The greatest saleswoman in the world
today doesn't mind if you call her a
girl. That's because Markita Andrews has
generated more than eighty thousand
dollars selling Girl Scout cookies since
she was seven years old.
Going door-to-door after school, the
painfully shy Markita transformed
herself into a cookie-selling dynamo
when she discovered, at age 13, the
secret of selling.
It starts with desire. Burning,
white-hot desire.
For Markita and her mother, who
worked as a waitress in New York after
her husband left them when Markita was
eight years old, their dream was to
travel the globe. "I'll work hard to
make enough money to send you to
college," her mother said one day.
"You'll go to college and when you
graduate, you'll make enough money to
take you and me around the world. Okay?"
So at age 13 when Markita read in her
Girl Scout magazine that the Scout who
sold the most cookies would win an all-
expenses-paid trip for two around the
world, she decided to sell all the Girl
Scout cookies she could - more Girl
Scout cookies than anyone in the world,
ever.
But desire alone is not enough. To
make her dream come true, Markita knew
she needed a plan.
"Always wear your right outfit, your
professional garb," her aunt advised.
"When you are doing business, dress like
you are doing business. Wear your Girl
Scout uniform. When you go up to people
in their tenement buildings at 4:30 or
6:30 and especially on Friday night, ask
for a big order. Always smile, whether
they buy or not, always be nice. And
don't ask them to buy your cookies; ask
them to invest."
Lots of other Scouts may have wanted
that trip around the world. Lots of
other Scouts may have had a plan. But
only Markita went off in her uniform
each day after school, ready to ask -
and keep asking - folks to invest in her
dream. "Hi, I have a dream. I'm earning
a trip around the world for me and my
mom by merchandising Girl Scout
cookies," she'd say at the door. "Would
you like to invest in one dozen or two
dozen boxes of cookies?"
Markita sold 3,526 boxes of Girl
Scout cookies that year and won her trip
around the world. Since then, she has
sold more than 42,000 boxes of Girl
Scout cookies, spoken at sales
conventions across the country, starred
in a Disney movie about her adventure
and has co-authored the best seller, How
to Sell More Cookies, Condos, Cadillacs,
Computers ... And Everything Else.
Markita is no smarter and no more
extroverted than thousands of other
people, young and old, with dreams of
their own. The difference is Markita had
discovered the secret of selling: As,
Ask, Ask! Many people fail before they
even begin because they fail to ask for
what they want. The fear of rejection
leads many of us to reject ourselves and
our dreams long before anyone else ever
has the chance - no matter what we're
selling.
And everyone is selling something.
"You're selling yourself everyday - in
school, to your boss, to new people you
meet," said Markita at 14. "My mother is
a waitress: she sells the daily special.
Mayors and presidents trying to get
votes are selling ... I see selling
everywhere I look. Selling is part of
the whole world."
It takes courage to ask for what you
want. Courage is not the absence of
fear. It's doing what it takes despite
one's fear. And, as Markita has
discovered, the more you ask, the easier
(and more fun) it gets.
Once, on live TV, the producer
decided to give Markita her toughest
selling challenge. Markita was asked to
sell Girl Scout cookies to another guest
on the show. "Would you like to invest
in one dozen or two dozen boxes of Girl
Scout cookies?" she asked.
"Girl Scout cookies? I don't buy any
Girl Scout cookies!" he replied. "I'm a
Federal Penitentiary warden. I put 2,000
rapists, robbers, criminals, muggers and
child abusers to bed every night."
Unruffled, Markita quickly countered,
"Mister, if you take some of these
cookies. maybe you won't be so mean and
angry and evil. And, Mister, I think it
would be a good idea for you to take
some of these cookies back for every one
of your 2,000 prisoners, too."
Markita asked.
The Warden wrote a check.