10 Ways to Ensure Success

Even in tough times, there are opportunities for car dealers who intend not just to survive, but to thrive.

ven in tough times, there
are opportunities for c
dealers who intend not just
to survive, but to thrive.
While there is no simple
recipe, these 10 tips will
virtually ensure success.
1. Despite what’s happening around
you, stand up and make things happen.
It takes a real leader to do that in the face
of adversity.
2. Sometimes there are no quick fixes,
but even a month can make a difference.
The 30-day fix:  Use a legal pad and for
a month, write down every problem that
comes up and what was done to correct
it.  At the end of 30 days, look at the
first problem you recorded.  If it’s still a
problem, come up with a real permanent
solution, not just a “quick fix” to get it
off the list.  Keep working each problem
until it no longer exists – one bite at a
time.
3. Instill the “Red Carpet Treatment”
philosophy throughout the organization
and create clients who buy because of
their relationship with your dealership
and the star treatment they receive, not
because of price. Go the extra mile to
“wow” your VIPs. Whether or not you
sell luxury cars, treat your customers as
if you do.
4. Fully work every opportunity.
Focus on closing leads, not generating
them.  Ask the right questions and listen to the customer’s needs, wants and
desires.  Don’t turn buyers into shoppers by pushing them to “buy now!”
Customers have no other reason for being
in your dealership other than to buy at
some point.  When salespeople become
selection specialists and understand their
job is to help buyers select the right car,
“now” becomes irrelevant.  What matters
is that they buy from your dealership at
some point.
5. Educate and train constantly.
Provide education, hands-on training and
practice for sales people and managers
that shows them how to follow-up and
pursue sales until the vehicle is delivered.
Teach them to use a customer-focused
approach, not high-pressure sales tactics.
Demonstrate not only how the process
works, but your willingness to lead and
work with them.  Monitor, assess, pinpoint and correct selling problems.
6. Manage the entire sales operation.
Develop an effective, step-by-step game
plan so everyone knows what he or she
should be doing at any given time. Now
that you have the data, use it to track,
analyze monitor progress and performance through every step of the selling
process, every day.  Use the results to
identify new areas for education and
training.
7. Promote managers from within
your existing staff because their skills and
performance will continue to improve
with on-going training and education.
If traffic is off, performance should
increase, not decrease.
8. Count traffic:  Base performance
on an accurate traffic count to create a
level playing field and measure execution based on an improvement in closing
ratios, the number of cars sold vs. customers the salesperson worked.  Using
traffic counts to track performance gives
every salesperson the opportunity to
improve.
9. Meet with your team daily to
motivate them to achieve their best performance each day.  Emphasize teamwork
and how everyone’s performance contributes to success.  Structure incentives
so every team member has a fair shot,
and so that the person with an “assist”
is rewarded, too, not just the player who
“scores.”
10. Give every salesperson 10 things
to do each day. Here are items to put
on the list. Generate two customers a
day: call five previous customers asking
for referrals; send 10 follow-up letters
or cards: visit two local businesses and
secure two prospects from each; be helpful, even if there’s no immediate profit
in it; give every customer a tour of the
parts and service area even if they haven’t
bought a car; maintain a sense of humor
and positive attitudeEven in tough times, there are opportunities for car dealers who intend not just to survive, but to thrive.

While there is no simple recipe, these 10 tips will virtually ensure success.

