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Social Media Marketing Goals & Strategy. 6 Ideas to consider.

kurbain

Rust & Dust
Jun 23, 2010
27
0
First Name
Katie
During a recent re-evaluation of the social media strategy of our car dealerships I had an a-ha moment. Maybe I already knew it, but it did not come to me in the same scope as it has at this moment.

Business is Business is Social

All businesses have a business goal in mind when using social media. They are putting time (money) into it, and need to get some form of business growth (money) out of it. Social Media Marketing firms encourage these goals - maybe due to pressures by business owners. We encourage goals for sales, lead generation, promotions, branding, buzz, product launches,...the list goes on. I get it. I really do. But isn’t this kind of backwards?
Maybe your goals should be things like:

  • Increase customer feedback
  • Reputation Management (to be fair, this is a common objective that I do agree with)
  • Increase customer awareness of your community involvement (w/out bragging)
  • Increase community involvement in your events & causes
  • Increase your knowledge of the behavior & demographics of your customers
  • Increase customer satisfaction through customer relations
Know Better. Do Better.

To grow (make more money) dealerships need to evolve the way they do business based on these invaluable bits of information. Companies used to pay loads of money for this by conducting focus groups, sending out surveys, and investing in third party market research. This expense encouraged businesses to take action as a result. But now, very few take action when they receive the same information -- just because it is affordable does not make it less valuable. This is a prime opportunity to do better!


How To Tackle These Goals


I am a firm believer in the fact that you get what you give. (You will hear me say it many more times if you are an avid reader of this blog) If you consistently use social media to sell your latest sale, you will attract the sale seeking customers (great! if that is what you really want). If you join the community and discuss important topics that affect the groups of people who you want as long term customers - then you will attract those customers (and more importantly, keep them). Especially if you show a propensity towards responding and making change based off your conversations.

Sincerity is Key


You cannot pretend to give something and expect to get the same results as you would if you ACTUALLY give that something. Put yourself out there, genuinely be you and attract the customers that will naturally like what you do. And please, do it with grace, good attitude, and willingness. If you do it half-heartedly or with spite and resistance - then your results will be half-hearted with spite and resistance.


So I say: Choose the results you want! Give what you expect to get! Be patient -- it will take people some time to trust that what you are giving is genuine and without a sales pitch. Especially if you previously have only given them sales pitches.
And, by the way, those goals we promote and talk about so often (leads, sales, profit) will come naturally if you focus your efforts on the immediate goals of gaining knowledge, using knowledge to make adjustments, and sharing knowledge.


What is your social media strategy? What are your short-term & long-term goals?


Photo Credit: Jos Dielis
 
Very few dealers get social right and the ones that do have "that person".

Stepping into a new position with a new dealer group I often ask this question myself.

Step one of your dealers social media strategy should be building transparency through reviews. And not just your positive reviews from sales. Grow some kahunas and ask every single customer that not only purchases a vehicle but also services their vehicle at your dealership to rate their experience online using google reviews and a 3rd part review service like dealerrater. You better have everyone onboard, especially the GM and the owner/principle. Have a game plan and and process for handling the good and bad reviews. Opening this up to your service department can yield some interesting results.

Grasp this first before jumping into the other forms of online social. This can be the steeping stone in helping your dealer better understand "social" all together.
 
Building upon Jeff's statement, I would share this... Many dealers are hesitant to setup a process where all sold customers and service customers with closed R/O's are automatically sent an email that encourages their feedback on DealerRater, Google Places, Merchant Circle, etc.. Why? They share "that will only result in getting negative feedback". My answer is - wow, what kind of service are you providing then?

We faced these same kind of objections from several of our rooftops, and guess what? When we put in an automated process, we saw a continuous flow of positive reviews coming in for both sales and service customers. Yes, there is occasionally a negative review, but this is a learning opportunity for us, as well as an opportunity to resolve the situation with the customer.

We have worked with social media for 2 years now, and have seen our greatest success with sharing our online reputation via social media, which only makes sense, as it is other people sharing their experiences online...
 
Kevin, you got it.

Once a dealer takes true ownership of their reputation and reviews, it starts to change the culture around the dealership. I've seen it. But it takes a higher up/leader to really steer the ship and make it part of the process at the dealership.

I decided to do the same - let's open the review flood gate and allow each and every service customer to review. It's a scary move but if you have a great service bay and a leader of the department, it's opportunity. The problem is, most service departments are a scare and the dealers know it, but it's many times not as bad as the dealer might think. They just fear not having that "control" of the review.

Let's admit, most reviews sites are a little misleading to some extent since dealers typically only ask their "happy" customers to review and not ALL customers to review.
 
Thanks for all the comments. I love to hear that you are encouraging customer feedback as part of your process. Even if you get some bad reviews - as we all know it can happen to the best dealership - this is a great opportunity to show your customers that you care when mistakes happen.

Has anyone seen the Dominoes Pizza commercial with the picture of the pizza cheese smashed to the inside of the box top? It get's your attention and lets you know that they are human, they make mistakes, and they care about fixing it when they do.

It takes a bit of work to change the minds of dealerships who hesitate - but when they do start to encourage this feedback it is invaluable. And thanking your customers for it is a really good idea.

My chiropractor did not tell me about it ahead of time, but I referred someone to them and a few weeks later I got a gift card to the local movie theater and a thank you card! It was a very nice touch.