I'm with Kcar on this deal. Somebody has to show me the money. At small dealerships, I don't see where an Internet Director has the time. At the larger stores, pawn it off to the Consumer Relations Manager.
I sold 5 cars last week from our Dealership FB page as well as my personal FB page.
By I, I meant the dealerships. They were 5 referrals and I gave their information to my ISM's. they set the appointments that day and got them in. The Sales Teams did the rest. BUT, they were 5 referrals that I wouldn't have seen if not for FB.
By I, I meant the dealerships. They were 5 referrals and I gave their information to my ISM's. they set the appointments that day and got them in. The Sales Teams did the rest. BUT, they were 5 referrals that I wouldn't have seen if not for FB.
By I, I meant the dealerships. They were 5 referrals and I gave their information to my ISM's. they set the appointments that day and got them in. The Sales Teams did the rest. BUT, they were 5 referrals that I wouldn't have seen if not for FB.
I mean, were any of these buyers "sold" because of FB contact?
Dealership marketing professionals debate strategies for growing Facebook page engagement, with proponents sharing tactics like liking related brand pages, running contests, requesting customer reviews via post-purchase emails, and offering incentives for social engagement. While some contributors report success with these methods (one dealer grew from 0 to 621 likes through consistent effort), skeptics argue there's no proven ROI in Facebook engagement and suggest dealers focus resources elsewhere.