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A wise man once said, "If we're all going to eat, somebody has got to sell."
It's the kind of statement that belongs with the other truisms that hang on the walls of
Mitch and Murray's real estate office in Glengarry Glen Ross. It may hang on yours. But if
your sales force is as dysfunctional as Mitch and Murray's, you've got problems - big ones.
Glengarry Glen Ross is based on David Mamet's 1984 Pulitzer Prize winning play of the same
title. The movie illustrates many tricks of the salesman's trade (including some highly
illegal ones). Glengarry Glen Ross presents, for the most part, outstanding examples of
how not to sell, how not to motivate salespeople, how not to compensate them and how not to treat your customers. As such, it is an excellent launching point for discussions of
the role of sales and appropriate approaches to the critical function of getting people to
buy your product or service.
Guide opening:
You're having a tough month. Orders have dried up and you're overdrawn on your commission.
You know there are some great leads out there, but the sales manager won't release them to
you until you've worked the current lists - filled with dead prospects - to exhaustion. You
need some help, but your colleagues on the sales staff are also your competitors for the
new leads. Everyone has a slump; but if you're going to stay motivated, you've got to have
some decent prospects to call on. To survive, you're thinking you may have to break a few
rules - maybe even a few laws. Real estate agent Sheldon "The Machine" Levene is
facing that dilemma. You don't want to do what Shelley does, but watching him and his
colleagues may help you think your way to better solutions.
An excerpt from the plot summary:
Shelley rushes back to the office for the 7:30 p.m. meeting. There's a stranger (Alec
Baldwin) in Williamson's office. Nobody knows who the guy is, but he's moving around
Williamson's office like he owns the place. The stranger moves into the sales room, where
only Roma is missing. He's wearing the most powerful of power suits. He tells Williamson
he's not going to wait, then turns to the salesmen and abruptly launches into a diatribe.
It is, perhaps, the most belittling speech in cinema. He starts by yelling at the men to
get their minds off unimportant things like family and supper and the weekend.
"Instead, let's talk about something important," he says. He notices that
Shelley is getting himself a cup of coffee. "Put the coffee down," he orders.
"Coffee is for closers!" Shelley looks at him, incredulous. "You think I'm
f
ing with you?" he asks Shelley. "Well, I am not f. . .ing with you. Put
the coffee down!" Shelley does. The man continues: "I'm here from downtown. I'm
here from Mitch & Murray, and I'm here on a mission of mercy." He asks if Levene
calls himself a salesman. He berates the men and tells them he's got good news: they are
all fired.
"The bad news is you've all got one week to redeem yourselves." He explains that
the company has added something new to the monthly sales contest: "First prize is a
new Cadillac Eldorado. Second prize is a set of steak knives. Third prize is. . . your
fired!." He tells the men that Mitch and Murray paid good money for good leads - leads
the salesmen can't close. Shelley says the leads are weak. The man says it's Shelley
that's weak. "[If] you can't close the leads you're given, hit the bricks!" Moss
asks the man his name. "F.. you, that's my name." He goes on, pounding on the
men, demeaning them. He tells Moss, "You drove a Hyundai to get here tonight; I drove
here in an $80,000 BMW. That's my name!"
He tells the men that only one thing counts in life: "Get the name on the line which
is dotted!" He moves to a portable blackboard on which he has written two columns of
letters. The first column is ABC. The second AIDA.
He explains them. A is for Always. B for Be. C for Closing. "Always Be Closing." That's
their marching order. In the second column A stands for Attention, I for Interest, D for
Decision and the second A for Action: "Attention, Interest, Decision, Action." It's a
process many salesmen use with clients.
Summary of the commentary:
Glengarry Glen Ross is a salesman's nightmare come to the screen. The commentary examines
the function of sales, reviews the basics of sales-force psychology (there are distinct
selling personalities), and presents an overview of sales compensation systems.
The commentary also looks at harassment in the workplace. Is Alec Baldwin's character
setting the company up for a sexual harassment suit when he calls the salesmen
"faggots?" asks Shelley Levene. "If he's man enough" to close
and calls Ed Moss an SOB? You bet he is. It's unusual to find harassment suits filed in
all-male environments, but it does happen; and it can be costly to companies on the losing
end of those suits.
Additional commentary looks at the disconnects that often occur between the sales force
and senior management. These involve Sales' tendency to focus on gross revenue when the
rest of the company is focused on net revenue, as well as the tendency of Sales and
Marketing departments to view each other as superfluous or subordinate. Keeping the Sales team's goals and practices in line with company goals and practices is a critical issue
with which every company must eventually come to grips.

The commentary is supplemented by BREAKOUT BOXES dealing with these topics:
 |
The Writing on the Wall: Motivational Epigrams |
 |
Sales Are for Closers: The Mitch and Murray Philosophy |
 |
Rick Roma on the Salesman's Life |
 |
Sales Compensation Systems: A Checklist |
 |
Six Rules for Avoiding Harassment Suits |

THE GUIDE also includes an essay that looks at business as depicted in
the movies. For an introductory section on how to use the Management Goes to
the Movies program, click through to Using The MGTTM Training Program.
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