Posts Tagged ‘internet sales’

Know Your Role

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

For dealers, your store often tells the story of your life. This is especially true for those second and third generation dealers. Every day, your dealership puts on a show for the consumer. The customers are your audience and you are the director. When you open the doors, you are pulling back the curtain for all to see. You’ve brought in the cast and paid their wages. You’ve done your job. Now, are you sure everyone knows what they are supposed to do? While we hire talent to run our dealerships, we don’t always guide them with written job descriptions. We must.

“Places, everyone, places” the director shouts. You have put everyone in position, but can you ensure your cast understands what needs to be done? Do they know what is expected of them? Many of your sales managers and service writers have been given the title and responsibility because they’ve succeeded on the sales floor or as a service tech. They’ve filled in during the absences of other managers and excelled. When promoted, though, few are given quality, written job descriptions detailing what their position entails because we feel they already know what is asked of them. Or perhaps a job description wasn’t provided solely because many don’t know what all to include.

A job description simply states the roles and responsibilities required of the position along with a reporting structure and details involving hours and expectations. It should address future questions, employee’s potential for growth/earnings, functions of the job, skills needed, and how actions will be conducted.

Here are the basics for every job description:

Job Title
Confirm the title of their position. Representative, Associate, Consultant, Specialist, Coordinator, Manager, and Director all mean different things to different people. Having the job title spelled out will deter them from asking for a special designating word on their business cards (i.e. the ever-popular “sales specialist” being chosen over “sales representative”.

Salary Range
This serves as a reference guide to comparable salaries within the industry. Make sure that the starting salary is noted as well as well as mid-range (and high) expectations for the position. If applicable, specify commissions, performance bonuses, percentage of profit, and any potential raises for long-term employment.

Purpose of the Position
Specify the objectives of the position. This section allows you to place a little weight on their shoulders and makes them understand how important of a role they play in the overall success of the dealership and the team.

Job Description/List of Duties
Beginning with the most important tasks first, list every duty required of them to perform their position. As the list continues, detail what their role is in the completion of each task. Are they simply delegating the work and ensuring it is done or is it their personal responsibility to complete it?

Hierarchy and Team
Define who they will be reporting to and what individuals be reporting directly to them. Many new employees come in with the expectation that, due to their title of manager, everyone without the title of manager reports to them. This can be a sensitive situation in those dealerships where the Internet department team reports solely to their Director and that Director reports to the General Manager only. It is best to clarify this “structure” of the departments up front so there is no confusion and specify who is on their “team”. A new employee understanding their supervisory role is imperative to their success and the streamlined processes you’ve created within your dealership.

Ideal Candidate / Skills Needed
The new employee must be told the skills they are going to need to be successful in the position. If there are certain solutions, software, or programs that are imperative they know going in, it is best to detail it here. If they are to have completed certain tasks during their past experiences, describe how the ideal candidate for the position will encompass those abilities.

Hours
We’re in the auto industry and it is well known that we often work insane hours. That being said, it is necessary to assign specific work hours expected for the position and include the dealership’s operating hours as well.

“And Other Duties Assigned”
The beauty of the car business is that no two days are the same. Every customer is different and each day there is a new circumstance to handle or concern to assuage. Including “And Other Duties Assigned” tells the employee they are responsible for those random chores that essentially help “take care of business”. Hopefully, we are all hiring those candidates that are looking to take on more responsibility and willing to fill up that rare free-time during the day with goal-oriented objectives on their own.

This statement of duties should be provided to every new employee on day one to overcome any unforeseen conflicts of the future. After all, it is usually the bad performance from an employee that causes the store to lose a sale or valuable customer, but, in the end, it will be you who shoulders the blame. Preparing a written, detailed job description for each and every position in the dealership (no matter how big or how small) provides total accountability because they now “know their role”.

With their roles clearly defined for them, you are setting them up on a path for success. As the director, you’ve given them their lines, their blocking, and all of the notes necessary for them to perform for the public day in and day out. The rest is up to them to put on a good show.



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.



Joe Webb “On Video” with Cars.com

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009


In this filmed Interview with Cars.com filmed in early 2008, I discuss just one of the many ways I employed video in my internet lead management process at my former dealership.



Switch With Me

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009



The Importance of Approachability Online

Monday, June 8th, 2009

The more people that peruse the online thoroughfare for vehicle information, the more dealerships have to go out of their way to be, not only found, but approachable. Dealers must dedicate themselves to being “Open For Business Online”.

