#RefreshFriday Your Lead Process… Happy With It? | Bill Vaughn

Jeff Kershner

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Your lead process… happy with it?

Maybe up for hearing ideas on how to improve it a little?

@BillKVMotorCo has some big thoughts on this subject. If your store, or a client (looking at you vendors), can use some tweaks on the lead handling process, this is the show for you!



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I left out a key point that I wanted to get across. From a sales perspective, it might be the most controversial thing I would have said.

I believe that dealers have to understand the psychological difference between an in store guest and an online guest to be able to sell them best. We've always known that the transactional is more of an emotional transaction and less about logic for a customer. That is still true to this day.

I argue that's it is the exact opposite with an online guest. The guests emotions are much less involved, because they are not put on the spot and not nearly in as high pressure of a situation as they are at the store. It helps that they know they can literally just ignore you at any moment. So I believe that transacting with an online guest becomes more about logic than emotion.

They are more willing to listen to logic and be shown evidence supporting various aspects of the deal than they are when they are in the store. This makes transparency online even more important than it is in the dealership. This is why transacting online and providing information like a firm price, a concrete trade evaluation, and proper payment options often becomes easier online than it is in person. The more information you can provide the online guest the more empowered they feel. This all makes them much more willing to transact with a dealer online.
 
After this call, I sent a lead to a mid-size dealer group. I messaged an hour after they closed to see if I got any kind of after-hours response. I did not receive a response until 12 p.m. today which is 3 hours after they opened. I had specifically asked for a text. They called me instead. They did not leave any kind of voicemail and they never did text me.
 
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Here's a great example of how. Shortly after my reply, me and one of my salespeople closed an internet lead on an $88,000 truck with a trade in a less than one hour exchange. The conversation flows from left to right (top) and then left to right (bottom) reading from the bottom of each image to the top. You will note:

Salesperson sends opt in within 2 minutes over an hour after close
Salesperson was a little slow to reply to the opt in (43 minutes), but not bad for after hours
Salesperson actually read the lead info
Salesperson asked two questions incorporating all of the lead info to structure the two questions
I communicate the plan with the salesperson
Salesperson executes the plan
Customer receives a trade value within 22 minutes
The customer accepted an offer less than their original request
Overcome objections with logic and reason
Highlight and add value to convenience
Convenience factor trumps any negotiation
Just the right amount of pushy necessary to keep the conversation going
Transparency about incentives
Closing question
Trust
100% text
 

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