My worst job ever! Some funny sh*t

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neorichieb1971
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My worst job ever! Some funny sh*t

Post by neorichieb1971 »

Late 2002/2003 I did something that you absolutely hate.. SALES! It was my first time eek!. The ad in the paper was not exactly clear about what the job entailed, it just said it would offer a good salary and benefits (Yeah right!). So we sit in this "get together" room with chairs and white board in front of us, waiting for some kind of presentation. The guys telling us we could make an absolute fortune, but it took more than 24 hours before they even told us what the hell they were asking of us.

Then after much a do about nothing, they release the beast.. The thing we are supposed to sell.

http://www.shapetomorrow.com/portfolio/ ... i-star.jpg

The cost to the consumer for this product is $1850 :o


What was hailed as an "air filtration unit" looked nothing more than a vacuum cleaner made out of bullet proof materials. So it was about demoing a vacuum cleaner in peoples homes, that amongst other things could do party tricks as well. So we watch the demo presentation that some expert is showing us. It was quite impressive, the damn thing could swallow up a 20lb bag of sand in about 5-8 seconds and suck the b-jesus out of your hand.. So yeah, it has brand new cyclone technology that works like tornado! Woo hoo! Just like the Grommit show, this thing sucked and blowed. So you flick the switch and it blows enough air to make a golf ball seemingly levitate.. This is the part when your supposed to get the kids all sitting on the couch wearing your BIG Clown hat your big red nose. By pouring vanilla extract onto the exhaust, you could make the room smell like vanilla in 30 seconds.. its all good stuff they say!

So for 2 weeks I learn their demo routine and I'm ready to hit the streets. During the 2 week period, it becomes obvious these people take short cuts and cheat you into believing things that are just not true. For a start, they said at the begining they had so many orders which is why they were recruiting new sales people. The truth actually was that everyone had 2 choices - 1) If you do a demo you get $20 each time 2) You sign out of that program and go 100% commission where you get $300 a time. Well obviously everyone went commission 100% because you would have to do alot of demos in a day to make $300. So if you just sold one, you could go home that day knowing you made some decent cash. Well, out of the last 30 people to sign up the month before, maybe 2 were left still doing it this month :o. Obviously made no sales and moved onto a proper paying job :D

The other cheating aspect of it was how they were getting people to call into the helpdesk. Pre-Xmas, they would do 10,000 flyers offering free pepsi/coke/turkey or Ham. The FREE part of the flyer was huge, with miniscule writing at the bottom saying you only qualify if you watch a demo of a said product, the Tri-star itself. So we get nuns, old age pensioners and cheap skates trying to cash in on the "too good to be true" free coke etc.

Another aspect I didn't like was that the $300 commission per unit sold was based on a cash sale, a credit card sale or a particular financial companies sale. If cash or CC was not acceptable they would be offered to take part in the finance program, if not accepted by them, the Tri-star people would go down a list of creditors. However, if any of those were used (which was about 95% of the time) the salesman would get a measly $50 set rate.. Pityful! They would also offer a plan where your first payment was not due until your tax return was paid around April..


So Day 1 of Richie's first sales day -

Its a nun (very nice sister)... Very nice house, all clean and tidy.. we didnt like clean houses because the product needed to sell by itself (but hey, if the house looked like crap they wouldn't spend a godly amount on a vacuum cleaner would they?). So I go in, do the demo and I hear "ooh its lovely, so fascinating technology these days".. She had some cakes in the oven which smelt so good I could just lie on the couch all day eating and smelling cakes :D. Well the nun wasn't stupid, she's like "Hey you missed a spot over there" whilst I was having a good time vacuuming her carpets. The Tri-star did a great job and she was so proud of the end product, how well it performed, giving me a cake :D. So I come to the crunch point... "The Tri-star is the best air filtration unit on the planet, i've proved it right in front of your eyes, it can suck the sand from under your carpet and you can shoot golf ball around the house at the flick of a switch and it only costs (wait for it) $1850 lmao. She replied "oh, I didn't realize it was that expensive, God wouldn't allow me to make such a large financial purchasing decision!". And went on "If the demo is over, I've got more cakes in the oven so can I have my Ham?".. Under normal circumstances we are supposed to do a runner, pack everything up and leave.. but this was a nun.. I wasn't going to let a poor nun down here. So I give her the ham coupon for shnucks.. I pack up, I leave and she's smiling at the door watching me mumble cuss words as I'm trying walk down the icy path to my car, where I almost fall on my butt trying to stack it all in the trunk of my car.