A website and some nice organic listings will not be enough anymore. What is most important is that the customer finds access to information about your dealership easily. From the homepage of a dealership website, shoppers should be invited in and welcomed. Simple navigation toolbars must lead the customers down the path to information enlightenment. Moreover, dealerships should take into consideration what their customers are looking for on their site opposed to simply what they want to sell the customers. A homepage that looks like an advertisement in a paper is a put off to internet customers that are only on your site to accomplish an objective. Steering them away from information they seek with the use of pop-ups and big flashing pictures of an in-stock pre-owned special will only get people turning away from the site. A clean, inviting homepage is a priority.

How do you find out what your customers are looking for when surfing your site? Ask them while they are in your store. Majority of sold customers have taken a peek at your website. Before they enter the business office, politely ask them what attracted them to your website and what they were hoping to find on it. A brief survey can assist dealers in determining some basic “best practices” for website design.

How else can a dealership be approachable online? Make sure pictures/videos or your showroom, location, and most importantly, staff is prominently posted. At my former dealership, the positive responses we’d received from in-store customer that looked online were endless. So many of these customers mentioned our detailed Staff page that was filled with family photos and personal information, it put customers at ease with the sales crew they’d be working alongside. Considering we always amped up the individuals in our dealership, the immediate rapport building available through this was significant. You’d often hear a customer walk in and ask for someone they had never met or talked to by name simply because they shared a mutual hobby learned from this portion of the website.

When customers find they share common interests with their salesperson or dealership, just like inside the showroom, it leads to a more personal relationship. The very same goes for customers that choose dealers through word of mouth. If a dealer is spoken highly of by someone’s peer, they feel much more open to approach the dealership. Dealers can make themselves more approachable online through the use of customer testimonials (video or written) by having a page dedicated to it on their own website as well as contributing and monitoring these reputation management sites such as DealerRater, CarFolks, Yelp, or Judy’s Book.

Much like these sites above, there are a plethora of social media sites available to dealers that allow them to leave their own site and travel out into the world wide web, approaching customers on their own turf. Dealership competition is taking advanced steps to reaching potential customers (and previously sold clientele) in different networking arenas such as Facebook, Twitter, Myspace, Blog Forums, etc. Consumers feel fairly protected in these social networking platforms so it is rare for them to feel as if they are being “sold to” in this virtual world (above and beyond the never-ending pleas to join Mafia Wars or the like :) . To approach these customers in these landscapes allows you to become a part of their trusted online community and develop a relationship based on the use of the very sites.

As you can see, there are many avenues that customers drive down when looking for a dealership. A dealership can represent themselves as approachable by building virtual roads on these platforms. This allows the customer to find the information they desire at their own convenience, on their own terms, in the security of their own homes, and choose the dealer that has positioned themselves as the most “Open For Business”.



Dealer Knows “Blooze Brothers” opening video from Digital Dealer conference

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Ralph Ebersole from Cars.com and (myself) Joe Webb of DealerKnows recreating scenes from the Chicago classic Blues Brothers. This video was the opening to our presentation titled “What’s Old is New Again” at Digital Dealer Conference in Las Vegas. Filmed by Dave Hudson of D. Hudson Productions – especially grateful to him for acquiring the perfect vehicle for the shoot – a Dodge Monaco. Hit it.



Five Senses

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

 

There are several tricks of the trade to employ while test driving customers. Even with the simplest of instructions, without proper training, every salesperson can get it wrong from time to time. Who is the unfortunate victim of poor training? The customer. Especially in this instance. Another Joe Webb car guy creation.
Starring John Schrimpf and Anthony Pollina



Who is Selling Whom?

Friday, March 6th, 2009

We have a serious problem in the automotive industry. No, the Internet is not destroying the car business as the old-timers like to say. The problem is simple. Internet customers, in many cases, are more knowledgeable on the models than the people selling the vehicles.

Sure, you can point fingers and say salespeople should take a vested interest in the brand they are selling. You can train and train and train. The repetition of a hundred test drives may not be enough. You can give up and believe clichés such as, “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks” or “you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink.”

It comes down to the fact that many salespeople are relying on their selling skills above their product knowledge to appease their customers. With the large majority of customers having done significant research on builds, options, pricing, invoices, and trade-in values, salespeople are at a significant disadvantage. How does a dealership overcome this epidemic?

An Internet sales professional (ISP) is the answer
If ISPs do their job correctly, they should be as researched and prepared as any customer (Internet or otherwise) that visits the dealership. Quality ISPs should be able to match wits with any customer that steps in front of them.

