Surveys continually show that people dislike buying a vehicle. Although the numbers have gotten better over the years, people still dislike the car-buying experience. The key word here is “experience.” Everything you do is sales and selling. Every person in the dealership is in sales. Everything the customer sees is selling. What message is the customer receiving?
Selling today is not about feature-benefit selling alone. Any dealership that is being trained primarily on…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on December 17, 2012 at 4:00pm — 5 Comments
“The more things change, the more things stay the same.” This quote can be an accurate reflection of most industries. With all the massive changes underway in the automotive industry, the majority of the industry operates in much the same way as it did 50 years ago.
One small part of an industry begins to change and reaches what Malcolm Gladwell termed in his book the “tipping point.” That tipping point allows the change to gain momentum and become norm for an industry. This…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on December 13, 2012 at 10:00am — No Comments
Everyday managers walk into their dealerships in the morning and start their day with tasks or TO-Do list items. Unfortunately, those items rarely involve direct interaction with their sales team. The ultimate place for managers to be is in front of customers and salespeople.
Salespeople need interaction and input. If a manager allows a salesperson to direct their own day by their own design without input and coaching, the results will often be lackluster and will lead to…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on December 11, 2012 at 4:30pm — No Comments
The average dealership hires a salesperson and, after a brief introduction of paperwork, allows the salesperson to begin talking to and selling to their customers. Some dealerships may send the salesperson to a meeting room to watch a series of perfunctory training videos and then cut them loose on the showroom floor to sell. Either way, the day of unleashing an untrained salesperson on a well-trained customer is dead.
The days of counting on a steady stream of traffic and…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on December 7, 2012 at 11:00am — 3 Comments
Everyone talks about change, but few people embrace it. Change is growth, and growth is positive and unavoidable. If you don’t change, the world will change without you and leave you behind. In business today, change is occurring at a rapid pace and is causing the death of traditional salespeople as we know them.
In the age-old process of selling, the emphasis has been on a linear “road to the sale” process. Step One leads to Step Two and so on. The Internet information age…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on December 5, 2012 at 1:30pm — 7 Comments
Every year at the NADA Convention, the exhibit hall is full of CRM and BDC companies displaying their wares. Dealers spend massive amounts of money in a frenzy to buy the “magic button” CRM or BDC solution for many reasons. Unfortunately most of those reasons aren’t valid. Putting great tools in the hands of below-average people with below-average processes and little-to-no accountability equals a waste of money.
Let’s look at some of the underlying reasons why dealers buy…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on December 3, 2012 at 10:30am — No Comments
Do you feel like you are missing out on something? Are you confused as to what the next step is in making your dealership successful? It’s a different ballgame than it was even just a few years ago. The traditional dealership is dead and you must bury it to prosper in the future.
For years, the car business could be a forgiving business. There was room for a lot of error in a dealership, and yet a dealership could still be profitable. Those days are gone. Dealerships…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on November 29, 2012 at 1:00pm — 4 Comments
The traditional dealership is dead but some have not had their funeral yet. It seems as though as much as some things change in the auto industry, as many things stay the same. Every week our trainers observe things in dealerships that look and feel like the 1960’s.
Let’s take a look at some things still commonly observed in dealerships that are outdated and should be changed.
1) Manager Towers – High towers built for…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on November 27, 2012 at 2:00pm — 8 Comments
Mark Tewart's “High Performance Management Workshop”
When: Monday, September 19th and Tuesday, September 20th
Where: Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza (35 West Fifth St.) Cincinnati OH
Times: 8:30 - 4:30 Wednesday…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on August 16, 2011 at 10:30am — No Comments
Price cutting is a self-inflicted wound. Nobody holds a gun to your head and makes you cut your price. I know that many of you are thinking right now: "There is so much competition today that you can't maintain profits," "Everybody is giving everything away," "The salespeople can't negotiate," and "Everybody knows our pricing from the Internet..." Blah, Blah, Blah. Stop whining about price!
Only about ten percent of buyers buy on price alone. For that ten percent, you can…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on July 29, 2011 at 3:30pm — 8 Comments
Do you feel like you are missing out on something? Are you confused as to what the next step is in making your dealership successful? It’s a different ballgame than it was even just a few years ago. The traditional dealership is dead and you must bury it to prosper in the future.…
ContinueAdded by Mark Tewart on June 5, 2010 at 12:00pm — No Comments
You may find this post a bit odd knowing that it is being written by a sales trainer. I believe traditional selling is dead on arrival. The days of hiring and building a well trained sales staff that executes all facets of the sale, follow up, prospecting, marketing, telephone skills and building a database of repeat buyers has for the most part been dead for a while.
Some of you reading this may be shocked or even angry at such a statement and declare that it is certainly not the…
Added by Mark Tewart on May 16, 2010 at 8:30am — 1 Comment
The traditional dealership is dead but some have not had their funeral yet. It seems as though as much as some things change in the auto industry, as many things stay the same. Every week our trainers observe things in dealerships that look and feel like the 1960's.
Let's take a look at some things still commonly observed in dealerships that are outdated and should be changed.
1) Manager towers - High towers built for managers where salespeople go to get their proposal…
Added by Mark Tewart on May 11, 2010 at 9:00am — No Comments
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