So I get back to HQ - "no sale" they said. I said "nah, it was a nun, hardly the type of consumer we are targetting". So then they get this girl to go with me who is supposed expert (Yeah right) to the next point of call, which happened to be on the same street as I lived on (uh oh).

So we arrive at this huge house (i'm thinking, "big house, loadsa money, easy sale"). Well in the real world it doesn't work out like you'd think. The rich folk have money because they don't buy stupid ass vacuum cleaners for $2k a pop. Well, ironically they don't like spending any money at all because when we got there he just wanted his FREE turkey :p. So he watches us unload this big huge box from the trunk of this girls car thinking "what the hell is that?".. Unsure of the next thing he is going to say or do, we pile in the front and he starts to get nervous. It turns out his wife has cancer and is in bed ill, probably dying. Well, its an unwritten rule that the wife has to be there because husbands don't really go for the vacuum cleaner sale thing. So I pursuade the girl to go ahead anyway since you can't really say for sure that its a forgone conclusion that he isn't interested. Well, it turned out he wasn't interested (what a surprise). Well, miss smarty pants doing the demo realized his attention was wandering. We were in this big room with a piano, grandfather clock and all kinds of antiques, we didn't realize the actual carpet rug thing she was sitting on was some sort of artistic antique collectors piece. So comes round the vanilla extract demo to make the room smell like vanilla. She is trying to retain his attention whilst dripping extract onto some kind of soaking paper not looking at what shes doing. The extract rolls right off the paper and is dripping between her legs (shes sitting on the carpet floor)... 10 drips later i'm going "PSSTTTT" "PSSSSSTT".. then she notices whats happening, the guy is almost asleep from boredom. Then he jumps up and says, "you know what I don't care about the turkey, just get out".. with only 2 minutes of the demo left we tried to get him to listen to it, he didnt want to. So we get out of there like a bus that is running 15 minutes late. The next day, the guy calls in fury as he noticed the vanilla extract stains all over his $3000 rug.. He then proceeds to try and sue the company eeekkkk...



Day 2 - (it don't get any better).

Today, I got some tips on how to work the sale. Apparently, it works better to empty the vaccuum and empty its contents back onto the floor once the demo is done. Because if they don't buy the machine, you leave the crap in a big pile on their carpet and whilst doing that your supposed to hold it at arms length and give the impression its disgusting.

Ring ring, ring ring... my turn again to go out on the prounce.

This time is was 2 old age pensioners.. So again, I pull up outside the residence, nice house again. Unloading the box, the man of the house comes strolling down the front yard bewildered "WTF is that" look on his face because of course, he just wanted a turkey, he must of thought it was some kind of Jurrasic Turkey called a Tri-star lol. So still bewildered he's opening doors and letting us into his home holding his head back in case a giant animal comes out of the box to attack him :D.. I sit him and his wife down and try to explain he needs to watch a demo of the Tri-star air filtration unit.. he's like "errrr".. At first I thought it was just more bewilderment.. but the simple fact was that they were both hard of hearing. Now 10 minutes into the demo I was pretty sure not much had sunk in.. The wife was mesmerized though, never took her eye off the thing, but when the husband found out it was a vacuum cleaner he almost sh*t himself. I later found out he did a stint for a competitor called "rainbow". So the man of the house starts to get worried, and since part of the demo has me talking over the noise of the vacuum cleaner (remember, they couldnt hear me when the stupid thing was turned off), it was a complete and utter waste of time. So now he knows the plan, he knows its a 2k vacuum cleaner and he knows he's not getting his turkey because we didn't bring it in the door lol (he doesnt know we gave coupons). But amazingly, the wife was in disagreement.. She made me stay even though the guy was packing my sh*t and pushing me out of the door. Well, they got into a Jerry Springer fight which led into the street on the front yard... I left as quick as I could, gasping for breath, smoking a cigerette in the car back to HQ... Phew! When I got back, the wife had already rescheduled another demo :o

I got back, they said "did you dump the contents of the demo back on their floor like we told you to?". I said "if I would of got to that stage of the demo it would of been a remarkable achievement!".


