Tags:
vehicle and calling you when they are ready to get into the new one.
Hope that helps!
Heather
Mudd Advertising
Wow, my entire message was removed.
What I was saying was that from my perspective in helping advertise to service and sales, what dealers communicate to me is this:
1. Service has a higher profit margin
2. Working with you sale and turning it into service allows you to ensure the vehicle is well maintained and a higher quality trade in
3. Building trust in service allows you to continue with sales of new vehicles when they are ready to upgrade
I don't know if service is the "new" sales department, but I think it should be recognized as a key area for sales. When I am helping a dealer with a campaign, no matter how much traffic we assist in driving to their store, the person at the receiving end - has to be on their game. Great customer service, phone skills, transparent about scheduling and pricing, and a pleasure to work with. This takes training and talent.
Although service seems to be more oil and mechanics, it still needs to be treated with sales mentality. I think the dream customer is the one who wants to buy a vehicle from you and bring in it faithfully for maintenance.
Heather
Heather Wirtz said:vehicle and calling you when they are ready to get into the new one.
Hope that helps!
Heather
Mudd Advertising
Being the gm. of a store is a little like being a dad. You have five or six children (profit centers) and they all need guidance, direction and attention to thrive and survive. The right mind set regardless of the economic conditions is to constantly work on maximizing revenue in each PC.
Whether you’re in an eleven or seventeen million car market some things don’t change. In both markets the average truck buyer spends $1500:00 dollars on accessories within two months of purchase. You want and need that business. Service absorption is just as important in a good sales environment as in a poor one. Three hours per RO of customer pay labor is not just for eleven million vehicle markets it’s for everyday regardless.
Going to teams and rotating them through the weekend to provide service seven days a week works just as well in either market. Advertising that you work on all makes and models is a given regardless of market conditions. Aggressive use of factory warranty without going over the line and dotting all your I’s and crossing all your T’s is good business all the time.
Training throughout the store from admin to the wash bay should be ongoing, comprehensive and enabling to the employee’s. Cross training of employee’s should be thoughtfully implemented also. Up in the front of the house regardless of the kind of market you want to be able to trust that managers are not just willing but able and eager to get up and close a deal. All managers regardless of their department responsibilities have sales responsibilities as well. All of this requires training to bring into focus.
So to answer your question is service the new sales department? No not in the well run stores that have it hitting on all six cylinders all the time. If a dealer or gm. finds him or herself turning to service in a panic for rescue all it means is that they have not been doing the whole job. They have been ignoring some of their children and that always ends in disaster.
An Advisor handles how many transactions[clients] per day as compared to a "salesperson" on the showroom?They must be trained not only the so called finer points of selling but how to listen, what the client is really saying or not saying[ warranty work done here, gravy down the street] Advisors need to follow up,engage the client and maybe it's just me but I don't see many Fixed Ops people on Social Sites, why is that?
The time has come for this call never to take place again......."Parts,hold!" .....dealers hold music,rock music station for 5 minutes
You're amazing Nancy! I just posted a tip of the day and it's directly related to your post. We are on the same wave length by far. Service business is what has carried many dealers in tough times. To promote car sales through the service department is a winner!
Great topic...
Nancy,
You pose a fantastic question, I am extracing just a portion of it -
"Has the dynamics of the retail operation of the dealership shifted to Dealer Principals & GMs focusing more deserved attention to the Fixed Operations side of the business"
In adding some thoughts to that portion alone, in my travels I have found that in most dealerships,:
The ratio of Sales/Desk Managers to Salespeople is 1:5
The ratio of F&I Managers to Salespeople is also 1:5
There is a GSM over all of these Managers and Salespeople
There is at least one person in the Office dedicated exclusively to post all deals and calculate commissions for payroll
Many dealerships employ some kind of Delivery coordinator
Many have added an Internet Department (a Manager and a few coordinators) to handle the incoming leads and set appointments for the Sales Staff
In a store with 20 Salespeople, that adds up to approximately 12 Personnel dedicated exclusively to supporting vehicle sales from a Management perspective, or 3 Management Roles for every 5 Salespeople (Ratio 3:5)
A store of this size is likely to have approximately 7 Service Advisors, 25 Technicians, 2 Porters, a Cashier and a Warranty Clerk and one Service Manager/Director.
Thats a ratio of 1:36
This Manager/Director is not only responsible for "managing the sale" in Service, but also doing the payroll calculations for every service employee (no one in the office dedicated to this task like the showroom has), he/she is responsible for chasing warranty receivables (an office task for the showroom), chasing a bad check (also an office task for the showroom), test driving problem vehicles, speaking with every customer who has a "concern", including every Salesperson who has a "spot delivery" at 5pm on a Friday or customer that just took delivery and needs their touch-up paint kit mailed to them, and lastly, but certainly not least, is the person that everyone in the dealership comes to when something in the dealership needs "repair".
Toilet in accounting backed up? Call the Service Manager!
One of the lights on the lot is out? Call the Service Manager!
Someone lost their key to the building? Call the Service Manager, she/he will coordinate getting the locks changed and new keys for everyone.
The Dealers' wifes' demo has flat tire? Dont call roadside assistance, dont send the lot-boy, call the Service Manager!
30 Years ago most dealerships had a Shop Foreman, who relieved the Service Manager from some of the above responsibilities, but during the recession of the early 90s, that role was scrapped in favor of a working Team Leader - no more Managerial help. Service Advisors make their own appointments, close their own repair orders - no managerial support here either.
If the Service Manager/Director was to actually ask for some Managerial support in the form of a genuine Assistant Manager, history and the present has proven - thats not going to happen!
So with all of that information presented I will now pose to everyone AGAIN - "Has the dynamic of retail operations shifted?"
Showroom Ratio 3:5 | Service Ratio 1:36
Unfortunately - I think the answer is not even remotely!
Being the gm. of a store is a little like being a dad. You have five or six children (profit centers) and they all need guidance, direction and attention to thrive and survive. The right mind set regardless of the economic conditions is to constantly work on maximizing revenue in each PC.
Whether you’re in an eleven or seventeen million car market some things don’t change. In both markets the average truck buyer spends $1500:00 dollars on accessories within two months of purchase. You want and need that business. Service absorption is just as important in a good sales environment as in a poor one. Three hours per RO of customer pay labor is not just for eleven million vehicle markets it’s for everyday regardless.
Going to teams and rotating them through the weekend to provide service seven days a week works just as well in either market. Advertising that you work on all makes and models is a given regardless of market conditions. Aggressive use of factory warranty without going over the line and dotting all your I’s and crossing all your T’s is good business all the time.
Training throughout the store from admin to the wash bay should be ongoing, comprehensive and enabling to the employee’s. Cross training of employee’s should be thoughtfully implemented also. Up in the front of the house regardless of the kind of market you want to be able to trust that managers are not just willing but able and eager to get up and close a deal. All managers regardless of their department responsibilities have sales responsibilities as well. All of this requires training to bring into focus.
So to answer your question is service the new sales department? No not in the well run stores that have it hitting on all six cylinders all the time. If a dealer or gm. finds him or herself turning to service in a panic for rescue all it means is that they have not been doing the whole job. They have been ignoring some of their children and that always ends in disaster.
© 2024 Created by DealerELITE. Powered by