At Proctor Honda in Tallahassee, Fla., salespeople are
expected to respond to Internet leads within 20 minutes.
Why? Because online shoppers are receptive for only a
few minutes, says Alex Jefferson, e-commerce director for the three-store
Proctor Dealerships group.
"The closer you can reach them while they're in the
right mental state [to listen], the better your chances are of getting them
to come in," he says.
But Proctor Honda's quick replies are exceptional in an
industry that has tolerated slow responses for years to Internet leads, in
which shoppers leave e-mail addresses or phone numbers and request replies.
Dealers respond on average in three to five hours to Internet leads,
dealership consultants say.
Dealers chalk up slow responses to a variety of reasons:
Salespeople are busy with other duties. Many leads that flow into
dealerships are of dubious quality. And many salespeople believe customers
eventually will come to the dealership regardless of how the Internet
inquiries are handled.
But slow responses are unacceptable to shoppers
conditioned by Google, Amazon and others to expect immediate answers to
online queries, says Larry Bruce, president of consultant OnlineDrive and
former dealer in the Houston area.
The consequences? Untold lost sales at dealerships that
sit on leads.
Studies show that Internet leads account for about 20
percent of all auto sales in the United States.
The best way to fix the problem? Track response time
carefully and reward salespeople who convert leads into test drives and
sales.
In a recent study of how 125 dealerships handled 15,000
online leads, Bruce found that shoppers who received replies within 10
minutes were three times more likely to visit a store than those who had
received a slower response.
Bruce says responses by phone, personal e-mail or text
are useful. He considers auto-responses virtually useless because they
seldom answer a shopper's question and don't stop them from seeking
information elsewhere.
The study shows stores were OK if they could contact a
prospect within 10 to 20 minutes, Bruce said.
But after 20 minutes, the bottom falls out. The data
showed no discernable difference in coaxing a shopper in for test drive
between leads followed up on in 24 minutes or 24 hours, Bruce said.
Clearly, the shopper was onto something else or another store.
"If you don't get to the lead within 20 minutes,
you may as well wait until tomorrow, because it doesn't matter," he
said.
Automakers are aware of the problem and have moved to
address it. Chrysler Group, for example, is seeing results from the effort
it made 18 months ago to speed up replies to leads and to address a host of
other dealer digital marketing issues.
In late 2012, Chrysler hired digital managers at its
nine regional dealer business centers to promote better digital practices,
said spokesman Ralph Kisiel. Another nine digital experts were hired by
Chrysler vendor Shift Digital to help, he said.
"These dedicated digital experts assist dealers
with building an engaging Web site, driving traffic, and most importantly
responding to the shopper promptly," he said.
Despite a 25 percent increase in lead volume in 2013 over
2012, Chrysler dealers as a whole responded to 97 percent of leads in 2013,
up from 91 percent in 2012. And average response time improved to 32
minutes in 2013, from 52 minutes the previous earlier.
In 2011, the response time across Chrysler dealerships
averaged 20 hours, according to comments made in 2013 by Chrysler's U.S.
sales chief Reid Bigland.
Constant oversight
Jefferson at Proctor Honda says the key is building a
culture of responsiveness and holding salespeople accountable.
His five-person Internet sales team handles 400 to 700
Internet leads per month. And a designated person is constantly monitoring
response times and whether appointments are booked from return calls and
e-mails, he said. The store also has another nine floor salespeople. Any of
the 14 salespeople can handle walk-in traffic and phone appointments.
Bottom line: The best performers in responding quickly
and cementing store visits get the most leads to handle and convert to
commission-generating vehicle sales and leases, Jefferson said.
Faltering performance results in fewer leads and
potentially a pink slip if problems can't be rectified, he said.
The store sells 175 to 220 new and used vehicles per
month, and Internet leads account for 35 to 50 percent of those sales,
Jefferson said.
The Proctor Group also has Acura and Subaru franchises.
Speed dialing
Jeremy Alicandri sees Internet leads as a race against
competitors.
That's why Habberstad Auto Group's 10-person business
development center is required to respond to Internet leads within 30
minutes or less. His goal is to get the person sending the lead on the
telephone and into the dealership.
"If you're the dealer that responds first, you'll
be the one that gets the opportunity sooner to start working with the
customer," says the vice president of corporate development at the
Huntington Station, N.Y., dealership group. "There's also the chance
that the customer only contacted your dealership, and if
you start working with them right away they don't need to contact other
dealerships."
The group of one Mini and two BMW dealerships sells more
than 3,000 new and 600 used vehicles annually.
Alicandri says the Internet leads are time-stamped and
assigned to employees who earn incentives based on the number of leads they
convert into dealership appointments.
He says Internet leads sent to the group generate
automated responses acknowledging the dealership's receipt of the
correspondence and a message saying to expect a follow-up phone call or
e-mail -- whichever way the consumers indicated they would like to be
contacted.
Though e-mails are useful, the dealership would much
rather have a telephone conversation with the person who sent the lead,
Alicandri says.
"Talking to them over the phone is better
opportunity to vet the customer, see how anxious they are to buy, see what
their needs are and more importantly set up an appointment," he says.
Sunday responses
Nine months ago, Sun Chevrolet Inc. in the Syracuse,
N.Y., area created a business development center to handle Internet leads
and phone calls for the Chevrolet store and two used-vehicle stores, said
owner Todd Caputo. The center now has 14 employees, including a manager.
Caputo said he puts such a premium on fast and detailed
responses to leads that two center employees now work from home on Sundays
so prospects don't have to wait until after the weekend to get the
information they desire. Last year the Chevrolet store sold 575 new
vehicles.
Rick Case Honda in Davie, Fla., also has a business
development center to handle incoming leads, said General Manager Richard
Bustillo. Internet leads get a response by e-mail within 15 minutes,
including prices for vehicles identified by the prospect as well as three
certified-used vehicles that might meet the sender's needs, he said.
The store then has processes in place to contact the
prospect up to five additional times by phone or e-mail to see if the
dealership can assist the shopper, Bustillo said.
Bustillo said for the most part dealers have the
software to aid them in following up with customers. But too many lack the
discipline or processes to hold salespeople to account for contacting
prospects promptly with relevant information.
He said dealerships in the large metropolitan areas, in
particular, just have the old mind-set that showroom traffic will come
regardless of the Internet.
Bustillo said: "They take it for granted. That's
good for us."
Arlena Sawyers contributed to this report.
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