So later that day, I get told things will look up.. I get sent on a ride with the best salesman in the area, his name was Josh.

So i'm like talking to him in the car, he told me he made a couple of grand that week and to watch what he does in the next home we go to.. So i'm like ok.

It turns out to be a crappy little apartment complex thats all run down.. Josh did a remarkable job.. These guys were just lapping it up.. At one point the phone rang and the man of the house just took the handle off the hook.. The lady had a newborn and the carpet looked like it hadn't been cleaned in about a year and a half. So we start the demo and start cleaning spots of the carpet, the Tri-star is kind of metal in places so all you can hear is "ping, ping, pong, pow" with all the bits flying in there.. We mustered up the biggest pile of crap, it was like a world record! Josh got one of the chairs from the kitchen table and I thought he was going to sit on it.. What he actually did was empty the contents on the floor again and then stood up on the chair and said "I feel safer up here".. I almost pissed myself! So after the demo, these guys wanted one.. Josh said "all the richer neighorhoods are buying these, their like hot cakes".. well we all know that isn't true. So anyways, they managed to get finance on the basis that the man had 2 jobs, some army pay of some sort and a tax return coming in April... At this point I felt really really guilty, these guys were going to suffer as soon as we walked out the door because they will have realized that $1850, plus interest over 3 years is like $3000+ and they didn't look like they could afford it. So I go into the car and pick up 6 bottles of 2liter coke and congratulate him on the sale.. To my amazement he was chuffed, saying it would be great for his camping trip.

Well anyway, Josh says that it is customary for the buyer to give up their old vacuum cleaner or let him cut the plug off the wire.. I later found out at HQ they have about 300 Vacuum cleaners that are all listed on ebay.




Day 3 - (worst day ever)

Its freaking freezin cold outside, im glad to get indoors at HQ. Top dog manager comes and says things are slowing down and more flyers need to be put out. He gets this heavy box from the corner and gives us a 1000 or so flyers each and tells us to put a number on it, I was number 11. So Im writing on each corner a number 11. About an hour later ive done my 1000 flyers and i'm asked what kind of car I drive. Since I had a small car they werent interested in mine, some lady had a SUV so we all piled in there and went for a drive. We stop in some neighborhood and start going door to door.. like I say it was freezing cold.. The manager guy said the person who gets the most calls gets $20 bonus woo hoo! (helpdesk would ask what number was written on it). Well 6 hours passed, my 1000 flyers were out, my ears were falling off and my feet hurt like f*ck. I get back to HQ to find out they had about 15 calls altogether, but no no11's :(. By 6pm, the top dog manager looked at the white board and dismissed me and another girl who had no calls at all. So 2 weeks of demo training, learning my lines, taking crap, driving around in my car using my own gas and working on 100% commission that paid diddly squat... I was kind of devastated.

But the funny thing is, I look back and its funny.. its actually hilarious to be honest. I don't tell anyone about this particular job because I never made a cent.

What some people do for money is somewhat criminal.. I'd pay $200 max for that vacuum cleaner, so even a sale in my eyes was a con, and i'm an honest person. I could not bring myself to sell this product unless it was some rich bastard.



I hope it made you laugh, I chuckled a few times writing this.. It all happened to me.. Hope I cheered you up.


Richie.
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Sly Cherry Chunks
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Post by Sly Cherry Chunks »

Agh. I almost got suckered into doing this shit myself. I went for an interview at a company called Magna-something (it was ten years ago, I dont remember) and I was told that I could start the next day. I was quite pleased that I was accepted, as I was only working in a crappy supermarket at the time - but some of my friends who knew about the place warned me away.