  1. Despite what’s happening around you, stand up and make things happen.  It takes a real leader to do that in the face of adversity.
  2. Sometimes there are no quick fixes, but even a month can make a difference. The 30-day fix:  Use a legal pad and for a month, write down every problem that comes up and what was done to correct it.  At the end of 30 days, look at the first problem you recorded.  If it’s still a problem, come up with a real permanent solution, not just a “quick fix” to get it off the list.  Keep working each problem until it no longer exists – one bite at a time.
  3. Instill the “Red Carpet Treatment” philosophy throughout the organization and create clients who buy because of their relationship with your dealership and the star treatment they receive, not because of price. Go the extra mile to “wow” your VIPs. Whether or not you sell luxury cars, treat your customers as if you do.
  4. Fully work every opportunity.  Focus on closing leads, not generating them.  Ask the right questions and listen to the customer’s needs, wants and desires.  Don’t turn buyers into shoppers by pushing them to “buy now!” Customers have no other reason for being in your dealership other than to buy at some point.  When salespeople become selection specialists and understand their job is to help buyers select the right car, “now” becomes irrelevant.  What matters is that they buy from your dealership at some point.
  5. Educate and train constantly. Provide education, hands-on training and practice for sales people and managers that shows them how to follow-up and pursue sales until the vehicle is delivered.  Teach them to use a customer-focused approach, not high-pressure sales tactics.  Demonstrate not only how the process works, but your willingness to lead and work with them.  Monitor, assess, pinpoint and correct selling problems.
  6. Manage the entire sales operation. Develop an effective, step-by-step game plan so everyone knows what he or she should be doing at any given time. Now that you have the data, use it to track, analyze monitor progress and performance through every step of the selling process, every day.  Use the results to identify new areas for education and training.
  7. Promote managers from within your existing staff because their skills and performance will continue to improve with on-going training and education.  If traffic is off, performance should increase, not decrease.
  8. Count traffic:  Base performance on an accurate traffic count to create a level playing field and measure execution based on an improvement in closing ratios, the number of cars sold vs. customers the salesperson worked.  Using traffic counts to track performance gives every salesperson the opportunity to improve.
  9. Meet with your team daily to motivate them to achieve their best performance each day.  Emphasize teamwork and how everyone’s performance contributes to success.  Structure incentives so every team member has a fair shot, and so that the person with an “assist” is rewarded, too, not just the player who “scores.”
  10. Give every salesperson 10 things to do each day. Here are items to put on the list. Generate two customers a  day: call five previous customers asking for referrals; send 10 follow-up letters or cards: visit two local businesses and secure two prospects from each; be helpful, even if there’s no immediate profit in it; give every customer a tour of the parts and service area even if they haven’t bought a car; maintain a sense of humor and positive attitude.

By Richard Libin

Retrieved 16 January 2013 from http://www.eyesonsales.com/content/article/10_ways_to_ensure_success/?utm_source=EyesOnSales.com&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=title&utm_campaign=17981&utm_content=10+Ways+to+Ensure+Success




8 Business Lessons Your Mom Taught You Better than Business School

Sometimes the best business lessons are the ones we’ve know the longest.

Success at business is no easy chore.  It takes discipline, focus, and a set of core values that guide you around the emotions and stress of daily combat.

It’s all too easy to get sidetracked by the latest new strategy for business — like social media or digital marketing or sales automation. You find yourself chasing tactics. One after another. Hoping that you will be successful with one of them.

When one doesn’t work, you throw it away. Quickly adopting another new tactic. As you repeat that cycle, the idea of success becomes blurry.

What used to be very clear now seems frantically out of reach. It’s likely you need a return to core business strategies.

You need a new philosophy. The one your mom taught you many years ago.

Here are a few of those business lessons:

1. What goes around comes around.

In any area of your business, what you do has consequences. Sometimes those are good. Other times you are left with regrets. Actions have results.  That’s a universal truth. It never changes. You will always get the results deserved by the activity that you’re doing. You might not like those results, but you’ll always get them.

That can be a good thing.  See, you need to believe that what you do can make a difference.  A kind word matters.  Honest matters.  Candor, personal responsibility, and fairness — they all matter. Because the culture you create is the culture that ultimately decides how successful you become.  Make sure you’re doing the right things.

2. No one likes a “know it all”.

Don’t be that person that cuts everyone off mid-sentence.  Don’t interrupt your employees or your customers.  Don’t roll your eyes and stomp your feet while you wait for the person who is talking to stop. That’s selfish and shortsighted.  And besides coming off completely arrogant, you are missing out on important lessons by acting that way.

Let’s be honest, a lot of things you hear are unimportant — facts you already know or criticism that is hurtful and unusable.  But if you can listen long enough you’ll hear some really important information that will help you be more successful.  Listen for those moments.  Ignore everything else.

3. Stop being a whiner.

It’s that simple.  Stop complaining.  Stop being the person who has to help “keep everyone else’s feet on the ground”.  That’s just an excuse for you to whine and mope.  No one likes a whiner.  That’s just the truth.

