Archive for the ‘Articles’ Category

DealerKnows Consulting Continues Growth of their Team

Saturday, September 10th, 2011

DealerKnows Consulting is pleased to add seasoned industry professional, Melissa Roberts, to their growing team of Virtual Account Managers.

Melissa Roberts, a former Internet Sales Manager and BDC Manager in Worcester, Massachussets, had recently been a Phone Coach for DealerKnows preferred training partner, Phone Ninjas before coming aboard the DK team.  As Phone Ninjas is a service utilized by DealerKnows, Melissa already had advanced knowledge of DK’s core philosophies and training regimen.

Joe Webb of DealerKnows states “I actively sought Melissa for our Virtual Account Manager position.  Having someone of Melissa’s caliber that has experience navigating dealerships’ CRM tools and websites is imperative for our clients.  I reached out to my good friend, Jerry Thibeau, owner of Phone Ninjas, and we felt there was an amicable way for her to jump aboard the DealerKnows team.  Melissa is a phone guru, alright, but her primary goal will be keeping a watchful eye on what our clients are doing and helping truly mentor and train them on the best Internet sales processes around.

A woman in a male-dominated industry such as the car business isn’t always a sought-after task, but Melissa has been very successful on the retail side.  In just three years as an Internet Manager, she personally handled all Internet sales inquiries for a multi-line auto group with two locations.  While there, she increased the online sales traffic at Diamond Chevrolet by one hundred percent, online service traffic by 300%, and overall Internet sales by 100%.  In the past, she created and managed two separate dealership Business Development Centers.

“People like Melissa, with her history of achievements and dedication to being meticulous and passionate about her craft, don’t come along very often and I am excited to bring her onto our Virtual Team.  I also imagine that her experience will lend well to handling much of the software implementation we do for our clients so I expect she’ll have the title CRM guru before too long.” Bill Playford, VP of DealerKnows and partner of the Virtual Dealer Training position jokes.

DealerKnows is constantly growing their team and is always looking for talented individuals with true, documented success in retail automotive.  As one of the leading training firms in the market, Melissa Roberts will be in a position to truly positively affect dealers on a one-to-one basis for the foreseeable future.

Melissa is excited herself when she says “From the moment I saw the DealerKnows Team in action in 2009, I knew I would soon be a part of it.  Not just their best practices beliefs, but the method in which them continually work with their dealer clients in a very hands-on way is a breath of fresh air in our industry.  I look forward to adding my expertise to an outstanding team of great people.”



Chrysler Southwest Summit Testimonial

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Let it be known, I did not write this. One Chrysler dealer in the audience I was speaking to, however, did… and I appreciate it greatly.
I have about 50 others that I’d love to share, but then it’d just be bragging :^)
Chrysler Southwest Digital Summit Testimonial



Digital Marketing Strategies Conference Invites Automotive Internet Sales Expert Joe Webb to Speak

Saturday, January 8th, 2011
PCG Digital Marketing is preparing for their automotive-industry insider summit, The Digital Marketing Strategies Conference, and they are stacking the deck by inviting many sought-after thought-leaders including Internet Sales Expert, Joe Webb. 

Joe Webb, Founder of DealerKnows Consulting, will be speaking on the need for auto dealers to consistently measure, monitor, motivate, and police their Internet sales departments.  A top-rated speaker at the Digital Dealer Conferences, Webb will also be detailing some cutting-edge practices in customer response techniques and long-term lead management follow-up.   

“Now more than ever, dealers must dedicate their time, energy, and financial resources to education for both themselves and their staff.  Events like the Digital Marketing Strategies Conference gives real-world, actionable tactics for dealers to utilize and stay ahead of the competition online.  The PCG Digital Consulting group has assembled a great group of speakers to flesh out an A to Z curriculum successful dealers must follow to succeed in today’s competitive online marketplace.”  Webb says.  ”How a dealership’s staff communicates with their customers is the most important aspect to Internet sales domination.” 

PCG Digital Marketing founder, Brian Pasch, agrees.  ”Dealers are investing a lot of time and effort attracting internet shoppers to their websites and even more money on the most advanced websites to convert those customers to leads.  It is imperative dealers recognize that the next, important step is managing each opportunity and communicating in a personal, professional manner with the consumer.  This is one of the reasons we are excited to bring Joe in as a subject matter expert on the topic.” 

