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"The Quality Sales
Presentation"
by Jim Ziegler
President, Ziegler Supersystems,
Inc.
From handshake to the desk, the
average sales person today has become a track star.
Over the last seventeen years I have
visited and interacted with more than 1000 new car franchised
dealerships in almost every state in the union. It really doesn’t
matter whether or not you are talking about a domestic dealership or
an import dealership, a high-line store, or a Hyundai dealership the
story is the same. If you put a stopwatch on a sales person the
moment they first shake hands with a customer, they will usually
show up at the sale desk trying to work figures in less than twenty
minutes after they first met and greeted the customer.
A quality sales process involves
building a relationship with the customer and with the car, as well
as presenting the dealership to the customer. An automobile isn’t a
commodity…we’re not talking about a can of Folgers coffee on the
shelf here.
An automobile is 15,000 component
parts made of plastic, metal, rubber, glass, and space age
materials. Some of these parts are moving at incredible speeds in
excess of ten thousand RPMs with less than three one-thousandths of
an inch of clearance and less than one one-thousandth of an inch of
lubrication in the presence of high levels of heat. All of these
parts are constantly rubbing and abrading against each other. Your
new automobile is a complex, high technology machine with more than
100 times the computer memory that first put Apollo 11 on the moon.
Personally, I couldn’t conceive of
anyone who would want to purchase a new automobile without a
complete, quality presentation. In my travels, the highest
commissioned sales people with the best CSI surveys were always
those who gave their customers the best quality presentation of the
product.
Unfortunately, today’s sales person
often skips the presentation stage of the sale. I can say with
absolute certainty that most sales people never present the features
and the benefits to the customer.
The presentation is the
value-building part of the sales process that justifies the price
(profit). If the customer is more emotionally bonded to their money
than they are to the car, they will not buy today. The walk-around
is the part of the process where the customer actually buys the
car. This is when it stops being “A NEW CAR” and it becomes “THEIR
NEW CAR”. Once again, in my travels, I am amazed at just how
terrible the product knowledge is of some sales people.
There are four parts to a quality
presentation…
- Safety
- Quality
- Luxury
- Technology
SAFETY IS THE SALE
...the biggest single item the
customer must be presented is the safety of the car. With all of
the bad press we’ve had, the sales person needs to spend a lot of
time showing and explaining the safety technology of the new car to
the customer. Believe me, most of them (customers) are not aware of
everything they are being asked to pay for here.
WHY ARE SALES PEOPLE TAKING
SHORTCUTS?
The answer is two-fold:
- Lack of Training
- Lack of Management
If management were hyper-aware of
every deal in progress, there would never be any missed
walk-arounds. Just because your sales people do great walk-arounds
in the classroom, don’t assume they are wasting any of these skills
on actual customers.
Personally, I would never work
figures on a deal with a customer that hadn’t actually driven the
car and been given a quality presentation by a sales professional.
If my alleged sales person was
consistently too weak to persuade customers to become involved with
the car before they became involved with the money, I’d have to help
them by freeing up their future. You don’t develop sales people
by catering to personality weaknesses.
Jim Ziegler
President, Ziegler Supersystems, Inc.
[Read
Biography]
For more on these techniques, please
call 800.726.0510.
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