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Wood Products Technical Salesperson

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

Salespeople are often confronted with difficult decisions. Profit margins are the bottom line for business and industry: companies are in business to make money.

That is why salespeople are faced with dilemmas related to profit making. They are often under pressure from higher-ups to make important sales and to obtain large accounts. Sometimes that means undercutting a competitor's price, resulting in a minimal profit to your company and a low commission for the salesperson. In business, there is sometimes a fine line between good ethics and sound business practice.

You are a technical salesperson for a secondary wood products manufacturing company. The company you work for manufactures joists. Your job is to sell building products to general contractors.

Your company belongs to something called a plan exchange. The plan exchange solicits plans from architects and contractors and keeps those plans in a central location. Manufacturers play a monthly or yearly fee to view the plans.

You have been in touch with a general contractor who is building a three-storey office building. The plans provided by the plan exchange tell you this building requires 2 x 10 joists of No. 1 D. FIR (weight, grade, standard). However, the contractor tells you he intends to use No. 2 SPF joists instead.

He has been a general contractor for 15 years, he explains. In his experience, the No. 1 D. FIR joists specified in the plans are not really necessary, especially considering the very light snowfall this area gets. After all, it's not like the roof could cave in!

The contractor wants to substitute a different joist grade. He would certainly consider doing business with you if you could provide him with No. 2 SPF joists rather than the No. 1 D. FIR joists called for in the plans.

What are you going to do?