The Digital Marketing Strategies Conference hosted by PCG Digital Marketing is scheduled just prior to the NADA Conference and set in NAPA Valley at the NAPA Marriott on February 1st – 4th.  Joe Webb and Brian Pasch are just a few of the amazing line-up of automotive industry experts speaking at the event. 

For more information on the conference, please visit http://digitalmarketingstrategies.org 
To learn more about Joe Webb and DealerKnows Consulting, please visit http://dealerknows.com



DealerKnows Consulting Introduces Automotive eCommerce Expert Bill Playford as Vice President

Thursday, June 24th, 2010
DealerKnows Consulting, an Automotive Internet Sales Training firm, officially announced eCommerce expert, Bill Playford, as their new Vice President today.

Joe Webb, President and Founder of DealerKnows Consulting said “I couldn’t be more pleased to have someone of Bill’s caliber and reputation join my DealerKnows team. He brings a level of in-the-trenches know-how that is often unmatched in most automotive digital marketing professionals and he is one of the few that is as passionate about this industry as I am.” 

Vice President of DealerKnows Consulting

Vice President of DealerKnows Consulting

Playford continues, “Joe Webb and I have known each other for several years and fast became friends. We share a deep-seeded desire to change the way vehicles are bought and sold. We understand that people buy cars from people. We also know that with practice and dedication, the car business cannot only be financially rewarding, but also a way to create friends (and clients) for life. These shared philosophies, coupled with our experience with dealers and vendors, will allow us to continue to offer world-class consulting to our dealer clients.”

Bill brings a decidedly different skill set to the DealerKnows team. While spending the last three years working for Trilogy, Bill played an instrumental role in launching three new retail solutions for the domestic and international market. He adds a depth of knowledge of vendor technology, and its effective implementation at the dealer level. Moreover, he brings the experience of working for one of the most successful privately owned technology companies in the world.

Having recently served as Director of Retail Operations for Trilogy’s SmartLeads program, Bill brings intimate knowledge of lead acquisition, lead quality, lead scoring, and lead segmentation. In the process of adding nearly 150 dealers and over 350 franchises to beta test Trilogy’s lead scoring and lead prioritization software, Bill helped dealers develop successful ways to efficiently acquire and convert third party leads. His efforts were reflected in OEM and dealer group adoption of the SmartLeads lead purchasing program.

As the Vice President of DealerKnows Consulting, Bill will be dedicating his time to the Virtual Dealer Training program recently launched by the company’s founder, Joe Webb. “I couldn’t be more excited to have Bill Playford take the reigns of an already successful program like our Virtual Dealer Training. Clients on our Virtual Dealer Training program have been seeing huge jumps in their online business and Bill’s involvement will only help us grow our virtual offerings and assist more dealerships.” Webb says.

“Throughout my career in the car business, I’ve come to grasp that training (or lack there of) is the root cause of many issues that plague both car dealerships and customers, alike. Many new retail hires lack the perspective and understanding that it takes to experience success. Workload, turnover, management shuffles, and egos tend to impede training from within. Expense, consistency, and timing tend to preclude training from outside. Hiring an “expert” to run the operation is often cost prohibitive, or just not practical. The end result is that training is viewed as a good idea, but too hard to coordinate, and thus put on the shelf. “Playford states.

“Since cloning is not yet a convenient solution,” he continues,” virtual training provides the means to train retail staff conveniently, and cost effectively. A dealer doesn’t know what’s going happen in the eight weeks after they book a consultant, and when the consultant shows up. Incentives change randomly, which can radically affect staff availability. Consultants typically aren’t local, and they surely don’t come for free. Hiring an experienced Internet director can be extremely expensive, and may yield mixed results. Virtual training provides the means to get a dealer’s staff on track, and keep them there- all at an incremental cost. With the DealerKnows training program and client base already in place, this allows us the opportunity as a team to continue carrying the torch toward a more progressive way to virtually educate and consult dealers.”

Prior to joining the SmartLeads team, Playford spent six years developing “click to buy” initiatives, catering to car buyers who are no longer interested in purchasing vehicles the traditional way. Over the course of eighteen months Bill’s team at Trilogy developed and launched a web buying service for the nation’s largest publicly traded auto-group, as well as the developed of a web specific, OEM backed, buying service for the international market.

Like the rest of the DealerKnows team, Bill also brings front line experience to the table. Bill spent four years at one of the first Internet dealers in the country. Building on what he learned from the best, Bill was among the first to launch an analytics program to ensure his dealer was delivering the right message to the right customer. His research directly led to the creation of association-specific buying programs, neighborhood level marketing programs, as well as cost saving lead optimization strategies. His pioneering geographic and demographic specific targeting methodology was also noticed by KBB, where he served on its inaugural Dealer Advisory Panel.

