other AC stations


began to compete for its 25-54 core audience. One station, known as


The Cloud, had virtually tied The Z in the last three books in the


all-important 25-54 demo. For the last four Arbitron rating books,


The Z had ranked fourth 25-54, and in two books it was behind The


Cloud. The Z had a 4.4 12+ share in the latest Arbitron, in contrast


to an 8.1 12+ share for KNNN-AM.


However, The Z’s sales staff had very little turnover, was the


highest paid in town and its salespeople were extremely well liked


among the agencies and clients in the top-ten market in which they


were located. So in spite of the rating declines, the salespeople


had consistently made the station the number-two biller in town,


according to the Miller-Kaplan reports. The staff reported to the


KRQZ-FM local sales manager, Olivia Mitovsky, who had been in the job


for five years and had the full support, respect and admiration of


everyone in the department. The six-person sales staff and Olivia


were considered to be miracle workers–the local staff’s share of


revenue continually outperformed the station’s 12+ rating share by


over two-to-one.


This outstanding sales performance also made Ed Jefferson, the


general sales manager, a hero, too. His boss, Tyler Saunders, and


everyone at corporate headquarters knew he and Olivia were doing an


excellent job–that’s one of the reasons everyone trusted him to come


up with a solution to the problem: KRQO-AM’s billing problem.


KRQO’s format was unique in the market–an oldies, Music-Of-


Your-Life-type format that featured Frank Sinatra, Patti Page, big


bands and songs from the late ’40s and early ’50s. KRQO’s audience


was primarily 44+ and 55+. But because it had no competition in the


format, it pulled good 12+ numbers. In the latest Arbitron it had a


5.8 12+ share, but ranked tenth 25-54.


KRQO had a six-person sales staff that reported to a local sales


manager, Oscar Smithers. As well liked and respected as Olivia


Mitovsky was by The Z’s staff, Oscar Smithers was disliked by the


KRQO staff, with one exception–a young, attractive, vivacious,


aggressive, female salesperson who was perceived by the other five to


be Oscar’s favorite. The perception of favoritism (in account


assignments and new leads) had gotten to such a point that virtually


everyone on both staffs assumed that Oscar was having an affair with


the salesperson. The other five salespeople on KRQO also complained


bitterly about the paperwork that Oscar made them do: daily call


reports, detailed weekly planners, weekly projections and complete


prospect lists updated weekly.


The Z salespeople only had to do daily call reports that merely


consisted of check marks on their account lists. These checks were


entered onto account-list forms by the sales assistants and a report


was given to the salespeople and the sales managers to help them keep


track of who they were calling on and who they were missing, if


anyone. Ed or Olivia rarely mentioned these reports to the


salespeople, and never in a negative or critical way.


On the other hand, Oscar used his reports to beat up on people:


“Why didn’t you call on this person?” “Why couldn’t you close this


prospect?” He’d look at the weekly planners and then demand that


salespeople take him out on calls, which he’d invariably take over


the presentation and push hard, very hard, to close. There were no


strokes (except for praise for his favorite). The salespeople had


the feeling that no matter what they did, it was wrong. Four out of


the six KRQO salespeople were actively looking for other jobs (and


spending more time doing so than making sales calls). Three


salespeople had even gone to Ed and Tyler to complain about the way


they were being treated, which took a certain amount of courage,


because Oscar had recently fired a popular salesperson and threatened


to fire more people if they didn’t learn “to do things his way.”


Oscar continually told his sales staff they were behind budget.


He posted numbers weekly that showed how much business each


salesperson wrote that week and compared that amount to their budgets


that he had set and to the station’s budget. Everyone was behind his


or her budget and the station was falling further and further behind


its budget every week. Even though Oscar yelled at the salespeople


at twice-a-week meetings (which often lasted an hour-and-a-half)


about missing budgets, at the same time he would complain bitterly


about how unfair the budgets were. The KRQO salespeople were griping


about the unrealistic budgets, too, because they got paid a bonus


based on making their monthly budgets. They weren’t making any bonus


money, and The Z people were getting substantial bonus checks every


month (a one-percent retroactive commission bonus based on each


salesperson’s previous months’s billing). Furthermore, the KRQO


salespeople complained that the commission system was unfair. They


were paid eight percent on agency business and a sixteen percent


commission on new, direct business (had to be both); The Z


salespeople were paid six percent on agency business and sixteen


percent on new, direct business. However, The Z billed three times


what KRQO billed and The Z’s rates were two-and-a-half times greater


than KRQO’s, so the KRQO people were making less than The Z people,


and often had to work harder because of the station’s difficult-to-


sell demos.


