The Sales History Podcast

Todd Caponi
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Apr 12, 2022 • 19min

The Top 5 Sales Follows - From 1922

Send us a textWondering what sales influencers would be the best follows for you on LinkedIn? Well, in today's episode, I give you that list - but from 100 years ago! The dawn of modern sales took place in the early 1900s - the individuals each left an indelible mark on all of YOUR sales careers - even today.So let's explore - the Top Five Sales Follows from 100 years ago...#5 - Noval Hawkins - "The greatest salesperson in the history of Ford Motor Company" & multi-time sales author#4 - Lucinda W. Prince - THE pioneer for women in sales#3 - Worthington C. Holman - Co-authored the first NCR sales manual, multi time author, publisher, editor and quote machine#2 - Dr. Orison S. Marden - the GOAT of business philosophers, who "has had children named after the titles of his books"#1 - Arthur Sheldon - the GOAT of sales philosophers, who, when he died in 1935 was referred to as "THE philosopher of selling"Support the show
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Mar 29, 2022 • 17min

Stories from the 1910s - The First B2C & B2B Cold Calling Campaigns!

Send us a textAn amendment to Season 1, Episode 10's episode on "When Did Cold Calling Begin?", this episode tells of two newly found stories - of the first found (so far) B2C telephone cold calling campaign in 1910, and the first found B2B telephone cold calling campaign from 1914. The success rate, the scripting, the analysis of numbers and the foundational technique is so amazing, given much is what we still teach today - albeit there was a transparency faux pas in the B2B story you've got to hear. (h/t Jeffrey Blackwell)Support the show
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Mar 15, 2022 • 14min

Using History to Predict - The Future of Sales

Send us a textIf the saying "if we don't know history, are we doomed to repeat it" is true, then why can't we use history to also predict the future? In this episode, I attempt to do just that. "Buyers know more nowadays" isn't just a quote from LinkedIn today, but also from a sales book in 1912! More information hasn't meant the demise of the profession - it's created more of a need for it!With this in mind, let's dissect the past to predict the future! Support the show
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Mar 1, 2022 • 10min

The OG's of Sales Leadership...were REMOTE Sales Leaders

Send us a textIsn't it ironic? Today, we fret over the challenge of building and leading teams that are all remote. However, the original sales leaders in the "modern" era of sales (i.e., 1907-1920s) - were REMOTE sales leaders. And, they built, trained and motivated teams without Slack, without email, or without even the ability to talk to them on the phone!In this episode, we explore the origins of sales leadership, how it was done remotely, and attempt to tie those concepts to today's remote requirement.Support the show
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Feb 15, 2022 • 16min

The Great Salesperson Purge of the 1920s

Send us a text100 years ago - 1922 - the sales world encountered a year with 85% salesperson turnover. You read that right! A year when "sales executives discharged practically ALL of their salesmen"! The crazy part - just 18 months earlier, the sales world "took almost anybody into their sales forces". What happened? Could it happen again today? The lead-up is eerily familiar. Better to know so we can avoid it than bury our heads in the sand and pretend like it cannot happen, right?Support the show
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Sep 7, 2021 • 22min

An Interview With A Top Performer - From The Early 1900's

Send us a textThe best podcasts give you access to top performers; salespeople, leaders & influencers, right? But, how about a top performer...from 100+ years ago?!?This week I've got a special episode for you -  where I (fake) interview Norval Hawkins (1867-1936), known as the greatest salesperson to ever work for Ford, whom Henry Ford himself referred to as "my million dollar man". Hawkin's writing is profound, just thinking about things differently - but incredibly applicable to today.So, in this interview, I play the role of podcast interviewer, and I play the role of Norval Hawkins, answering the questions using his own thoughts from ~ 100 years ago.If you have feedback, let's hear it! Reach out via www.toddcaponi.com, connect on LinkedIn, or follow on Instagram or Twitter @SalesHistorian, where I post daily with quotes from sales history's past.Support the show
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Aug 24, 2021 • 17min

Sales Process: From Buyer-Centric (AIDA) to Seller-Centric (BANT) and Back Again?

Send us a textThe question: Where did the qualification construct BANT come from? In looking for the answer, I realized something...Sales processes of the early 20th century? All buyer-focused steps - what is the buyer doing? Sales processes since the 1950's, when BANT came around? All seller-focused, all the way down to our CRM stages.To be truly buyer-focused, shouldn't our processes & measures be housed in recognizing buyer behavior?Support the show
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Aug 17, 2021 • 19min

The Origin of Sales Quotas & Variable Compensation

Send us a textSales compensation - commission-only until the 1900's. And, for good reason. You wouldn't pay a rep you rarely see a salary, right? Sales are face-to-face. Travel is slow, there's no real-time distance communication, and no CRM system, so it's what you did. Sell something, get paid - a lot. Don't sell something, don't get paid. The birth of salary+commission changed that, and inspired the need for quotas. In this episode, we track that progression, the original purpose of a quota, and how we've convoluted that purpose over time. Maybe we should consider going back?Support the show
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Aug 10, 2021 • 16min

When Did Cold Calling Begin?

Send us a textCold calling - some love it, some hate it, but when did it start? Specifically, when did salespeople start cold canvassing (in-person), and when did they start doing it using the telephone?The answers are pretty clear, and what you find in a Google search are NOT the correct answers...clearly. Let's debunk the false, and get to the truth about where our cold outreach began.Support the show
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Aug 3, 2021 • 14min

The Origin of "Drummers" & "Bagmen" - The 1800's

Send us a textAre you responsible for "drumming up business" in your role? Do you "carry a bag" as a salesperson? Do you know where those terms come from? They come from the traveling salespeople of the 1800s. In today's episode, I tell their story - of the hard-drinking, back-slapping "Drummer" - and of the horseback riding "Bagmen" - what it was like to be one, and where those terms came from.@SalesHistorian on Twitter or InstagramSupport the show

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