Bill is extremely passionate about automotive ecommerce and says his goal is to share his sales, marketing, and product development skills to help dealers sell more cars, and add customers for life.”I’m truly excited to be joining the DealerKnows team.” Playford states. “Having spent the last few years developing technology, I’ve come to the realization that even the best technology cannot reach its full potential if it is not being used properly. After much careful consideration, I decided I to rededicate myself to helping people sell cars.”



Bobbled Phone Calls Hurts Dealership Business – Ward’s Article

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Check out this Ward’s Auto article about the phone and the emphasis of training best practices to improve dealer results. While I only contributed a quote, several others detail out great aspects about phone skills for Steve Finlay.

The telephone dates to 1876, back when Ulysess S. Grant was president. So why is it so hard for so many people to master the art of the phone call?

On a personal level, that lacking can irk or hurt the person on the other end. But on a professional level, it can damage business, repel customers and gouge into potential profits.

That is particularly true for car dealerships, where the telephone is a vital, but often misused tool.

“Handling phone calls has always been a challenge for dealerships,” says Ralph Ebersole, a dealership veteran and consultant for Cars.com., an online marketplace.

As a communications tool for cultivating customers, the phone ranks right up there with the Internet and customer-relationship management software.

Ironically, the telephone is crucial to dealership online sales efforts. That’s because the goal at most dealerships is to get customers off line and on the telephone at some point in the process.

Dealership misuse of the phone ranges from not answering it promptly, to putting callers on hold too long, to misdirecting calls, to lousy conversational skills.

Michael Tyman, a former dealership manager and now CEO of Professional Success, a training firm, regularly listens to outbound and inbound dealership phone calls.

His conclusion: “We’re not doing a good job of training people to listen.”

Customers convey how they want to be sold, but to grasp that “you need to listen,” he says. “If you are answering their questions and paying attention, it enhances the sales prospects.”

He says it is vital to route calls to the proper location, and quickly, “so the customer is not lingering on hold.”

The Internet is important, but so is the phone, says Joe Webb, a former dealership manager who runs DealerKnows Consulting.

The earlier a dealership can get a prospect off line and on the phone “the more we can lead them down the path towards buying a car,” he says.

Proper phone procedures and skills are vital, especially considering that most people prefer to use the telephone over emails, says Mitch Golub, head of Cars.com.

“We’re seeing phone calls as predominant,” he says. “It’s the preferred way to contact a dealership.”

On its website, Cars.com has toll-free telephone numbers, unique to each participating dealership, so Internet users can call about vehicles they are interested in.

The system signals a dealership staffer answering the call that a Cars.com customer is on the line. Accordingly, they are considered hot leads. Yet, some of those calls get misdirected or enter phone limbo.

Terry Hoisington of Henderson Chevrolet says dealership A-team members handle phone calls.
“Here you have a customer on the phone, someone who has picked out a vehicle and is as qualified a lead as you can get, and the phone is not being answered at the dealership or the call is going to voicemail or going to the service department,” Golub says.

In such cases, “you have qualified customers, but not a process to deal with them,” he says. “No matter how much you promote your website, so much of success comes down to the process in the dealership.”

Cars.com’s toll-free phone system allows dealers to access recordings of conversations.

The system also times the calls. “That’s important, because if the calls are under 30 seconds essentially they go unanswered,” Golub says. “If a dealer is getting 50 calls under 30 seconds, we can work with them to solve that problem.”

He recalls a vexed dealer approaching him at a National Automobile Dealers Assn. convention. The dealer beefed that Cars.com phone leads were ineffective.

“We looked at the call information and determined the calls were going to an inactive voice-mail box,” Golub recalls. “When the dealer saw that, he said, ‘I’ve got to go back to my dealership and talk to some people.’”

Chip Perry, CEO of AutoTrader.com, says a recent customer survey indicates 80% of people who visit a dealership show up without contacting the dealership beforehand.

“Of those that do establish prior contact, 80% do so by phone, yet we’re so focused on Internet leads and clicks,” he says.

On the other hand, the vast majority of car shoppers – more than 90% by some estimates – shop and research for cars online before heading to the dealership. “They are influenced by the information they found on line,” Perry says.

