Friday, July 25, 2008

Take Time to Talk to Your Customers

I've just returned from 2 weeks working with a client dealership to get their Special Finance efforts off the ground. To say it's been a challenge would be an understatement! Yeah, times are tough, lenders are tight, new vehicle sales are way down, and the used car market is all over the place. Some dealerships are sitting heavy in full size SUV's and pickups, and auction prices are sky high on economical units that are, with $4 a gallon gas, the most desirable.

Despite all that, credit challenged customers still need loans, and the vehicles that go with them. The problem, to me, seems that, while market conditions have changed dramatically, the way business is done still remains the same.

Sales people will always be sales people...motivated to make the sale, and the associated commission. To many sales people, it's a numbers game. The more folks you talk to, the better the chance you'll make a sale. Take more "ups", and sooner or later, you'll find a buyer.

Most dealerships boast of a 20% closing ratio, so the old "more is better" philosophy takes over and we find ways to flood a showroom with customers, figuring that somewhere in the crowd there's got to be a buyer or two. If we can bring in 100 folks, the numbers say we'll sell 20 units.

Truth seems to be that, if only 20 of those folks want to buy, and as NADA says, 3 out of 5 of those customers have some kind of credit problem, unless your sales staff can spot it early enough in the process, you spend a lot of time selling vehicles to folks who can't buy, even though they want to! When you finally discover this, they've already committed to buying the unit they selected while they were out on the lot with the sales rep, and unfortunately, the lenders won't qualify them for that unit.

Take some time to sit down and talk with your customers. We used to call this the "Discovery" or "Qualifying" stage of the sales process. Ask your customer for permission to sit down and gather some information about them and what they came in for. Ask them about their previous car buying experience. If it was good, why didn't they go back to the last dealership they bought from. If it was a bad experience, ask what happened. You'll probably here some horror stories about your competitors, some of which will scare the heck out of you. So far this week, I've heard tales of bait and switch, straw purchases, and possible fraud, from customers that were, to say the least, a bit upset with the last dealership they bought from.

I've also seen customers put onto $38,000 new vehicles who were no where near able to purchase such a unit. Even though the customer said they had previous financed a vehicle with a prime lender, no one bothered to ask if things had changed in her life recently. Then there was the guy who pulled up in a 24 year old car with the windows down on a 98 degree day, that tried to buy the 2003 Hummer!

It all comes down to this simple concept. Talk to your customers before you walk them out to the lot. The more your customers talks, the more you'll find out information that will help you control the process and move it in the right direction - good credit customers to the lot, and credit challenged customers to the finance office.

Look at it this way. If this helps you sell just 1 more unit a week, how much will that mean to you at the end of the month? Sounds to me like money in YOUR pocket!