Getting job as car salesman
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Manny, well put; pretty much true and definitely sad. No question why it is difficult to attract ambitious people to our business and even more difficult to keep them. Automotive sales people are for the most part bright, personable, hard-working, and honest. What they are taught to say and do by the "industry experts" is archaic, ineffective, and offensive. Sales people are abused by consumers and their management alike. They make little money due the sales process, not their work effort. They turnover not because they don't want to succeed, but because they are prevented from using their talents in order to succeed.
Manny, I'm guessing that you're a success in spite of the training you've received and maybe in spite of the management you've worked for. That seems to be the case with most of the successful automotive people I meet, sales person or manager. Rare is it that I find someone who has been trained to use modern sales strategies and is consistently “coached up” by their direct supervisors.
The culture of most new car stores is one which suffers from what I call a two-way vertical of MISTRUST. Consumers don't trust sales people, sales people don't trust management. Management doesn't trust ownership and owners don't trust the factory! And the "reverse" is true; the factory doesn't trust dealers, dealers don't trust their managers, managers don't trust sales people and sales people are taught NOT to trust customers ("buyers are liars"). It's a bit nuts. Lack of trust is expensive and slows the process down. But, that's the way it has always been done.
Thank You !!!
Have a great weekend!!!
Steve Richards said:Manny, well put; pretty much true and definitely sad. No question why it is difficult to attract ambitious people to our business and even more difficult to keep them. Automotive sales people are for the most part bright, personable, hard-working, and honest. What they are taught to say and do by the "industry experts" is archaic, ineffective, and offensive. Sales people are abused by consumers and their management alike. They make little money due the sales process, not their work effort. They turnover not because they don't want to succeed, but because they are prevented from using their talents in order to succeed.
Manny, I'm guessing that you're a success in spite of the training you've received and maybe in spite of the management you've worked for. That seems to be the case with most of the successful automotive people I meet, sales person or manager. Rare is it that I find someone who has been trained to use modern sales strategies and is consistently “coached up” by their direct supervisors.
The culture of most new car stores is one which suffers from what I call a two-way vertical of MISTRUST. Consumers don't trust sales people, sales people don't trust management. Management doesn't trust ownership and owners don't trust the factory! And the "reverse" is true; the factory doesn't trust dealers, dealers don't trust their managers, managers don't trust sales people and sales people are taught NOT to trust customers ("buyers are liars"). It's a bit nuts. Lack of trust is expensive and slows the process down. But, that's the way it has always been done.
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