He says dealers report on average that it takes 13.5 email leads to generate one car sale, compared with 8.5 phone leads and 6.5 customer walk-ins.

Considering that data, he wonders why some dealerships and industry experts place such an emphasis on emails. “There is this sense that the Internet changes everything, but does it?” he says. “Dealers say, ‘What can we do to get more emails?’ I say, ‘Why do that?’”

When customers get close to buying, “most of them pick up the phone and call the dealership,” says Shawn Veronese, Internet sales director at Crevier GMW in Orange County, CA.

Most customer phone inquiries center on vehicle selection, loan interest rate and “whether they can get approved,” she says at a recent National Remarketing Conference.

Terry Hoisington, general manager of Henderson Chevrolet in Henderson, NV, says his dealership has established a hot-line number for customer phone calls. “When it rings, our people know it’s an important call.”

The dealership realizes the “extreme importance” of phone calls, he says. “We have our ‘A’ players handling that piece of the business.”

“The biggest problem can be answering the phone,” says Tony Giorgione, digital director at United Family Dealerships in Las Vegas. But some calls that get answered don’t go well.

Unfortunately, he says, “calls normally come in at the busy time of day when our best sales people are out in the showroom with customers.”

Forty percent of the time a properly handled phone call will result in a customer appointment at the store, Giorgione says. “We don’t want to pre-qualify them too much over the phone. But we to want to collect (contact) information during the call so we can follow up with them.”

Paul Johnson, president and CEO of Kelley Blue Book, a vehicle-value guide, has winced while listening in on some customer-dealership phone conversations.

He recalls one in which the caller was transferred five times before getting “a salesperson who didn’t speak English well, didn’t acknowledge the dealership had a particular vehicle on the lot and then said they didn’t have the vehicle.”

That’s not all. “The salesperson was rude in the process,” Johnson says. “Think about the damage done. All the brand-building by that dealership goes down the tubes.”

Of course, today’s phones aren’t just phones. They are multi-functional devices for different forms of communication and information gathering. Girorgione says he sees shoppers at his dealership “using their smart phones to price out vehicles.”

Dealer David Pilcher of National Car Sales in Indianapolis, IN, says his store receives more phone calls than emails from customers seeking vehicle information.

Many dealers struggle in dealing with the problem of improperly handled phone calls, he says. “It’s a dealer issue, frankly.”

And it’s a serious one, according to studies, such as one cited by Anna Zornosa, general manager of the Cobalt Group’s Dealix.com, a sales-lead provider.

“Of 3,000 phone calls to dealerships, 24% went to voicemails that were not fully working or not working at all,” she says. “It can be really bad.”

It also can be costly in terms of lost revenue, notes Jonathan Ord, CEO and chairman of DealerSocket, a dealership CRM provider.

He cites a study in which 30% of calls to dealership service departments either go unanswered or go to the wrong person. “That’s hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in lost business,” he says.

His firm offers a call-center service that fields those phone calls for the dealership and sets up appointments.

AutoNation Inc., the country’s largest dealership chain, has established a process on how to handle a phone call. Some of it is common sense, a human quality that is sometimes uncommon.

Answer quickly.
Be nice and knowledgeable.
Answer questions willingly.
Get contact information.
Cue the next action, usually setting up a dealership appointment.



Automotive Trainer Creates New Way for Dealerships to Achieve Online Sales Success

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

PR Log (Press Release) – Jan 21, 2010 – Automotive dealers are fighting their way out of the industry’s most economically challenging periods.  With the economy on a slow upturn, dealerships are finding more stability in the market and dedicating themselves to the newest advances in online marketing. 

However, much like the uphill battles facing a myriad of industries, dealers are struggling to compete with those that had instituted internet initiatives in their stores before the nation’s automotive sales plummeted.  Auto industry expert, Joe Webb, President and Founder of DealerKnows Consulting, has created an innovative program to virtually manage the entire Internet sales department’s efforts and implement best practices with the use of web-based softwares, phone tracking solutions, and video chat.  The Virtual Internet Director program ensures that all online advertising campaigns are measured, monitored, and monetized to their fullest.   

“Dealers are getting away from paying the high costs of on-site training.  An automotive consultant will spend a couple of days in the store and drown them in ideas and concepts.  Truth is, it doesn’t always stick.  The teachings of some trainers fades over time.  Dealer employees need long-term guidance, specifically with the Internet departments and business development centers.” 