So the next day I chose not to turn up. :D
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D
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Post by D »

Very amusing.
You should be a script writer. It would make a great show. Sell it. I'd watch it. Every episode you go to other peoples houses and something happens.
You really can make me visualize it. Good job.......
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Michaelm
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Post by Michaelm »

Nice story.
I'm sorry you lost your time for them.
I think the reality is that most companies that try to sell stuff going to peoples houses are scams. Some of them even have some kind of pyramid structure like those money scams also had. The first in gets the most cash. Mostly the organizers.
neorichieb1971
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Post by neorichieb1971 »

The person that trained me would of got a % of my sales.. Had I made any :lol:

The organizers were pocketing $1000's in ebay cash from the vacuum cleaners they collected from homes. Which they said were crappy useless machines to the new Tri-star owners, but when on eBay they were sold as the best vacuum cleaners on the planet for $30 a pop.


Its totally wrong.. The product seems attractive to the working class because they think the Joneses have it.. But they don't! :roll:

Thats the thing I learned out of it..


Oh, on the first day I remember them telling us to demo the machine to our parents, to our neighbours, to our friends (another con). Basically on the first day if you sold 1 machine you got $100, if you sold 2 machines you got $1000, if you sold 3 you got a free trip to Las Vegas with one of the organizers. If you sold 4 you got like 1,2 and 3 ($1100 plus a trip to Vegas, plus a free Tri-star)..

My family just laughed, one guy offered $800.. and the worst thing was after every demo your supposed to call into HQ.. At which point some hot shot salesman comes on the phone and tries to ram the product down their throat with a plunger. Which made me feel uncomfortable also, especially since it was my friends, my family etc.
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Post by sven666 »

great story, best thing is its true, ive been in the exact same situation with the same product (kirby blah blah scam'o'rama) some years back.

you KNOW its a scam when you go into it, but still give it a shot and hell yes if it doesnt dissapoint and turns out as a scam... its just one of those things you have to try before you can dismiss it :D

ed: btw, the way this company works is just like a pyramid scheme, the sales dont come from you selling stuff to nuns ( ;) ) in 99% of the cases its someone that sells one to their relatives/friends.
so in fact what you thought was education for being a salesrep was actually the sale itself and you were the target.
companies like these have a huge turnover in personel, if 10 quit each week they "hire" 15 the next..

ed2: o snapi just remembered,on the introduction we got to watch this motivational video that featured WILLIAM SHATNER :lol: he talked serious about career choices and in the end he EVEN ROAD OFF INTO THE SUNSET ON A FUCKING HORSE!!! :shock: i couldnt believe my eyes, shatner is such a poof! :lol:
Last edited by sven666 on Wed May 24, 2006 2:24 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by Blade »

I feel for you man....I was once a TELEMARKETER.

....You can hate me all you want, people.... :lol:

Actually our job was to try and get people to donate to a Veterans Association...but the truth was, even though it was a donation, we in actuallity got 50% of the profits...so yeah...that's my worst job in a nutshell...I certainly got a bit more than you prolly did neorichie...but that was most likely due to my "persuasive" voice.

I quit after about a month due to my sense of morality. My boss and all his employees were lying through their teeth. I couldn't stand to work there anymore. :wink:
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Post by howmuchkeefe »

My father worked in insurance sales, once upon a time.

A "career counselor" recommended the work to him. He charged $3,000 for the service. One $200 course later, my dad was an insurance salesman.

My dad worked 50 hour weeks during this time. He kept it up for over a year. He never got a paycheck.

I've worked as a telemarketer twice. The first time, I sold memberships to Walter Mercado's Circle of Vision. The second time, I did standard credit card/balance transfer sales. I didn't last long either time.
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Post by dial911 »

Great story! It definitely made my day, love it :)
What more can I say I wouldn't be here today if the old school didn't pave the way.
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Post by Shatterhand »

Yeah, I am reading that at work, and I had to hold myself to not laugh out loud.

