'Business is Supposed to be Fun'
Motivator Hal Becker has a cool job,
urging people to laugh and be courteous
By HOLLY CUMMINGS
Staff Writer, The Corydon (Indiana) Democrat
When Hal Becker was 21 and on the way to
becoming the number one producer in Xeroxs I 1,000- strong sales force, he heard his
first motivational speaker.
He was hooked.
I thought it was a really cool
job. Becker said last week. I decided that was what I really wanted to
do.
Now, 23 years later, thats exactly what
Becker does - all over the world.
He has risen from being a top salesperson to
one of the worlds top sales and customer service experts and author of two books. He
travels the globe, makmg about 120 presentations a year, although hes trying to cut
down.
The average speaker does about 60
seminar dates a year, but its too hard for me to say no, Becker said.
He brought his dynamic delivery and humorous
advice to Corydon last Thursday for a seminar sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce of
Harrison County. Sarah Turpin, the chambers vice president of membership and public
relations, said she had wanted Becker to come to Corydon after seeing him last October at
a sales seminar for the Southern Indiana Chamber of Commerce.
Turpin thought Becker would fit tight in with
her efforts to provide better membership programs in Harrison County.
I came back to my board of directors and
said I want to do this because we need customer service training in this area,
Turpin sald.
The board supported her, and she booked him.
Becker teaches business owners to rely on
customer service and the positive word-of-mouth advertising spread by satisfied customers.
If people like how they are treated, he said, any business can spread without a sales
pitch.
"The best companies dont have to
advertise. he said. Business is supposed to be fun. The best companies in the
world have fun with their customers.
If the customers are happy then
businesses are happier.
Becker said those happier businesses practice
simple graces: treating customers or clients with respect, making others feel necessary,
and, most importantly, just being nice.
Weve forgotten how to just be nice
to people, he said. Wal-Mart is famous for great customer service. The first
thing you see when you walk in the door is a greeter, someone who smiles.
Becker credits his family - Holly, 31, his
wife of six months, and stepdaughter Nicole, 7 - with changing his perspective on things.
While he once focused on a fast-track business life, he now focuses more on family.
Both of them add a lot of balance in
life, he said.
Even though he wasnt always too fond of
children, he confessed that Nicole has changed my life. Having her has made my life
more fun.
Being with her has allowed him to reconnect
with his child inside, the one who finds fun in work.
"As adults, we forget how to play,
Becker said. We forget how to be a kid.
And, like a kid, he also admitted he suffers
from having the attention span of a mosquito. So, there are three things I want to
get out of a seminar: I want time to fly by - l dont want to have to look at my
watch all the time. I want to be entertained. And I want to leave with things I can do
immediately.
He tailors his programs around those three
tenets. To make time fly and keep his audience involved, he uses humor. He gets material
from stand-up comics, and he especially admires Whoopi Goldberg, who, he said,
produces humor with a message in between.
Becker also writes articles for magazines and
newspapers, and some of his titles reflect his comic twist. Life Is Like A Twinkie -
Or It Should Be, published in 1997 by Small Business News, holds nuggets of advice
like Be a kid; dont lose that fun inside of you, At work, pretend
youre playing and Your attitude is everything. If you want to have fun,
you will.
Fun is not something that came easily to
Becker. In 1983, shortly after he started a customer service telemarketing firm called
Direct Options, he was diagnosed with abdominal cancer. He was 28.
Doctors gave him a 30-percent chance of
survival. He suffered through surgery, eight months of treatments and an uncertain future.
His survival changed his outlook. It also
resulted in the nonprofit Cancer Hotline of Cleveland, which he founded and now funds
through the sales of two of his books, Can I Have 5 Minutes of Your Time? and
Lip Service.
In 1990, Becker sold Direct Options to promote
his books and audio and video tapes and become a motivational speaker. Since 1993, this
aspect of his career has taken off. Despite his own advice, heworks between 70 and 80
hours a week.
But I dont consider it work -
its fun, Becker said. He quoted Mark Twain: Your vocation should be your
vacation.
One hundred and forty-eight people turned out
to hear Beckers presentation last week.
It was a great evening. People were
amazed at how quickly the time went by, Turpin said. It was not what they
expected because of the humor and the flow. People walked away with a lot of smiles. He
got the point across.
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