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What I Learned from Bill Sharer

Photo of Bill SharerFor some time now, I have meant to do an article about sales and marketing for rental and staging, how they are different from the rest of our industry, how they are the same and how they are changing. I was not sure when I would put this on my schedule, but this week I received the news that one of the unsung heroes of our industry is gone and it has prompted me to do a lot of thinking about the subject.

To our great loss, Bill Sharer has passed away.

For those of you who may not have had the privilege of knowing him, Bill served our industry as a sales and marketing consultant for nearly 40 years. He was a perennial volunteer who wrote many of our most popular training courses on sales and served the industry over and over again on many of our most important committees. He had also been selected for many of our honors, including AVIXA Educator of the Year. Beyond that, he was incredibly thoughtful and engaging as a presenter, and taught many of us techno-types a lot of what we knew about sales and marketing. I could say a lot about Bill, as he was also a close personal friend, coworker and co-presenter of more than 30 years. He was also a lot of fun. Classes with Bill were engaging, active and produced some of the most lively discussions I have ever been part of, to which Bill would contribute from his incredible stock of illustrative stories. When I first entered the industry, one of the first people I took a class from was the young Bill Sharer. I was the only staging salesperson in the class at the time and that led to a lot of post-class discussions with Bill about how selling a service like staging could differ from selling hardware or installations. Those discussions became the seeds of the association’s first course on rental and staging sales, which Bill and I wrote and taught together for several years and which proved to be some of our most popular courses. I will fully admit that the course evolved from Bill’s massive knowledge of the subject, with me helping him add rental and staging “color.”

As I said, I could go on at length about Bill. But I believe that it best serves his memory, and our industry, to pass along a reminder of some of the things that Bill taught us. With Bill, simple ideas were always the most powerful, and many of them have stuck with me throughout my entire career.

I am going to miss working with Bill.

He hit what we pitched to him — always.

JRR

Image via Navigate Consulting Management

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