Archive for December, 2009

Who Sings Your Praises?
Creating Evangelical Customers Who Spread The Good Word About You

Appearing in 1/10 AutoSuccess Magazine

By Tim James
Director of Sales
HomeNet Automotive 

When faced with a problem that only an expert can fix, everyone feels vulnerable if we don’t know a trustworthy expert to call upon, someone responsive, experienced, and reliable who we know will give us a fair price in exchange for quality service that they stand behind. Without such an expert in our phone directory, a small matter can become a big source of worry.

Let’s say your family doctor says you need a knee replacement. Unless it’s an emergency, it’s not likely that you would drive to the local hospital and ask for the next available orthopedic surgeon. You would probably spend a few months getting mentally ready, unsure how to research surgery options, surgeons, and facilities. Feel the anxiety?

Many people feel the same way when buying a car.

Now, suppose a colleague had a knee replaced last summer. She can’t stop telling people about how wonderful her new knee feels. She talks about her doctor like he’s a god (regardless of the actual qualifications of the surgeon). She tells you about how the physical therapy facility sent a van, so her husband didn’t have to take off from work three times a week to drive her. And, when you share that you need your knee replaced, your colleague earnestly responds, "You need a knee replacement? I’ve got a guy who’ll fix you right up. Just look at me! I’m walking three miles a day! You really need to call my guy. Here’s the number. Call him now."

Ah, you're saved!   Someone’s got a guy! 

They’re everywhere, these "guys." You need concrete poured? I’ve got a guy. Need your pants taken in? I’ve got a guy for that, too.

I’m sure you know a "guy" in the car business, too, the industry veteran who seems to have a lock on your local community. Everybody in town, maybe even your uncle, buys their car from this guy. He knows everyone by name, their kids, too. Forget "taking ups" or prospecting using the CRM, he has a large book of customers that he sends birthday cards to and always seems to have people referring him business. Yeah, you know the guy.

Wouldn’t you LOVE to be the "guy" to your customers?

What does the guy know that you don’t? What every guy knows how to do is create what marketers call an evangelical client, a customer who enthusiastically promotes their "guy’s" business, product, or service through word-of-mouth without solicitation. Evangelical customers feel great reward from helping both the person in need and the business they are promoting. They enjoy the fact that because of them others are having the same successful experience they did. They believe in a better world and this is one way they actively contribute to it; in essence, they feel their community worth is enhanced with every "convert."

An evangelical client is the ideal customer for several key reasons:

1. He genuinely likes you and wants you to do well.

2. He is willing to pay more because you offer the whole package (decent product, fair price, you’re here to stay, and that certain "guy"-ness).

3. He wants to help others, and that motivates him to tell others about you (that also makes him credible).

4. He is a not just a happy, repeat customer, he is a walking testimonial, working for you without compensation.

5. He refers "softened" customers to you, meaning they’re already sold on essential intangibles like trust, reputation, and fairness before they walk into the showroom.

6. He offers you solid suggestions on how to improve your business.

7. He sends you more business than your brother-in-law.

Priceless, right?  You bet.  We should all be so lucky… and we can.

How do you create evangelical clients?

1. Be trustworthy. Even if you have fierce sales skills, if your mentality is that every deal is a notch on your quota bedpost, customers’ radar will go up, and they will get a sense that they mean nothing more to you than cash. The only customers you will attract in that case are the ones looking for the best deal… in other words, they’ll be using you, too. Worse, without solid referrals to carry you through times of lean advertising budgets, you’ll go hungry. You also won’t last long in any one dealership, which makes it impossible to build an evangelical client base. Voluntarily ensuring transparent, win-win transactions will build trust and pay out far more in the long run.

2. Treat every customer right. Listen, put yourself in their shoes, and do whatever you can to meet their needs. Every once in a while, exceed their expectations, like the van that shuttled your colleague to physical therapy appointments.