It impacts more than the people around you at the time of your whining.  It directly impacts who you hire and how you manage your teams.  If you whine, your people will whine.  And the last thing you need when you’re trying to be successful is an army of wimps and whiners.  So stop.

4. Life isn’t fair.

Stop pretending like you’re the only one who has bad, unexpected circumstances happen to them. Everyone lives in the same sometimes-erratic universe.  You didn’t get it any worse than anyone else. Enough already with the theatrics.

A lot of things that we like to call “unfair” are really life gambles that we lose.  We make risky decisions and then cry “unfair” when our gamble doesn’t turn out with us hitting the jackpot.   Which is unfortunate because there is a valuable lesson that could be learned if we stopped pouting and started listening.

5. Just because everyone else is doing it doesn’t mean you should too.

Idiots do stupid things.  Sometimes a lot of idiots do the same thing together.  And you can feel like there are so many people doing something that you are missing out if you are not doing it too.  The only thing you are missing out on are the results of idiot behavior.

But it’s not always that extreme.  Many times your industry is heading is a good direction.  And it feels safe to follow the leader.  But instead of achieving greatness you get the “success left-overs” of everyone else in your industry who gets to the finish line first.  Take the time to go your own way.

6. Learn from your mistakes.

Success doesn’t mean that you need to be perfect — or anything close.  You just need to be honest about those mistakes and learn from the results that you achieved.  It does you no good to pretend like you’re more successful that you really are.  It stops you from being amazing.

Running your business successfully isn’t so much about having one giant brilliant idea and executing it. It’s more about taking tiny steps forward continuously.  When you’re right you keep moving.  When you’re wrong you change course and keep moving.  Mistakes lead you towards success.

7. Say “I’m sorry…” when you’re wrong.

This is likely the most important business lesson that leaders overlook.  You are going to make many mistakes if you attempt anything remarkable.  You are going to hurt people, create disappointment, and cause confusion and chaos.  The best way to make these right is simply to apologize.

And the best way to apologize is simply to say “I’m Sorry…”.   No excuses.  No drawn-out reasons.  Just powerful words and an attitude of sincerity.  And when you do, the results are mind-blowing.   You solve problems faster, win the confidence of your clients better, and make yourself more accessible to everyone around you.

8. Grow up.

You need to be tough if you’re going to win in business.  That means you’re going to get kicked in the teeth when you least expect it and need to get back up on your feet.  That’s why you need to grow up. Instead of getting offended, insulted, or misunderstood, you need to focus on the “real dramas”.  You’ll know them when you see them.  Whining, wimping, and complaining isn’t what big kids do.  Simple as that.

Part of growing up involves learning from your mistakes, being more mature, and getting better at making decisions.  If you can’t say that you are making better decisions and learning better lessons, then you know that you need to grow up.  And fast.

Your mom was pretty smart.  The basic life lessons you heard from her growing up are the same practical lessons you need right now to be more successful as a business leader.

It really is that simple.  Being successful isn’t always about your S.W.O.T. analysis or your “go to market” plan.  Most often it’s about the core values you let guide your day-to-day decisions.

Right now you’re making decisions that impact the future of your business.  Maybe it’s time to revisit the life lessons your mom taught you.

By Dan Waldschmidt

Retrieved 10Jan2013 fromhttp://www.eyesonsales.com/content/article/8_business_lessons_your_mom_taught_you_better_than_business_school/?utm_source=EyesOnSales.com&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=title&utm_campaign=17981&utm_content=8+Business+Lessons+Your+Mom+Taught+You+Better+than+Business+School




Top 10 Must Read Sales Tip Articles for 2012 – Q4

Happy 2013, it should be an exciting year, the economy should be turning around… now is the time to leverage all the best tips you can.

We appreciate all the support and dedication we have received from you all in 2012. We’re excited to share that we have been awarded a top sales and marketing resource for 2012. We also just broke 3000 likes on FB, please “like” and subscribe to our daily tips if you have not done so already and please feel free to share EyesOnSales with the rest of your sales and marketing team’s members.

We have great plans for 2013 and want you along for the ride!

