How salespeople deal with intergenerational relationship selling

Purpose - The Millennial generation (born after 1981) of salespeople is projected to become the apparent heir to replace top-end Baby Boomers expected to retire at an alarming rate over the next five years. This problem poses a significant challenge in that buyer-seller relationships will need to fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of business & industrial marketing 2011-08, Vol.26 (6), p.443-455
Hauptverfasser: Bolman Pullins, Ellen, Mallin, Michael L., Buehrer, Richard E., Jones, Deirdre E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose - The Millennial generation (born after 1981) of salespeople is projected to become the apparent heir to replace top-end Baby Boomers expected to retire at an alarming rate over the next five years. This problem poses a significant challenge in that buyer-seller relationships will need to form between members of different generations.Design methodology approach - Through a grounded theory style approach, the paper explores this intergenerational selling relationship development problem.Findings - In addition to confirming that Millennial salespeople feel challenged by differences stemming from their age-group, several strategies were identified for Millennial salespeople to overcome these challenges and effectively build relationships with their (older) customers.Research limitations implications - The study is qualitative and based on a limited convenience sample, but reveals the need to further pursue study in this area.Practical implications - Managers can help younger salespeople develop strategies for managing older buyers. These strategies are establishing similarities, building credibility, showing dependability, demonstrating professionalism, and showing youthful enthusiasm.Originality value - The paper helps resolve the issue of whether understanding generational differences is important. Statistics show that increasingly younger salespeople will call on older buyers. The paper establishes that this is consistent with discrimination, SIT theory, rather than earlier work on similarities.
ISSN:0885-8624
2052-1189
DOI:10.1108/08858621111156430