3. Care about your customers. Keep notes on every one of them, including the names of their spouse and kids, birthday, anniversary, hobbies, etc. Take a photo of them with their new car and create a scrapbook with their testimonials for prospects to flip through on your desk.

4. Be human. Show your personality. Create a photo montage screensaver of your family. Whatever your hobbies, put evidence of them on your desk to help you connect with your customers on a personal level. That emotional connection is imperative for the evangelical customer.

5. Be personal. Today, technology is widening the gap between consumers and the car sales professional by providing all of the information the consumer needs online and removing all personal interaction until the customer finally shows up on the lot after weeks of research. If technology is removing so much communication throughout the buying cycle, how can an auto sales professional become the "guy?" The exact same way the "guy" became the "guy" before all of this wonderful technology. Take the time to truly get to know your prospects and communicate with them (utilizing technology) throughout the buying cycle and beyond, even if they do not buy from you. Let your CRM do the work of the follow up, but know what "work" it is doing. Know what each email says, and follow up with your own personalized emails and phone calls. Get out and become a positive part of your community. If you want to be the "guy," you have to invest the effort necessary to cultivate meaningful interactions with your customers in all stages of their buying cycle.

6. Be grateful. Stop and appreciate what they’re doing for you and actively thank them. Write thank you notes after every referral, whether the deal closes or not. After they’ve sent you a few customers, send them a small but highly meaningful gift, like if your customer likes to fly fish, send them a dozen hand-tied flies. The point is not the expense, it's to show that they mattered enough for you to remember something important to them.

7. Be humble. Ask them how you can improve and listen carefully to their ideas. These people like to feel needed and helpful. They will appreciate the opportunity to better the world. Even if their suggestion is something you already do, don’t dismiss the idea (instead, look at how you can better create consumer awareness around that service since your best customers don’t know about it). Appreciate that they took the time to think of an idea and be honest with you.

8. Be responsive. When an evangelical customer calls, answer the phone. It’s usually important. In fact, it’s usually a lead or a complaint. In either case, it’s important that you’re on top of it. Most amazing about evangelical customers is that they are so loyal, they will excuse the occasional poor experience, even going so far as to rationalize a bad experience had by a convert with a stream of logical reasons ("Maybe their website was down…" "Maybe there was an emergency in the family…" "Maybe it was defective. It happens. Mine still works great. Call my guy, he’ll take care of you," etc.). The evangelical client doesn’t want to be wrong about you.

And you don’t want the evangelical client to be wrong about you.

As passionately as the evangelical client sings your praises, he can also ruin your name in his circle of influence… and do so with that same passion. Remember, he’s out to create a better world, and if that means people should avoid your business, he’ll freely tell them to do so. To him, spreading a cautionary word is just as helpful as a recommendation.

The good news is evangelical customers are naturally forgiving people. Should something happen that causes your customer to slip out of evangelism or flip alliances, go back to #1 and work toward renewing your relationship. They’re worth it. Just ask any guy.

For more information and resources on creating evangelical clients, please check out these sources:

Creating Customer Evangelists: How Loyal Customers Become a Volunteer Sales Force by Ben McConnell and Jackie Huba (Kaplan Business, 2002)

There's a Customer Born Every Minute: P.T. Barnum's Amazing 10 "Rings of Power" for Creating Fame, Fortune, and a Business Empire Today - Guaranteed! by Joe Vitale and Jeffrey Gitomer (Wiley, 2006)

Managing the Customer Experience: Turning Customers Into Advocates By Shaun Smith and Joe Wheeler (FT Press, 2002)

The Brand Who Cried Wolf: Deliver on Your Company's Promise and Create Customers for Life by Scott Deming (Wiley , 2007)

Exceptional Selling: How the Best Connect and Win in High Stakes Sales by Jeff Thull (Wiley, 2006)

HomeNet Autmotive makes Inventory Online (IOL) solution helps automotive dealers sell more cars and save time by converting DMS data into emotional online ads with compelling descriptions, video, SEO display pages, price analysis, automated distribution, and more. Visit HomeNet at www.homenetinc.com.      