About the budgets and commission differential, Oscar and the


salespeople were right. They were unfair, and Ed Jefferson knew it.


This fact was a major part of his dilemma.


The reason the budgets were unfair was because until the


previous year, The Z and KRQO had been sold in combination. Until


two years ago, KRQO had small ratings and couldn’t support a separate


sales effort. The eight-person sales staff would sell a schedule on


The Z and then throw in KRQO for an additional ten percent. Thus, if


a salesperson got a $4,000 order for The Z, he or she would say,


“Give me another $400 and I’ll match the schedule on KRQO.” Billing


on the two stations was divided accordingly, ninety percent for The Z


and ten percent for KRQO. However, when KRQO got a new program


director who changed the music and the promotion for the station, the


station’s numbers began to grow–from a 1.8 to a 2.6 to a 4.5 Ed


Jefferson and the previous general manager began to realize that they


could get more for KRQO than an additional ten percent on top of The


Z’s rates. They knew that they were underselling KRQO substantially.


The reason the co

mmissions were out of balance was because the


commission rates had been based on the stations’ budgets, which had


seemed reasonable at the time.


Ed and the previous general manager decided the solution to the


problem was to hire a local sales manager for KRQO who had some


expertise in direct, retail selling and to split the staff. They


felt that pursuing direct, retail business was the best strategy,


because the KRQO couldn’t compete effectively at the agencies for 25-


54 business, and with most of KRQO’s numbers being 44+, the


salespeople couldn’t sell very much on a combo with The Z. They also


decided to have one salesperson from each staff call on agencies and


clients, and when a buy was up, to have the two salespeople work


together and make a joint sales presentation to get both stations on


the buy. They offered a twenty-percent discount on both station’s


rates if a buyer would by an equal schedule on both stations.


Ed hired Oscar, who had a good track record of increasing


direct, retail business at a station in another top-ten market, and


Ed split the sales staff. Ed actually hired Oscar the week after


Tyler Saunders joined the station as general manager. Ed gave Oscar


three of his better, more experienced salespeople–the ones that he


felt were more adept at direct selling.


When Ed made out the budgets for the two stations, he worked


painfully through a number of scenarios. He looked at billing


figures going back several years for the combo. He looked at rates


for each station and the number of combo buys that they had gotten.


He looked at the current ratings for the two stations. Finally, he


came up with a sixty-forty revenue split, based on his estimate of


what the two stations could bill–about sixty percent of the total


would come from The Z, and about forty percent would come from KRQO.


When he and Tyler, who had just been on the job for two weeks, made


their budget presentation to corporate, the top brass agreed that the


budget projections for the two stations were reasonable, and the


numbers were locked in. Now, nine months later, Ed knew the numbers


were out of whack. The Z was sailing along way ahead of budget and


ahead of last year. KRQO was impossibly behind budget and


expectations. The system of making cooperative presentations was not


working well. Oscar was so highly competitive with Olivia that he’d


insist that the KRQO people go after an unrealistically high share of


the budget. In fact, there was virtual warfare between the two


staffs, much to Ed’s dismay. But was it Oscar’s fault or the fault


of poor budgeting?


In either case, “What do I do now?” Ed thought as he looked out


at the setting September sun.


“Do I admit I made a mistake and fire Oscar?”


“If I fire Oscar, do I hire another local sales manager and keep


the staffs split, or do I go back to one staff selling combo.”


“Oscar is a good closer; do I keep him and let him and a couple


of retail people report to me and have them sell only KRQO, and have


the rest of the staff sell a combo with realistic, appropriate rates


for both stations?”


“Do I fire Oscar and several salespeople, and then have a nine-


or ten-person staff sell only a realistically priced combo


(understanding that most of the remaining salespeople used to give


away KRQO for ten percent extra and don’t know how to sell its


specialized format)?”


