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A DAY IN THE LIFE OF AN ACCOUNT MANAGER


                                                     WITH PAT JOHNSON


                                 Pat Johnson explains a day in the life of an Account Manager, what it
                                 takes to thrive in the position, the hardest parts, and much more…


                     I’ve  been  working  as  an Account  Executive  for  33  years  and  each  and  every  day  is  a  different  as  a

                     fingerprint, and I can tell you that until a friend of mine told me about the position that was open I would
                     have never dreamed of being in steel sales. I interviewed with my former General Manager John M.

                     O’Connor and I was so impressed with not only his character, but his open, friendly, and sincere attitude

                     during the interview process, that I felt that even though I had another job offer, I needed to accept his
                     offer, and never regretted it.  The Account Managers job on the inside is, to simply put it, the ones that

                     make it happen for the customer. That is, taking the accounts you have, and doing your best to grow

                     them through accurate, timely, and competitive quotes that can then turn into profitable orders for the
                     company.  It’s about developing relationships with your customers so that you’ll have credibility when

                     you communicate with them. It is about not only handling the easy things, (orders just sent in…) but also

                     skillfully handling customer problems to retain and still grow the account. I think maybe a misinterpretation
                     of account managers is, that we just sit and take orders….that is the farthest from the truth!  We’re using

                     either entering quotes or following up on them, entering orders, tracking down material for customers, and

                     taking care of issues that undoubtedly pop up during the day.  I think some of the strengths one might need
                     for this job is an attention to detail, instinct, organization, the ability to prioritize, and the flexibility to change

                     in an instant what you’re doing. As inside, we deal with virtually everyone associated with taking care of

                     the customer. Whether it's with purchasing & inquiring, and following up on material, to working with credit,
                     traffic, or paper trail issues. Like I mentioned earlier, no one day in this job is the same, the goal clear

                     though, and that is taking care of the customer.  A typically a day for me starts by following upon what orders

                     did or did not ship, handling back-orders, taking care of quotes, and prioritizing those, then following up
                     and turning the quotes into orders. I think one of the hardest parts of my job is accepting things that are out

                     of my control, i.e. mis-shipped material, truck issues, but taking that negative and making it into a positive.

                     I would recommend this job to others, as through the years, it has been a good company to work for.
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