Business Advice

is your arsenal for developing and maintaining sound financial plans and business strategy.

Free Trial: Intuit QuickBooks

Simple Start Free Edition 2009 for Windows

Departments

 

Feed

The Entrepreneurial Generation by Donna Fenn

RSS

Inc.com Featured Blogs

July 10, 2008

Too Much Chutzpah?

Posted at 6:02 PM

How much chutzpah is too much chutzpah? Somehow, I doubt it’s a question that Jake Sasseville has ever asked himself. Sasseville is the 22-year-old producer of The Edge with Jake Sasseville, a Manhattan-based late night talk show that debuted last February on 39 ABC affiliates right after Jimmy Kimmel Live. If you want to know how a kid from Maine muscled his way onto late night TV, watch the show here, because that’s what The Edge is basically about – it’s a show within a show, where viewers not only watch Sasseville interview celebs like Katrina Bowden of 30 Rock, but also witness his struggle to keep his fledgling show on the air by cajoling sponsors like Overstock.com to give him an advance of $30,000 so that he can make payroll (they did, btw). Companies like Overstock, Ford, Bed Head, Denny’s, and Air Tran like Sasseville because his whacky and unscripted show speaks to a large and important demographic – 19 to 30-year-olds – and because he integrates sponsors into The Edge in a way that’s, well, edgy.

Now, he’s set his sights on State Farm as a potential sponsor, but there’s just one problem: the suits in Bloomington, IL are reluctant to open their hearts and their wallets. So how far do you go to land a piece of business? “I don’t like being told no, so I wanted to get in their back yard and gently bang on their door,” says Sasseville. So he went to Bloomington a couple of weeks ago, talked his way into co-hosting a local early morning show, HOI News Daybreak, and announced on air Tuesday that he was holding an open casting call for a new character on his show: State Farm Dude (or possibly Dudette). Think Rupert Jee on Letterman.

Yesterday, he was back on the morning show with clips of the auditions. So what was State Farm’s reaction? Sasseville hasn’t heard from them yet, but he’s optimistic. Earlier this week, before the broadcast, State Farm execs who had heard the buzz about his upcoming on-air appearance, agreed to hear his pitch. “I think I dealt with all their objections,” says Sasseville. And that included an offer to cast an actual State Farm agent as State Farm Dude. So will Sasseville’s antics pay off? Will State Farm Dude play a major role in season two of The Edge? Stay tuned.

In the meantime, though, what’s your take on how much chutzpah is too much chutzpah? What’s the craziest thing you’ve ever done to land a new piece of business, and was it successful, or did it backfire?

Tags:

* 2 Comments

Posted by: David Mullings at July 10, 2008 3:00 PM

Wow...that is definitely chutzpah and I admire his efforts.

The most I have ever done was during a morning show interview, I talked about the kind of support we received from a specific company and how their CEO was always looking to be on the cutting edge and willing to support young entrepreneurs - BEFORE they actually agreed to come on board as a sponsor.

We ended up getting the largest sponsorship package we have ever gotten to date and the CEO is now one of my best friends, routinely talking about me to his colleagues or when speaking to other young people (He is in his 50's).

Jake's story definitely tops mine :-)

Posted by: Bunmi at August 18, 2008 3:34 PM

I love people with guts. People make fools out of themselves everyday, why not do it with purpose?

Every client I have has been the result of some kind of nonsense. Nothing has come without significant vulnerability and the possibility of incessant laughter.

The weirdest thing I've done is make myself a t-shirt using iron-on technology to "join the team" of a company before a contract was signed.

Post Your Own Comments










Remember personal info?




Please Post your comment only once. Clicking on Post more than once may result in multiple postings. If you don't see your comment immediately, try refreshing your browser.



Try a RISK-FREE Issue of Inc. Today!

Renew | Contact Us | Current Issue

Magazine Cover

Select Services