Car Buyer Incentivizing

Get Creative with Your Dealership’s Incentives

I’m sure it’s no surprise that high gas prices are causing most Americans to cut back in other areas of their life, especially in those things considered as luxury items.  Edmunds.com recently conducted a survey showing that 95% of Americans are changing their lifestyle due to the recent increase in gas prices.

Ever wonder exactly what types of things people are cutting back on?  A new study by WebRidesTV.com answers this question.  According to their survey, the top three categories in which people expect to cut back are:

  • Travel (42.35%)
  • Dining Out (40.98%)
  • Consumer Electronics (26.57%)

Incorporate this information into your incentive campaign; use it as a way to reward customers and entice leads.  Use incentives that help satisfy your potential customers desire to fill the categories where they’ve admitted spending is down.

Get creative.  Go beyond the typical $50 gift card for local restaurant favorites.  While this is a great starting point, increase your offer for a raffle or for those that buy new vehicles.  Set up a “Night on the Town,” complete with dinner, movie, and the use of a limousine (or use a luxury vehicle from your dealership for added branding).  While the actual cost behind this is fairly low, the perceived value to your potential customers will be exponentially greater.

A lot of dealerships are offering gas cards as incentives.  How can you raise the perceived value besides simply increasing the denominational value?  Throw in a night’s stay at a hotel a few towns over, or maybe tickets to a sporting event, and you’ve just given your customers an instant vacation.  Again, the extra cost to your dealership is minuscule compared to the added perceived value you’re giving to your consumers.

For electronics, the iPod is a common giveaway item.  Why not offer to pre-load it with bands of your customer’s choice, or a collection of local bands?  Giving away a GPS?  Load their home and work addresses in it before they pick up the car.  These won’t cost your dealership much, or anything at all, but will set you miles above your competition.

Because many people are holding back on car purchases, give them an opportunity to fulfill another area that they’ve cut back on.  Your dealership spends minimal money compared to the perceived value to your customer, and everyone’s a winner.

Automotive Sales Targeting

Get to Know Your Customer

The 2008 Pied Piper Prospect Satisfaction Index® U.S. Auto Industry Study set out to study how customers were treated while shopping for new vehicles.  They used mystery shoppers to visit auto dealerships nationwide who reported back about the customer service they received.  Among many other, interesting facts, the study found that auto sales people were more likely to:

  • Mention the availability of different financing options.
  • Handle any required wait professionally.
  • Make special orders simple and easy.

Sales people were less likely, however, to ask info-gathering questions like:

  • Why the shopper was considering the particular brand.
  • What the customer’s price range was.
  • How the vehicle would be used and by whom.

Judging by the types of questions these sales people asked, it appears as though their main goal is to make the car shopping process quicker and easier for potential buyers.  While this will help improve the experience of your shoppers, it’s important that it go beyond this.  Customer service shouldn’t stop at the efficiency and ease of the transaction.

It is extremely important that your sales people are actually finding out what their customers want and need their cars for.  Many shoppers will come into the showroom, full of facts and figures that they found on the Internet, but it’s still the job of a sales person to discuss the car choice and make sure it’s the right fit.

It can be tempting to get the sale and get out, quickly moving on to the next.  However, your long term sales, referrals, and overall customer satisfaction will be much higher if you take the time to ensure your customers are getting a vehicle that is right for them, their lifestyle, and their budget.

If this isn’t incentive enough, think about the possibilities of an up-sell.  Asking what the budget is, the down payment amount, or their ideal monthly payment all open the door to finding a “better” vehicle to fit their needs.  When you find out more about the buyer and their lifestyle, you have more room to negotiate and open their eyes to the vehicles they could end up wanting and buying.

As a sales person, it’s imperative that you know your product; but it’s also extremely advantageous to know your customers.

Automotive Market Segmenting

Dealership Market Segmentation 101

One of our most visited blog posts talks about using market segmentation and customer profiles to attract used car buyers.  The study was pretty general, and split pre-owned car buyers into only four categories.  Since there seems to be an interest in the concept of market segmentation, I wanted to give a brief, simplified overview of how to conduct one for your own dealership.

Let me define what I mean by market segmentation.  It involves taking your customer base, both past and future, and separating it into smaller segments of people grouped by shared characteristics.  This allows you to market to, appeal to, and focus on the specific groups that are most likely to buy, increasing your marketing ROI.

Even Ford is tightening up their segmentation.  Rumor has it that when the 2009 F-150 is released, the marketing focus will be on promoting it as a work truck, not trying to appeal to everyday drivers who will most likely be turned off by it’s low MPG rating.

The first step in creating a market segmentation is to decide what you will “segment” by.  Start with a huge bucket list of criteria and characteristics you can use to separate and group your customers.  Throw in everything you can think of; you’ll narrow it down later.  The two types of characteristics most likely to be helpful to your dealership are demographic (age, gender, location, etc.) and psychographic (lifestyle, family stage, personality, etc.).

