The Answer To Your Car Count
Question
By
Eric M. Twiggs
“Success doesn't necessarily come
from breakthrough innovation but from flawless execution” Naveen Jain
“What can I do to get more cars?” asked “Mark”, an ATI
member who was experiencing the winter blues.
He was averaging thirty-nine hundred dollars in weekly
mechanical sales and thirteen cars.
It was hard to understand why car count was an issue because
Mark has one hundred fifty Google reviews with a 4.8-star average! He
has a great looking website and appears on the first page whenever you search
the high traffic key words on Google.
Mark also has a series of commercials that play on the local
cable stations that his customers always mention seeing.
Since Mark records
all of his incoming phone calls, I asked him to send me some recordings, to
see what I could learn.
He sent over three recordings of his service advisor named
“Tom”. On each call, Tom failed to invite the customer to the location,
and had a tone of voice that would cure your insomnia. At night,
you could play these recordings and immediately fall asleep!
We decided to switch things up by giving his other service
advisor named “Dave” responsibility over the phones, since he had an energetic
personality and tone of voice. Tom was only allowed to answer the phones
when Dave was unavailable, and to get the customer’s name and phone number for
Dave do the call back.
This minor change had a major impact. The following
weeks, the shops sales improved to a ninety-five-hundred-dollar weekly average
on twenty cars! According to Mark, the only thing he’s doing
differently is having Dave answer the phones.
This proves that executing the phone process is the
answer to your car count question. I know what you’re
thinking: “Cute story Coach, but what do Tom’s phone failures have to do with
me?”
Well, based on the data that has been gathered from ATI instructor Randy Somers, there’s a 96% chance that you have a phone
execution issue. He’s phone
shopped over fourteen hundred locations and only sixty-four (4%) invited the
customer to the shop.
96% of these shops failed execute the phone process.
So how can you leverage the phones to answer the car count question? Stay
with me and I will explain.
Hear Them Smile
One of my fellow coaches named Ray, used to work for the
Midas Corporation twenty years ago. He told me that each location had
mirrors connected to the counter that were labeled with the following words: “How
Am I Doing?”
My initial thought was that the Midas service writers had a
serious vanity issue and needed to check their ego at the door!
But Ray assured me that the mirrors had everything to do with the
Midas customer service culture.
Their writers were trained to smile whenever they were on
the phone. The mirror served as their monitor to make sure they were
executing their phone process with a smile. Smiling on the phone was so
ingrained into the Midas culture that failing to do so was a terminable
offense!
Studies
show that your voice conveys 84% of the message over the phone, with only 16% coming
from the actual words you use. When you commit to
executing the script with a smile, you send a positive message to your customer
that can cause them to choose you over the frowning competitor.
Tom’s tone would make
you snore, but a smile can get the customers to your door. When you
listen to your writer’s phone calls, do you hear them smile?
Ask For The Appointment
If your advertising budget has increased, but your car count
has decreased, the natural tendency is to blame your advertising. The
purpose of your advertising is to get the phone to ring. Therefore, the purpose of the phone call is to invite the customer to
the shop.
According to research done by author and sales guru Kenneth
Polino, a customer with an appointment is three times more likely to come in
and make a purchase, than one who doesn’t. As we saw with Mark’s
shop and Randy’s study, the most common problem is the failure to
ask.
I’ve discovered that the desire
to diagnose is a leading cause of the failure to ask. Imagine having
a tooth ache and calling your dentist to find out why. He probably
wouldn’t say: “Sounds like you need a root
canal which is $900!”
As much as he wants
to help you over the phone, his priority would be to make you an appointment
so he can see the problem and then make an accurate diagnosis.
Here’s the big takeaway that will
help you overcome the desire to diagnose: The best way to help
your phone customer, is to set her up with an appointment to visit you.
Asking for the appointment will put you in the
top 4% of shops in America.
Conclusion
So, there you have it. If they can hear you smile and
you ask for the appointment, you will have answered the car count
question. What minor changes do you need to make to your phone process,
to have a major impact in 2017?
Eric M.
Twiggs
The Accountability Coach
PS: We have a new
and improved phone script to help you answer the car count question. Email etwiggs@autotraining.net
and I will send it to you.
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