- Apr 22, 2009
- 423
- 84
- Awards
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- First Name
- Ryan
I started my professional sales career at the age of 23 working at a Ford dealership. I had zero responsibilities (lived at home, drove a hand me down car from my grandfather) and the idea of UNLIMITED earning potential sounded great. (This was 2003)
My my first few months I was on a "guarantee". I learned a little be later that draw and guarantee were not the same thing. Why would I have assumed you would be guaranteed a living while trying to learn the product, systems, and process?
After 6 months I was making a decent living for myself (compared to my 23 year old friends) and I can proudly say that I never had to dip into the dreaded "draw". Things were pretty good.
Fast forward to today. I'm managing a large sales team (vendor side) and offer a very competitive compensation plan that is roughly 60% base + 40% commission (can over deliver on commission).
I can't imagine being able to hire quality, educated, problem solving, and professional 25-30 year olds on a 100% commission plan.
Many of my clients (car dealers) complain that retention is still a major problem and the revolving door/bottom end of their sales team is horrible to work with. They cheat , steal, and lie.
"No one wants to sell cars anymore" - sales manager
Maybe it's because they have a mortgage payment and kids? Maybe they are not all 23 year olds that live with their parents?
A Majority of the big volume "Internet" dealers around Toronto are on a one price / no haggle model. Does 100% commission really make sense when you don't need slicksters to hammer customers into a deal?
What are some alternatives to 100% commission? I just can't see it being the way to attract high quality (no baggage) automotive professionals. Maybe this is why customers are still afraid to buy a car.
Chime in.
My my first few months I was on a "guarantee". I learned a little be later that draw and guarantee were not the same thing. Why would I have assumed you would be guaranteed a living while trying to learn the product, systems, and process?
After 6 months I was making a decent living for myself (compared to my 23 year old friends) and I can proudly say that I never had to dip into the dreaded "draw". Things were pretty good.
Fast forward to today. I'm managing a large sales team (vendor side) and offer a very competitive compensation plan that is roughly 60% base + 40% commission (can over deliver on commission).
I can't imagine being able to hire quality, educated, problem solving, and professional 25-30 year olds on a 100% commission plan.
Many of my clients (car dealers) complain that retention is still a major problem and the revolving door/bottom end of their sales team is horrible to work with. They cheat , steal, and lie.
"No one wants to sell cars anymore" - sales manager
Maybe it's because they have a mortgage payment and kids? Maybe they are not all 23 year olds that live with their parents?
A Majority of the big volume "Internet" dealers around Toronto are on a one price / no haggle model. Does 100% commission really make sense when you don't need slicksters to hammer customers into a deal?
What are some alternatives to 100% commission? I just can't see it being the way to attract high quality (no baggage) automotive professionals. Maybe this is why customers are still afraid to buy a car.
Chime in.