MY STORY: INNOVATOR
SELLING COOKIES FOR FUTURE GIRL SCOUTS By Brianna Iannone
T
his year’s cookie sales were bittersweet for me. I am graduating from high school this year, and this was my last time participating in the cookie program as a girl member. In 13 years, I have sold thousands of cookies. I have schlepped wagons full of boxes door-to-door and have moved thousands of cases at cookie deliveries. Every year, my favorite part of the cookie program (well, besides the access to boxes of Samoas) was to collect donated packages for Cookies for the Community. My Service Unit pulls cookies together, and we give them to a chaplain in the Air Force who gets them to deployed service people. The cookies bring a piece of home to those who are away from their homes, protecting our country.
spoken. For example, I learned to accept rejection and to be resilient. Believe it or not, there are people out there who CAN turn down a box of Girl Scout Cookies! Not every sales pitch lands a sale. Sometimes people passed our booth without even looking at us. Handling rejection in a healthy way is critical to everyone's development, and we learned how to accept rejection and moved forward healthily. Every year my troop set a goal and decided what to do with our cookie money. We paid for and had the time of our lives at summer camp several times. We have used some money for community service projects. And in the last few years, I have sold cookies so that my troop could help fund Gold Awards for my Girl Scout Sisters and myself.
And as we all get ready for the next step, this year’s program was bittersweet since we won’t be going to summer camp and, instead, preparing for college. I sold cookies for the future. So that each of my troop members One of the first things I learned about selling can get a Girl Scout Lifetime cookies was that I needed to be friendly and Membership. So that the outgoing! This tip works well when you are a camps we enjoyed so much small Daisy or Brownie, but as you become will be there for our younger older, customers want to know your goals. Once Brianna Last Cookies: Brianna holds up a “Last Chance to Buy sisters. So that girls in the [Cookies]” sign at her last cookie booth as a Girl Scout. I reached middle and high school, an important future will get to experience strategy was selling cookies door-to-door to the network of the fantastic opportunities that we did. I thank everyone who loyal customers who had known me since I was a Daisy. has supported girls like me through the cookie program to help fuel the experience and opportunity of Girl Scouting for Of course, I learned other skills like goal setting, money everyone and for years to come. management, and business ethics - all things I’ll use my whole life. I also learned things that aren’t as obvious and often not
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GIRL SCOUT
Connections
SPRING 2020