Here are the Top 10 articles from last quarter. Enjoy! A special congrats goes out to Colleen Francis for the success on her 5 part series. Congratulations Colleen!

#10. Five Great Ways to Send Your Sales Skyrocketing – Part 3
by Colleen Francis

#9. Five Great Ways to Send Your Sales Skyrocketing – Part 1
by Colleen Francis

#8. Two Words Sales People Need to Use More Often
by Kelley Robertson

#7. How To See Your Creative Ideas
by Kevin Eikenberry

#6. INFOGRAPHIC: Top 10 Holiday Email Marketing Tips for 2012
by Wendy Griffin

#5. Hello, My Name is Jonathan, and I am a Salesman
by Jonathan Farrington

#4. Closing the Sale – A Realistic Perspective
by Dave Kahle

#3. Five Great Ways to Send Your Sales Skyrocketing – Part 5
by Colleen Francis

#2. 7 Paradoxical Sales Principles
by Jill Konrath

#1. Five Great Ways to Send Your Sales Skyrocketing – Part 4
by Colleen Francis

Don’t see your favorite article here? Leave a comment below with the URL and share them with others. You can use the SEARCH box above to help you find them. To a profitable 2013. Thanks from everyone at EyesOnSales and CamapignerCRM.

By EyesOnSale

Retrieved 9January2013 from http://www.eyesonsales.com/content/article/top_10_must_read_sales_tip_articles_for_2012_-_q4/?utm_source=EyesOnSales.com&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=title&utm_campaign=17981&utm_content=Top+10+Must+Read+Sales+Tip+Articles+for+2012+-+Q4




SalesDialers.com Introduces New Feature: Connect-N-Sell

SalesDialers.com introduces Connect-N-Sell! Their new automode feature that allows for you to instantly connect to a lead.

Connect-N-Sell is their new direct connect feature that pretty much guarantees users will be the first to contact internet leads when they get them.

Here’s how it works: The agent assigns up to four numbers for SalesDialers Connect-N-Sell feature to call.

When a live internet lead comes in, the agent will get a phone call from SalesDialers. A text to speech engine will announce the internet leads name, type of product they are inquiring about and the amount. Connect-N-Sell will then automatically connect the agent with the lead.

“The whole process happens very, very fast”, says Erika Henry, Director of Operations. “Now the agent can not only guarantee the lead will be called by them first, but the agent does not have to be tied to the computer too”. “The agent can connect with their internet leads where ever they are”, says Henry.

The official launch of this product is set for January 10th but some clients of SalesDialers.com have had tests of the system and really find a value instantly. “Connect-N-Sell comes with SalesDialers product or you can purchase it as a stand-alone product for $49 per month” says Henry. See SalesDialers.com for more info or give them a call at 800-662-4009.




Stop Being So Darn Polite

The other day I was speaking with the Vice President of a large company and we were discussing the good, the bad, and the ugly of sales and selling. When I broached the topic of prospecting calls he shook his head and expressed his frustration.

“I can always tell when it’s a sales person calling,” he said “because they all sound the same. They say, hi Mr. Williams, it’s Bob Smith calling from My Company; how are you today?

“I know they mean well but I highly doubt that they really care how I’m doing and quite frankly, I don’t have time to waste on social chit-chat especially with someone I don’t know.

He continued and said, “Sales people don’t have to be so polite; they need to get to the point and tell me why they’re calling. I’m not suggesting they act rude or treat me with disdain but they need to respect my time and cut to the chase quickly. Tell me how I’m going to benefit by listening to them.”

I later spoke to one of the top sales people in that VP’s company who told that he used the “hi, how are you today?” approach when he first started selling. He went on to say that his results improved dramatically once he took a more direct approach. He admitted that it took a lot of practice in the beginning but he found that the executives he called on didn’t seem to mind or notice.

Here’s the deal.

If you sell to Directors, VP’s, C-level or any other senior executive, stop being so nice and start being more direct. They will appreciate and respect it and you will achieve better results.

By Kelley Roberston

Retrieved 8 January 2013 from http://www.eyesonsales.com/content/article/stop_being_so_darn_polite/?utm_source=EyesOnSales.com&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=title&utm_campaign=17981&utm_content=Stop+Being+So+Darn+Polite