I have a soft spot for the Girl Scouts because of my
experience with my daughter when she was a Girl Scout. She was the cookie
seller and I was her sales manager. Honestly, I think I enjoyed the experience
more than she did. I like selling things and I was determined I was going to
make a salesperson out of her. I also had a rule that I was not going to sale
them for her but that she had to make the contacts and take the orders. So on
the first day of cookie sales we would hit the streets together and with my
encouragement she would ring the door bell and when people came to the door she
would ask “would you like to buy some Girl Scout cookies”? Some would buy and she would be happy. Some
would say no and sometimes she would get multiple “no’s” in a row and would get
a little discouraged. I tried to help her understand that often in life the
answer was no and that a negative answer just gives you the opportunity to move
on to the next door. We learned to take orders in places of business and that
the orders were often larger there. She took her order sheet to church and
found lots of friendly buyers there. We learned that repeat business was best
and having secured phone numbers from the previous year’s sales sheet she was
able to take a lot of orders by phone. Over the years she took special interest
in some of her customers. Like the widower who lived a few blocks from us, had
a house full of cats and always had to show her the weaving work he was doing
with rugs. He would buy several boxes but the sale was never quick. You had to
give him 15-20 minutes of your life. But he needed that and we were enriched by
the experience. We thought she had sold a lot of cookies one year when she sold
737 boxes. But the next year she sold 1003 boxes. To put this in perspective,
if you take the back two rows of seats out of a mini-van and fill it with 1003
boxes of cookies you have just enough room for the driver and the Girl Scout. Of
course then you have to deliver all those cookies and collect the money. But
when it was over she had helped her troop earn some money and she earned for
herself some “cookie dough” to pay a large part of her way to summer Girl Scout
Camp. Perhaps my daughter would say I was a tough sales manager. But for me it
was a treasured experience that I got to share with her. And if I see Girl
Scouts selling cookies I am going to buy some.
Saturday, March 1, 2014
A Thousand and Three Boxes of Girlscout Cookies
While driving down Main
Street today I saw two girls standing in the cold
and snow flurries dressed up as cookies. One was a Thin Mint and the other was
a Samoa . I am a sucker for this scene. Not
because I cannot live without the cookies. But because I appreciate the work of
the Girl Scouts, like to support their work, and contribute to their
entrepreneurial education. The look of satisfaction on the face of a Girl Scout
when she makes a sale is worth the $4 price of the cookies. So today I drove
around the block, stopped, chatted with the Girl Scouts, and bought 4
boxes.
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