Friday, November 28, 2014

COPA Awards Gala

Announcing the 2014 COPA Awards winners
 



The Motown-themed 2014 COPA Stars Gala was another memorable and entertaining evening for our industry. Nearly 160 industry luminaries gathered on Thursday, November 27 at the Bellagio in Vaughan, Ontario to honour excellence and raise proceeds for the COPA Scholarship Fund and "Movember".

Guests started their evening off at the open bar mingling over drinks and hors d’oeuvres, as the silent auction table buzzed with stiff competition for two iPad minis and the 49" LG flat screen. The grand prize basket, courtesy of 3M Canada Company, which consisted of $500 worth of gift certificates ($150 at LCBO, $150 at Canadian Tire, $150 at The Keg, and $50 at Cineplex) was also hotly contended for. Overall, the silent auction, grand prize draw, winter accessories/jewellery table and candy bar, raised approximately $5,500 in proceeds.

Emceed by COPA’s own chair, Elio Tremonti at Staples Canada, and president, Sam Moncada, the night seemed to fly by once guests were seated for dinner and the awards show.
By far, the most touching moment of the night came during the Individual Award of Excellence presentation to Gary Quinnell, formerly of Staples Canada. Mr. Quinnell was overcome with emotion as Pete Gibel, his former boss at Staples Canada, talked of his great personal and professional contributions to the organization and OP industry. Mr. Gibel’s introduction was followed by a video tribute, created by the Staples Canada team, featuring testimonials from co-workers and colleagues, including vendors that worked with Mr. Quinnell, as well as his wife and children. Welcomed to the podium with a standing ovation, Mr. Quinnell gave an emotional acceptance speech and returned to his seat with another standing ovation. All in all, it is clear that Mr. Quinnell left a great personal and professional legacy across the industry and is a well-deserving candidate for COPA’s highest individual honour in 2014.


COPA handed out nine awards at this year’s Gala with ACCO Brands sweeping several categories thanks to their Hilroy and Kensington brands. Nevertheless, the Awards Committee had some close calls to make this year as the contention was very close in many of the categories. The 2014 COPA Awards winners are:



Category Development
  
3M Canada Company - Scotch® Expressions
 
 
Honourable mention in this category:
 

Fellowes Canada Inc. - Auto Feed Shredders - AutoMax™
 
Corporate Social Responsibility Leadership – Program
 
Beatties Basics Office Products - Environmental Responsibility
 


Staples Canada - Staples Canada Recycle for Education Computer Lab Contest
 
 
 
 
Corporate Social Responsibility Leadership – Product
ACCO Brands Canada - Me to We Back-to-School Collection in conjunction with Staples and Free the Children



Friday, November 21, 2014

Thinking about Expanding your assortment.......how about Booze?

I came across an article a few weeks back regarding a New Zealand OP dealer's efforts to expand their product offering and found it very amusing. There has been lots of talk about dealers in our business expanding into non-traditional areas.......maybe they should consider this?

From the New Zealand Herald

An office supplies company's request to deliver beer and spirits to customers has been rejected.



Auckland's "Gem Office Products Depot" wanted to deliver alcohol alongside fruit juice, stationery and cleaning supplies to office workers.

Under the Sale of Liquor Act, local licensing authorities can grant off-licences if they think alcohol sales are an "appropriate complement" to other goods a business sells.

Neither police nor the Medical Officer of Health opposed Gem's application, but Auckland's district licensing inspector Stephen Galvin claimed booze was not an appropriate complement to other goods Gem sold, which were overwhelmingly office supplies.

Gem disagreed, saying it was developing its business into a "one-stop shop" for customers.

Gem said it was reasonable to expect some offices to order drinks, including alcoholic ones, when ordering stationery and office supplies.

Judge John Hole disagreed with the company.

"In this case, the sale of alcohol has nothing to do with the kind of goods sold by the applicant. Non-alcoholic drinks constitute a very small part of the overall business of the applicant."

Judge Hole also pointed out other firms had made similar bids, and failed.

One earlier case involved an application from an Ashburton company Combined Rural Traders Society, which wanted to sell beer, wine and spirits from its site as well as a range of rural merchandise. The High Court turned that request down.

Hey, what with the dealer community trying to expand their assortments from A to Z as a total solution for everything - maybe we here in Canada should try this? Think the beer companies need an agent to put this together?

Friday, November 14, 2014

Beyond Motivation Is Decision


The importance of  Consistent Motivation.


 Article #5 –  Solutions for the Human Side of Business - By: Jonathan Creaghan  


 I had a wonderful conversation with a friend about why some people achieve their goals and others don’t. He had been sharing his experience of feeling excited about working out and losing weight. For the first month his determination was high, and then it waned after he injured himself during a workout session. His commitment to his goal fizzled out. Frustrated with himself, he couldn’t get back to his original regime and enthusiasm.
 

 We have all been there — we start something with vigour and passion, only to find our excitement and energy naturally dissipates after a while. The problem is that we interpret this waning as a loss of interest, making it difficult to overcome the natural ups and downs we are inevitably going to face.  

I can imagine your heads nodding as I write this. The issue is not the loss of enthusiasm, the issue is where you have placed your attention and energy. Typically, we place a great deal of emphasis on the initial excitement and passion we feel for our cause, and rely on that unbridled energy to move us forward. This energy, which is difficult to sustain because of its naive nature, can disappear very quickly at the first set back.
 