From the long list you’ve created, decide which factors are most important and relevant.  For example, if you live in an area where the population is generally homogenic (made up of similar people), then dividing people by zip code wouldn’t make much sense.  Take these chosen factors, and start separating your customers into groups, creating customer profiles.  This may take some playing around with to determine which factors will most appropriately group your customers.

You can do a market segment for your entire dealership, or drill down into Make or even Model to determine who your customers and future customers are.

Often the most difficult part of segmenting your market is getting information about your customers.

  • Use Your CRM: Do some data mining, especially if your dealership has been good about collecting and recording customer information there.
  • Research Online: The US Census website has a wealth of demographic information.  While this may not be specific to who is buying or will buy from your dealership, it will help you get an idea of who is buying on a more general level.  For more local info, try doing an online search for “demographic data” and your location.
  • Ask: Send surveys, take notes while selling, call your customers, or even shoot them a quick email.  This is often the most effective and accurate way to interpret who is and who will be buying.

When the market is slow, it pays to know who you’ve sold to and who you could be selling to.  Exploring market segmentation can help you drill down your marketing and sales techniques, focusing where you need to, and ultimately, increasing your sales.

Driving Automotive Conversion

Use Your Online Efforts to Help Convert

In Internet sales, the conversion from anonymous web visitor to known sales lead is the necessary first step when making a sale.  Your web visitors decide when they want to offer up their contact info and start communicating with your dealership, so in order to convert your web traffic into customers, they need to be able to interact with your site and make themselves known.  This needs to be the number one goal of your site, and everything should work towards that goal.

Using identifiable and trackable web tools like effective incentive campaigns, a virtual assistant and engaging multimedia will make it as easy as possible for them to submit their contact information.  Because these types of tools make it easier for web visitors to interact and connect with your dealership, DealerOn has found that when dealers use them, the number of visitors that convert into leads is increased, often doubled.
After you’ve been able to establish contact with your web visitors, it’s important to convert them from sales leads into sales.  Although you can’t force them into taking the next step on the road to sale if they aren’t ready, you can lead them through the sales process.
Just like web tools can help you convert visitors into leads, use lead nurturing to turn these leads into customers.  Sending surveys will allow you to find out where leads are in each sale, making sure your follow-up is appropriate for their buying status.  Use follow-up emails to keep in regular and timely contact with your sales leads.  This will allow you to further the communication that your website facilitated, moving you closer to making the sale and help to complete the conversion process.

Make sure that your lead nurturing efforts always include a strong call to action in each email, phone call, or voicemail to let your leads know the benefits of taking the next step, as well as how to do so when they’re ready.  It’s important to ensure your leads know how to convert into a sale when they want to.

Focusing your website around interacting and communicating with your website visitors will convert more of them into sales leads.  You can then use your lead nurturing to direct your leads through the sales process and convert them to customers.

How do you structure your website to help you convert these visitors to leads?  Lead us through what works for your dealership to get people through the conversion process and into your showroom.

Automotive Trust Building

Use Your Dealer Website to Earn the Trust of Prospects

Many people are hesitant to give up their contact information online, especially to auto dealerships.  They are concerned about things like identity theft and email SPAM.  Because of these fears, getting a visitor to raise their hand can be difficult.  Diminishing the fears that many have about providing their contact information to your car dealership will help increase conversion rates and earn you more sales.  Earning their trust before they become sales leads is a critical step in turning those visitors into leads and upping your conversion rate.

Below are some ways that you can use your website to help earn the trust and overcome the fears of your website visitors, thus increasing the chances that this web traffic will convert to leads.

  • Be Upfront: Many people see the auto industry as a pariah, always trying to get one over on anyone they can.  Convince them that your dealership is on their side, and wants to do business in a fair and ethical manner.  Try putting a video on your home page with your General or Internet Manager explaining the dealership’s sales philosophy, or add a short letter to your customers relaying the same message.  Getting over this hurdle can be what makes your dealership stand out from the rest.
  • Security: This is a huge issue these days.  People have to be very careful about who has access to their personal information because of the increasing threat of identity theft.  Make it clear that you won’t sell or rent their information and that your site is secure.  This security is especially important if you have online credit applications which should have a 128-bit SSL Secure Certificate.  Make sure this is clear to your visitors so they feel safe providing their private information.
  • SPAM: Nobody likes to get it, and it doesn’t do your dealership any good to send it.  Make sure that your leads are only getting the information they’ve requested.  Have it written on your website that when they submit their information, they won’t get any unsolicited emails.  One piece of unwanted email can be enough to erase the trust you’ve built with your sales leads.

Besides the potential annoyance to your customers, SPAM can also become a legal headache.  It’s extremely important that your dealership is CAN-SPAM compliant.  Make sure each email has an opt-out link included, and that you respect the right of your patrons if they decide to not receive emails from your dealership.

Take a look at your online presence.  Examine each part and ask yourself, “How does this aspect help to earn the trust of my potential leads?”

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