This is not always the case. With so much information available online, just a click away, customers are walking in with all of the information necessary to make the best deal for them. Internet sales professionals must be more familiar with these sites than the customers utilizing them. Ownership and management of every dealership should strongly encourage their ISPs and salespeople to take time out of their day to sit down and research all of their models through the Internet. My mentor, and marketing manager, John Photopulos, made it a point when I became Internet sales manager to send me to every best practices training, phone skills class, and product knowledge course available. I visited web site after web site to learn all they had to offer. By training yourself with all resources available, including the Internet, you know where the customer is coming from, you understand their expectations, and, best of all, you have the knowledge to dispute any of their errant beliefs.

How often do you run into a customer who believes he has a firm understanding of the vehicle’s base price and invoice, only to find he is not in the same ballpark? This is a common occurrence and one that is easily overcome providing the ISP has dedicated his time to understanding these sites. How many customers believe they can purchase a unicorn (a mythical vehicle that has never been seen, except as a part of someone’s imagination built on a wishful web site)? Hopefully, the ISP can utilize these sites to correct the customer for the benefit of the dealership. With a little practice, you will quickly learn how to navigate through the sites. This will give you the wherewithal to inform your customers without turning them into shoppers by overeducating them.

If any web site and its content are explained to a customer the right way, dealer profit will remain and customer service ratings will increase. No longer will the buyer feel their questions are being talked “around,” but instead, talked “through.” Knowing the intricacies of the web sites that your customers are requesting their information through will only put you one step closer to a closed deal with a happy customer and a reasonable margin of profit.

An example: When a client is in your store and wants Edmunds Excellent Value for his trade, take time with him. After a silent walk-around of the trade, build it out on Edmunds. Make sure the customer rates its condition with you. Read the detailed explanations of each value category. Once this is done, go one step further. Build out his new vehicle with him. Make sure to click on the tabs that mention the regional advertising fees being legitimate (though he never expected to have to pay that before). Click on the explanation of dealer holdback and view the TMV (true market value). I don’t know about your dealership, but most busy suburban Chicago dealerships would be content offering a good trade-in value provided the customer pays TMV. In a market like ours, flooded with over-aggressive dealerships, most would be happy to accept this deal. It is a daunting task for a customer to give a reasonable explanation to you, a professional, why the value of his trade is correct on a web site, yet the price that others are paying for a new vehicle is not a legitimate number.

If you are working Internet leads, or any customer for that matter, and you did not know the basic information above, this entire article is dedicated to you. I believe Internet sales professionals must take it upon themselves to learn and understand the sites their customers are surfing. Furthermore, I believe the ISP should train his sales staff how to use these sites to their benefit. My Internet sales coordinator (and right-hand man) Jason, only months into the business turned to me and said, “I can’t believe more salespeople don’t use the Internet to their advantage. Instead, they consider it more like a roadblock.”

As an ISP, you should change the perception of Internet sales, thereby changing the culture of your dealership for the better. In my last article, I mentioned how Internet sales professionals should differentiate themselves from normal salespeople on the floor. It is imperative for an ISP, above others, to function at a high level. We are all a team, though, and it is a good feeling when the sales staff around you is successful too. Share some of your knowledge, experience, and time with them. Do not let them walk into a situation where they are overmatched. Teach them the new selling tactics for today’s car shopper and make a progressive difference at your dealership. And, most importantly, know how to overcome customers’ objections using the very same source where they gathered the information.

In the simplest of terms, the Internet offers knowledge to the public. In our industry, knowledge is power. If a customer knows more than the salesperson, he has the ability to sell you on his beliefs, opposed to the correct way, where you are in control and you do the selling.

Just remember who is selling whom. There is only one answer.



On a Test Drive – “For the wife”

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Several years ago, a woman would be overlooked during the car buying experience. With the majority of buying decisions being made by women, I wonder if that is still the case.
Either way, I feel this video is a true example of how women perceive car salespeople.
Sooner or later, we will all get it right.
-Another Joe Webb car guy creation
Starring Joe Webb and John & Amanda Schrimpf



The Negotiation

Monday, December 8th, 2008

This is what happens when an internet-researched client meets the stereotypical car salesperson. When someone appears overmatched and under-trained, it only looks bad on the dealership. Sales Professionals must dedicate themselves to understanding how to overcome online objections. This is a DealerKnows specialty.