 

The same pattern can be seen in companies wanting to improve: great beginning, but short-lived follow through.  If we feel enthusiastic, we move forward. If we feel we’ve lost that energy, we panic and question our decision — or worse, beat ourselves up for losing it. An enormous amount of time is spent wondering why we are not excited any more. Our mistake is relying on a passion that isn’t deep enough to handle varying external conditions or fragile internal emotions. Shift your focus away from whether you are excited, and you will see that this lost energy can be directed to a re-commitment to the original purpose.
 

“Goal is to be efficient and economical with your actions”

 
Contrary to what you hear from most motivational speakers, you don’t need to get up every morning feeling passionate about your life. Nor is it necessary to be excited about your goal every moment. You don’t need to artificially build yourself up. The energy it takes to do so is energy better spent on just achieving what you want. The goal is to be efficient and economical with your actions right now. When you do this, you can then maintain the higher levels of energy and focus over a longer period of time, and ultimately achieve your goal faster.  

It is never about the level of sustained enthusiasm, it’s about the efficient use of energy and focus over time at an appropriate level to create quality outcomes. And believe it or not, this is easily attainable. You just decide to do it.
 
 
 


Excerpt from Jonathan’s upcoming book

 Beyond: Finding Freedom and Meaning in the Everyday

 

Friday, November 07, 2014

Web Marketing – Opportunity or Oxymoron

By: Norm MacLeod

If there was a movie about Web marketing it would probably be called A Shot In the Dark and the same words Inspector Clouseau used to sum up the original movie, “I believe everything, I believe nothing,” would also aptly apply.
 In the Office Products world, web marketing used to mean a number of boxed ads for randomly selected products spread around the landing page. These ads were funded by vendors usually out of the same pot that pays for flyers and catalogues. And was there a return on this investment?
You can choose either:
A) YES - 102,816 impressions over the month the ad appeared
B) NO - 14 clicks and possibly 3 sales actually attributable to the ad.  
 
Of course web marketing has evolved since then. Now we have stalker ads and search based personalized ads that are at least somewhat relevant to the customer. What’s that you say, you don’t really care that a Staples ad appears on Kijiji after you’ve been to their site and didn’t find either the item or price you were looking for? Rather than copying current fashionable ways of spending web dollars, perhaps our industry needs to concentrate more on finding marketing tools that genuinely benefit our particular breed of web customer.

For better or worse, our industry’s products really aren’t that emotionally important to our customers and ads for them will never be of much interest to anyone other than someone with that exact burning need the moment the ad is seen. So does that mean web marketing is a waste of money?

Based on the fact that the telemarketing industry still exists by trying to sell duct cleaning to everyone in the world with a land based phone, the shotgun approach must deliver some small percentage of success. But is there a way to turn web marketing funds into a higher percentage form of campaign, preferably one that is not annoying or intrusive to the customer? I believe the answer is a resounding YES.

The most effective use of Web marketing funds is to help the customer find what they are looking for even if they aren’t quite sure what that exactly is. Why is this the most effective spend? Because the decision about what to buy has not been made yet. People searching specifically, knowing what they want or shopping from a contract/favourites list, can’t be easily influenced. The decision making is already done. 
Imagine yourself as a customer shopping for an item. You know roughly what you want, be it a pen or a USB drive or a binder but you aren’t sure about brand or feature set. You enter the general item name into the search field and a scroll down of choices appears. At this point, it can either be eenie-meenie pick one at random or if some web marketing dollars have been allocated, specific products can be made more appealing.

For example, one of the items in the list could have a 30% off sale sign, or a $10 off coupon or a banner saying Customer Top Choice or ECO Choice. Another very simple and cheap approach is to make the item photo of the most profitable product more attractive than the ones around it, either bigger or with a more colourful background. A useful attention getter is a click for video demo icon or detailed fact sheet. The key at this point is to help the customer make a buying decision (even if it is on a paid for basis). At the very least, the search sequence should be based on some internal rationale, whether that is coop funding driven or dealer profitability driven.

So how do the big 3 industry web sites stack up? Totally at random, I selected the category of Retractable gel pens for a search, and here’s what I found on October 16th, 11:30AM:

None of the sites attempted any direct marketing once the scroll down appeared, one site actually had no discernible sequence logic at all and included products that weren’t even in the selected category (a refill is NOT a pen). The other 2 sites had returns that were likely based on sales ranking as well as a directive to place private brand high in the list.

You would think that at least a boxed ad could appear relevant to the product group selected since all 3 of these sites run timed promotions which would usually have some product on sale in the selected category. It’s already on sale, how about letting the web customer know it up front rather than having to specifically sort by On Sale. How many vendors have tried to influence the sequence of the product scroll down, realizing that most customers aren’t going to get past about #10? How many vendors have demanded that when they coop for a promotion, the save amount be highlighted on the web search? How many vendors have proposed an aggressive cross sell campaign to dealers funding a switch over special offer if their product is not the first selected? How many vendors pay to ensure their collateral materials are used properly on the web site?

All of these web marketing tactics are well within the capabilities of the industry web sites. Dealers need to allocate more resources to their web activities, moving away from things like catalogues and flyers, to make them happen and if the dealers aren’t going to do it on their own, the vendors need to drive the process and ensure their marketing dollars are spent effectively. Otherwise, start buying shares in Amazon.