“How do I establish a budget for next year for each station or


both stations in combo?”


“What is the best compensation system, and is the one I’m using


now fair?”


“What comes first, structuring the sales department(s)


realistically or backing into the budgets I know I’ll be facing


(corporate always wants ten percent more, regardless)?” Ed hated


backing into budgets. He remembered several years ago when the


company was under severe pressure from bankers, that he had to back


into some pretty ridiculous budgets.


As Ed looked out of the window over the setting September sun,


he decided to hire a consultant from the Marketing Communication


Group, a consulting and sales training organization he had dealt with


in the past. Ed had formed an outline in his mind of what he thought


was the optimum solution, but he felt he needed an objective,


knowledgeable outside opinion. He picked up the phone and left word


for the consultant to call him.


AUTHOR’S NOTE


While the incidents in this case are not factual, they do


represent a composite of real situations and common industry


practices. The case was prepared to use as a teaching tool.


As we discussed, Oscar is a real problem. Morale on the KRQO


staff appears to be quite low. There is a perception among both


staffs that he is unfair and shows decided favoritism to one


person–for no apparent reason (there is rampant speculation, of


course, but it is only speculation). Oscar is not an effective


manager; his people skills are poor. He is very competitive with


Olivia and The Z staff, which causes counterproductive attitudes


and feelings among everyone.


The poor morale and apparent poor performance of KRQO is in stark


contrast to the excellent morale and performance at The Z. The Z


salespeople love Tyler, love you and love Olivia–for all the


right reasons. You help them, coach them, encourage them and make


them feel like winners. I’m afraid that Oscar spends a great deal


of time making his people feel like losers–thus it’s little


wonder they are losing. It’s sort of a self-fulfilling prophesy.


I feel that you have waited too long to address the Oscar


problem. The fall buying season is coming up and you must get the


KRQO staff organized and cracking immediately in order to


maximize fourth quarter business. Of course, your motives for


waiting to move on Oscar are beneficent, which is typical of your


company’s culture; however, I would move immediately on Oscar.


Talk to him right away and tell him it isn’t working and it’s


time for a change. Give him until the end of the year to find a


job, if you can, but get him out of the station now (perhaps your


rep will give him a desk and a phone to use in New York). When


you terminate him, you and Tyler do it together and do not argue


or give him any specifics–just be general and say it’s a style


problem and be as generous as you feel you can. He will try to


argue, want to go over your heads to corporate, will demand exact


reasons, etc. Let him vent his anger, but do not be specific.


Also, tell him he can resign if he wants to (which is a nice


technicality and lets him say that he quit). On the other hand,


if he quits, he can’t get unemployment compensation. So give him


a choice. You can fire him so he’ll be eligible for unemployment,


but then you and he can tell everyone he quit. In any case, get


him out of the station at once; he can do nothing but harm.


I think your idea of taking over the KRQO sales effort is an


excellent one. Let Olivia handle The Z, she can certainly do it,


and you can organize and evaluate the KRQO staff. I think you


ought to make one or two KRQO changes right away–certainly Mary


Ann (if she doesn’t leave when Oscar does, she will be nothing


but trouble if she stays; she has a terrible, negative attitude).


Unfortunately, Harry probably needs to go too, as we all seem to


agree that he isn’t going to make it (how about putting him in


production and creative for a while to shore up direct selling–


let him do it 25 hours a week and look for work the rest of the


time. His programming and production experience will be of value,


particularly with your emphasis on new, direct business).


After letting two KRQO salespeople go, raise the KRQO commission


several percentage points (more about this later, but for now the


commission rates are inequitable–the rates on The Z are more


than twice KRQO’s but the commission rates are very close).


Divide the lists up realistically and equitably. Make some


interim decisions about account assignments. Do not have two


people go into agencies yet. Tell The Z people to pitch both


stations and give them the higher KRQO commission for KRQO


business. In this manner, everyone will be pumped to get more


KRQO business and it won’t cost the station much more money


because you’ll be saving the overhead costs on two salespeople.


Next year, split the staffs completely and put two people into


agencies competing for business, but not yet. The Z people will


love this system for the rest of the year and will really hustle


to get business for both KRQO and The Z and to make some more


money this year–they like selling both stations and the


challenge of it.

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