Automotive Sales Training - Stop Whining About Price

Price cutting is a self-inflicted wound. Nobody holds a gun to your head and makes you cut your price. I know that many of you are thinking right now: "There is so much competition today that you can't maintain profits," "Everybody is giving everything away," "The salespeople can't negotiate," and "Everybody knows our pricing from the Internet..." Blah, Blah, Blah. Stop whining about price!

 

Only about ten percent of buyers buy on price alone. For that ten percent, you can decide to lower your prices or let your customers buy elsewhere. Every person who has ever sold anything knows that the happiest customers are the ones that pay you profit, whereas the unhappiest customers are the ones that you gave everything away to. Here's a news flash: You don't have to do business with them. It's your choice.

 

All things being equal, money will be the customer's final decision. It is your job to make everything unequal. Customers consider the 3 M's: Money, Machine, and Me. What are you doing to elevate the "me" part of the equation? The "me" part of the 3M's stands for you: your process, the dealership, the service, and the reputation. It's the easiest part of the equation to change. Your dealership is unique and your customers need to know why. You have to believe that you are the best and that you are worth more. Many salespeople and sales managers have a flawed, weak belief system. If you don't believe you are outstanding, you will make yourself a replaceable commodity.

 

Every day you must work as hard on yourself as you do on sales. When you get better, your customers will get better. Do you work on yourself every day in the area of attitude, education, motivation, sales skills, customer follow-up, and marketing? Let's be brutally honest and forget about being politically correct...most sales people stink at their profession. The majority of salespeople never work on the above skills. Can you really tell me that those unmotivated and uneducated idiots are the tough competition? Your only competition is in your own mind.

 

Recently, while in Las Vegas, I shopped for shoes at Caesar's Palace. At the first store I went to, I noticed the salesperson looked agitated to have to hang up the phone to wait on me. He was extremely rude and did nothing to add value to his store or differentiate himself from other run-of-the-mill salespeople.

 

The second store I went to, I encountered a sensational salesperson that created rapport, sold value, and quality. He knew his product and made a high price seem like a bargain.

The first store lost two sales and the second gained from the first salesperson's stupidity.

Is the first salesperson and his inadequacies the norm, or was it an aberration? My experience says that unfortunately, he's the norm. My hunch is that your experiences are the same as mine.

 

Work every day to get better and show it to your customers. Work on your belief system.

Don't be a commodity, and stop whining about price. Price is the easiest problem to solve in the sale.

 

For your free special report “10 Ways to Overcome the Best Price Questions”, email me at info@tewart.com with Best Price in the subject line.

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Comment by Troy Spring on August 4, 2011 at 10:29am
The 3 M's  love it.  Mark,  Price never has and never will sell a car.   It may close a deal to the 10% you speak of, but it will never SELL a car.
Comment by Mark Tewart on August 3, 2011 at 1:54pm
Thanks for all the comments and feedback.
Comment by Matt Harper on August 3, 2011 at 7:10am
How very true! Also lets face it if you have the customer who is strictly shopping the internet for the lowest price no matter how low your prices are there is always going to be a dealership somewhere selling a car for cheaper than you.
Comment by Stan Sher on August 2, 2011 at 12:12am
Very nice...
Comment by Erik Vallejo on August 1, 2011 at 7:55pm
Great Article!
Comment by Brian K. Martin on July 31, 2011 at 9:53am
Mr. Tewart is exactly right! Price is nothing more than an objection, and is part of the over all sales process. In the steps of the sales; we must adopt the process of isolation, either or and transition, This process will root out the true needs of the customer, establish where the customer is as it relates to price and help the sales person and the customer land on the correct vehicle. Sales managers, your pencil does control the sales process. Believe it or not, your sales people do. Price doesn't sell anything. If it did the Auto Nations concept of no price haggling and no sales people that Wayne Hizinga in visioned when staring the company would have work. Put the pencil down, push away from the desk and teach your sales people effective, practical listening skills that will allow then to unlock the customers wants and needs. Then teach then the value of isolation, asking either or questions and transitioning back to the vehicle and you will see your first pencil going out, and coming back with a signed commitment to buy today. If you would like more information on this topic contact us at www.dealermgntgroup.com
Comment by Marsh Buice on July 30, 2011 at 5:12pm
Great, great post Mark!
Comment by Vincent T Dellatore on July 30, 2011 at 10:22am
Great information,,,Gross is a state if mind.

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