“The Decision”
“I’ll be taking my talents to South Beach”….oh, sorry, wrong decision [Clevelander joke]
The way many dealerships make the decision when to bring on more salespeople and how many or replace underperforming salespeople has always baffled me. I have seen countless “formulas, statistical data, seasonal hiring decisions, you name it. We have had managers tell us they need 4 salespeople, we ask them why 4?” That’s how many desk we have open” Really, hiring due to number of desks? New manager starts at store and brings his “team” with him. This one is very exact “Salesperson can properly “wait on” 2.25 clients per day x 6 day work week =13.5 clients a week X 4.2 weeks per month = 56.7 clients per month, so we are “logging” 425 clients a month which would mean we need 7.49 salespeople on our floor??? “It’s the first of the year, in with the new, out with the old” I know none of you make your decisions these ways, but you know what I’m saying.
Law of Diminishing Return
The reasoning behind The Law of Diminishing Returns from a Dealers point-of-view in terms of hiring employees can be simplified into three stages:
My question is, do we have any idea where that third stage is? We are in the car business, our outcome should be to have as many people as possible buy our products and services at the highest possible profit margins we can with 100% customer satisfaction. We can’t do that unless we have pushed the envelope with a quantity of quality, properly recruited, screened, interviewed and trained salespeople.
“I don’t want to flood my floor”
That’s admiral and I applaud your moral judgment in trying to make sure your salespeople all make a good living, but how many times have you invested in having a special sale or event, or your product is super hot and huge new incentives came out or you invested millions in your facility and you look around and several of your salespeople decided to come in late, stay home or move on to the next “Hot Store?”
The law of diminishing return is a bit different in our business. How many hours are your salespeople currently scheduled to be at the dealership? Wouldn’t an additional sift or shifts or teams allow them to work less hours, be more affective and in turn more productive and actually have lives outside of work as well? Couldn’t that also help the talented person at your store that has “Manageritis” and if you don’t move him or her up, make them a team captain, they are going to leave you?
How much real time do your salespeople have to actually truly prospect, develop their own client base, properly handle all the internet leads, take vehicles to people’s homes or business’s ,be involved in the community to create more business when they are at the dealership bell to bell?
Simple question did you or did you not sell more cars when you had more salespeople? Why are some dealers that are in the middle of nowhere selling 5 to 10 times the number of cars dealers in major metro areas selling? Marketing, proper use of the internet for sure, but remember in this point in time in our industry our property goes well beyond the amount of acreage you own, take advantage of that opportunity and dominate your competition .To do that, you need better recruited and trained people. Now of course at some point to many really is to many and moral goes down and productivity would suffer, but I’ll bet very few if any have ever come close to that point that are reading this.
Judy B. Margolis, writes:
“Employees who grow too comfortable and complacent lose their edge. The more they
know, or think they know about how their particular slice of the business world works, the
less likely they are to challenge their old tried-and-true methodologies and to innovate. The
same holds true for companies that fail to embrace change and, instead, have it foisted
upon them, often when it is too late.
Tags:
Thanks for your comments,Dave. It does blow our minds when we hear "That's the number we normally run with" or "We have 3 Desks to fill" etc when we attempt help a dealer find that "full potential" as you said. Time to move out of that comfort zone.The best process known to man will have little affect if you don't have a quantity of quality talent first.
Dave Anderson said:
Great insights Craig. Sadly, many dealers have stayed in their hiring box so long that it's turned into a casket--killing the opportunity to grow to their fullest potential.
Thanks Dave, appreciate your insight!
Dave Anderson said:
Great insights Craig. Sadly, many dealers have stayed in their hiring box so long that it's turned into a casket--killing the opportunity to grow to their fullest potential.
Check this video
Craig Lockerd said:
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