Joe Webb found success in the automotive industry by personally creating and managing some of the most recognized Internet departments in the car industry.  Webb parlayed his successes on the retail side into a prominent digital marketing consulting firm based out of Chicago, Illinois. 

“I’ve traveled the nation and trained on-site in showrooms.  What I’ve found is that most dealers and their employees need an advocate in their stores daily.  I saw a need to develop a specific training and management program where I can be in these stores virtually…daily.” 

The Virtual Internet Director program as it is being hailed offers car dealers the chance to have a recognized Internet sales expert and consulting leading the team and managing from afar while monitoring up-to-the-minute, real-time online and showroom activities through these CRM (customer relationship management) solutions. 

For a fraction of the cost of in-store consulting, Joe Webb guarantees to put dealerships on the path to online success by reviewing internet correspondence between dealer employees and prospects, measuring the necessary metrics for online profitability, policing the ratios to make sure no e-lead goes unanswered and all vehicles are properly are advertised, mystery shopping the dealer client and their competitors, listening to recorded calls, holding daily calls and video trainings to the Internet department staff, and training on the best-in-class processes of online inventory management. 

“Dealers’ eyes are opening and realizing that it is a breath of fresh air to know that an Internet Trainer is ensuring the success of the departments without the strain of trial and error.  In this economy, dealers don’t have the luxury to spend too much time learning the best processes.  They need help, but don’t often have the budget for it in store.  DealerKnows’ Virtual Internet Director program solves this need.  Basically, a dealer no longer has to worry about their business development centers…it is my job to keep everything growing for them.” 

Webb’s first order of business was teaming with Vin Solutions, an industry leader in offering full-service customer management and website solution software to dealers.  Webb recently became one of the few Certified Vin Solutions Trainers in the nation and believes the Vin Solutions software is one of the few natural fits for his Virtual Internet Director program.



Auto Industry Consultant, Joe Webb, Scheduled to Speak at Digital Dealer Conference

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Automotive Internet Sales Trainer, Joe Webb, consults car dealers nationwide on the best practices of eCommerce and digital marketing tactics within their departments.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PRLog (Press Release) – Oct 19, 2009 – Joe Webb, President of Dealer Knows Consulting, will be speaking at the upcoming Digital Dealer Conference.

The title of the seminar, “Selection, Hiring, Orientation and Training for the Internet Department” teaches automotive professionals the best-in-class practices of recruiting for success in today’s difficult economic climate.

“The secret to success in the auto dealership world is by surrounding the staff with talent. Recruiting is step one.” Webb says. In this session, dealers will learn the best places to recruit talent for the Internet department of car dealerships. Joe Webb of DealerKnows will also be showing how to conduct professional interviews with leading interview tactics.

Webb states “Orientation of sales professionals, especially those in Business Development Centers and Customer Contact Centers in dealerships, continues to be a growing problem.” Industry Expert, Writer, Trainer, and Blogger, Joe Webb, will provide step-by-step instructions on how to properly orientate new hires and train them to find success in the future.

The 7th Digital Dealer Conference will be held in Nashville, Tennessee from Nov. 1st – 3rd. The conference continues to be one of the auto industry’s top destinations for digital marketing professionals to expand their knowledge base. Webb, consistently rated as one of the top speakers at past conferences, will bring his unique blend of past experiences, knowledge, and comic background to deliver his session.
# # #
Joe Webb is the President of DealerKnows LLC, an automotive digital marketing consultation firm. They specialize in assisting dealers with their online advertising, lead management, ecommerce marketing, and internet initiatives. Called “the funniest guy in the car business” where he combines his background in comedy with his presentations and seminars nationwide, Joe also recently founded Dealer Signage Inc where he is the acting Chief Operating Officer. Dealer Signage is a progressive, digital advertising network and signage company that allows dealers to manage the media on their own televisions and deliver targeted digital messages to their loyal customers within their own dealership. In the past, Mr. Webb found success in the trenches of dealerships where he created and managed award-winning Internet Departments and Business Development Centers. Joe Webb’s primary goal, as he always states, is “to better the culture of car sales”.



Will Your Internet Department Sink or Swim?

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

An Internet Sales Professional should be a life raft.You can stop an internet customer from drowning in a pool of builds, specs, and prices.You can save them from visiting one salesperson-flooded dealership after another.

 

Now ask yourself…are you a life raft or are you an anchor?

 

A life raft will answer a question quickly and, more importantly, competently.