Great story :)
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Post by Eps »

I worked in telesales and door-to-door when I was about 18, selling double glazed windows (which traditionally were the #1 most commonly sold product by telesales and doorstepping in the UK, though that's changed in recent years). I lasted a week - I just couldn't bring myself to lie, lie and lie while putting people in far more debt than they could possibly afford. In the end I barged into the sales manager's office, told him that I thought he was, and I quote: "a massive cunt", and walked out. :lol: Needless to say, that one doesn't get featured on my C.V.!
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Post by sjewkestheloon »

well i've got an interview tomorrow as admin support for a telesales team. they have assured me that i will not be doing any cold callingbut merely merging data etc. i hope they're right.

i have a bt of nervous problem and i previously worked at a local paper doing avertising sales. they gave me the shitty areas with really established papers, and i was competing trying to sell space at about £40 per cm squared. it made me vomit.... i was actually nervous so much i threw up lots and left.

i haven't told the new place this (obviously) so it should be fun lol.

but yeah that was some funny shit.
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Post by BulletMagnet »

sven666 wrote:o snapi just remembered,on the introduction we got to watch this motivational video that featured WILLIAM SHATNER :lol: he talked serious about career choices and in the end he EVEN ROAD OFF INTO THE SUNSET ON A FUCKING HORSE!!! :shock: i couldnt believe my eyes, shatner is such a poof! :lol:
Someone needs to pretend to apply to work for that company just to have the opportunity to make a copy of that video and get it on the internet...it'd be an instant classic, I'm sure. Just beware the inevitable lawsuit from Shatner. :mrgreen:
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Post by GaijinPunch »

I sold Cutco knives out of college. It has similar elements you found, but they tell you by the end of the first 90 minute or so meeting what you'll be selling. They even boot a few people out before they release the product name.

No flyering -- works on referrals. To be honest, it's a fantastic product, and you're only working with college kids (booze and weed) so I actually had a great time.

The most expensvie set at the time (12 years ago) was $650 -- not bad considering they'll reblade the knives forever. I think my mother even had a set from the 60s that she still used which helped me realize they weren't some fucked up company like the vaccuum people. :)

I guess my worst job ever? My first one. McDonalds, for two months.
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Post by Super Laydock »

A very nice and entertaining read that was! :D


We had one of these demos over at our house once (I had a hard time again saying "no" to one of these phone calls solliciting for a visit to show a product). I think it called Kirby something (the one sven666 is talking about). :)

First thing we asked for was if it was REALLY for free (not to get a bill for the demo afterwards, with them saying we hadn't read the small letters/listnened carefully) and asked for he price.

Once they told about the price (trying to cover it up with saying how it would only be a "few bucks" a month if we choose to pay in installments), I and my mom were like looking at eachother and were like "no fucking way" (but of course the sales' girl hadn't seen that).

In the end she vacuumed about all of the living room and we just said no.
She did empty the cleaner to show what had come out, but did it on an old rug, which we just knotted together and threw in the garbage can.

A fairly entertaining demo and clean room was what we got out of it. :D

But indeed in no way will we ever pay more than about 100 Euro for vacuum cleaner (mine was about 50 Euro and is extremely powerfull too (2200 Watt) so why pay about 50 times as much!?).
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Post by Andi »

To be fair, I think there is something satisfying about sales work. It's great to make money based on your wits. For instance, if you are sly enough to trick some old folks into buying something, you get a fat comission. It's challenging and interesting work - although I admit, morally objectionable.

I'm a video camera technician now. It's sometimes intellectually engaging and I don't have to scam people.
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Post by FatCobra »

Ohhh...I hated selling newspaper subscriptions. I couldn't sell any because:

A. The customer wasn't interested.
B. They use the internet for news or already have a subscription with another paper.
C. They hated solicitors and cased me out threatening to call the cops.
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Post by Specineff »

I once got sent by a temp agency to do quality follow up surveys for disabled seniors who used a certain ambulette service. I liked it and the only bad part was having to listen to some of their rants, but it was good, though.

Then I get a job offer for something similar, but these weren't follow up. We only ended calling the east metro Phoenix area (Read: Snotty Attorneys, Doctors, and architects). Or farmers in Texas at 10 PM their time, for crying out loud. Unsolicited phone call work sucks the big one. I left them after a week when a temp agency got me a job as a book room attendant for 10 bucks an hour. With overtime. Rarely will a temp agency get me a job I hate.
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Post by chempop »

richie, that is the funniest story I have read in a long time. Thanks for sharing man, I even told a friend about it and he thought it was histerical.
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