An anchor will attempt to drag the customer into the store by giving them either as little information as possible or by flooding them with prices.A life raft offers quality answers after the initial email and gives customers realistic expectations and fair offers.An anchor promises the imminent arrival of a vehicle they have little chance of obtaining.

 

One thing that an Internet Sales Professional (ISP) can be sure of is the internet-savvy consumer knows a price waits for them right around the corner; one website away.More and more, customers demand to have all their questions answered… and sooner rather than later.Vague answers are no longer adequate bait to lure today’s consumer.
 

 

Save them from vague answers, repeated urges to visit, and automated follow-up responses.If you want to be competitive, you have to answer their questions on the first email.Please notice… “email”.Don’t be the person that calls them immediately, even if it is under the veil of “Did you receive the information I sent you?”They are sitting at their computer with their inbox open!They know you did not send anything!You can always call later; but you can’t change a bad first impression.Send a personalized email first.

 

Internet Sales Professionals have the opportunity to separate themselves from the typical salespeople on the dealer floor.These are the very people the consumer fears and want to avoid speaking to in the first place.And let’s face it, we ISP’s are all just glorified sales reps with good word tracks, better organizational skills, and fast fingers.However, customers have higher expectations of us.Johnny Car-Buyer doesn’t want to believe he is talking to a Sales Rep that can type.Nor does he want to be conversing with a technician from a computer store.He wants to believe he is speaking to a knowledgeable friend that is looking out for his best interest.Johnny needs a life raft.

 

Any ISP worth their weight in leads will tell you that directing an internet customer to act is just as easy as a walk-in customer.We all have the same job duties.We all are fighting toward one goal.“Get the customer in.”How we go about this and how we view our job description, though, is what separates you from the next ISP a few miles away.How do you direct an internet customer, you ask?Your first email will rarely spur someone to hop into their car, drive to see you, and drive off with the exact vehicle quoted.Not anymore.A few years ago this was a little more common, but people want all of the information nowadays.They don’t do this solely by collecting prices.Internet customers ask follow up questions.It is how you respond to these questions that determines your worth as an Internet Professional.

Build trust by moving the internet customer one step at a time.Build the relationship, connect with the customer, and move them toward you.This is how you differentiate yourself from other ISP’s and endear the customer to you.Customers want to be guided on their car-buying process.Replying to customers’ questions will give you the opportunity to direct them to the dealership. If handled correctly, you can guide them straight to your lot.You don’t need to light a fire under them in the first email.You simply need to give them reasons over time to see you.It is a process.

 

Some dealers operate by inundating their internet leads with mass amounts of information, whether it was requested or not.This is called the “Info Anchor”.The anchor drowns the customer with builds, specs, and prices, hoping to look like they are being upfront with their information, but, in reality, just trying to save themselves time from following up.You don’t need to purchase ALL of the leads possible. You simply be more thorough with your leads so your closing ratio increases.

 

Like everyone else, I shop my competition.Their initial emails with amazingly low price quotes, attached list of all features and options (and even discounted warranty prices!) are absurd.Even though they are not being vague, they are supplying the customer with too much  information:The Info Anchor. However, try to ask them a follow up question and wait for a response.Continue to wait.Take a nap.Take a trip.Take a coma.You will keep waiting because they hardly ever answer follow ups.They give it their one shot and they’re done.That is when Life Raft (me – and not just because of my size) floats in and saves them.I keep them headed toward land by answering any remaining questions they have.I don’t make their vehicle purchase seem like a too-good-to-be true mirage, but a tangible and reachable goal. An overflow of information will simply numb them from realizing the difference between a fair deal and a nit-picky deal.You will just send them shopping.Doing this is creating your own worst enemy.

Here is my request to all ISP’s.This is what I am asking you to do.
1) Do not give the lowest possible price for a vehicle.Offer a competitive price that reflects the value their vehicle deserves.You are selling something of value.You are selling a motor vehicle that will be carrying their most important commodity – their family.

2) Don’t offer to beat everyone’s deal.You will only send them scavenging for quotes.In latter emails, simply tell them you will stay competitive with other offers.

3) Build value in what you do.Buying a vehicle can be a painful process.You are saving a customer from going through a potentially-frustrating and painstaking process of visiting an endless number of dealerships to get the same questions answered.

4) Tell them the truth.It is a lot easier to remember what you have said to them in the past.

If a customer feels that you have saved them time, energy, and a little money…you have already become their life raft.You have become a real Internet Sales Professional and you have earned the sale.