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

   

 

1 comment December 17th, 2009

10 SEO Tips To Ensure Online Shoppers Find You In 2010

12/09 AutoSuccess Magazine   Reprinted from 12/09 AutoSuccess Magazine, p 28

SEO Tips for Auto Dealerships

By Tim James
Director of Sales
HomeNet Automotive, Inc.

Everyone wants to come up at the top of search engine results pages (SERPs), but the truth is, in this industry there are millions of pages sharing similar content and most of your keywords.  The search engine optimization (SEO) tricks of the yesteryear no longer work well, and many will get you penalized, some so badly you’d be better off with a new domain name and website.

For instance, it used to be popular to add blocks of keywords at the bottom of pages in the same color as the page’s background, making those words invisible to visitors but indexed by search engines.  Such practices littered search results with worthless and unrelated pages, and the public abandoned those search engines (remember Alta Vista?).  In order to make money, search engines depend on ad revenue, which depends on quality search results, so search engines are always honing their ranking algorithms and methodology.

Here are some SEO recommendations that you can employ now to pull more traffic to your site, rank higher in SERPs, and increase conversions (visitors taking some action indicating interest in your site, like clicking on a link to go further into your site, watching a video, or contacting you):

Automotive inventory online SEO tips    Know the goal for each page of your site, and create its page title, URL, keywords, alt tags, etc. accordingly.  Is your aim for vehicle display pages to direct traffic to your showroom?  Then your site should include a landing page for every car in your inventory, and the configuration of those pages should be individually search engine optimized to appeal to the person who is searching for that vehicle.  Alternatively, there may be sections of your site where your goal is to build community, your brand, and customer loyalty.  Not everyone who visits your site is a solid prospect at that moment, but that is no reason to ignore them.  Woo future buyers by presenting them with compelling content, an engaging community, and keywords specific to what they may be searching for.

Search engine optimization for car dealers   Content is king, queen, and pied piper.  No matter what other SEO tricks you use, the fact remains that high quality, relevant content is still your number one tool to not only interest your visitors but ensure that search engines deem you—and your web pages—credible.  According to Edmunds.com, 85% of all prospective buyers search online first before buying a car.  Think of it as having one chance for you to establish credibility and trust, as well as to get them to happily follow you into the showroom. 

Online inventory SEO techniques for 2010   Place the most important content “above the fold,” which means readily visible in the standard browser window without scrolling down.  Search engines consider this your most essential information, and it earns higher ranking stature than content residing “below the scroll line.”  Not to mention, what greets people once your page loads had better be your most relevant information!  Rather than have long pages that incorporate disparate information, you’re better off with shorter, highly focused pages.

Blog posts are effective tools to help customers find you   How-to articles and blog posts are good content for SEO as well as informative and entertaining for your prospective customers.  Imagine how both will love your glossary page entitled, “Automobile Service Terminology for the Automotive-Challenged“ or a blog post called, “66 Winterizing Tips for Every Rochester Car Owner,” or a weekly Q&A from your service manager.  From within your blog posts, link to deeper pages on your site, as cross-linking adds SEO reliability to your deeper pages, especially if those links are followed.   While you’re at it, be sure to include service coupons, pictures, and videos on those blog pages.

VIN-decoded inventory pages that are Search Engine Optimized?  YES!   A picture is worth 1,000 words—and many clicks, particularly when you use page-relevant alt tags on all your photos. In addition, the more photos you have, the more consumers will perceive your operation as transparent and, therefore, trustworthy.  On vehicle landing pages, I recommend no less than 24 pictures of any one car, and even then, I would go for 30 or more, particularly for pre-owned vehicles.  What shoppers can see with their own eyes, they feel more secure—and passionate—about.  Along those lines, be forthright and include photographs of anything out of the ordinary on the vehicle to avoid accusations of non-disclosure (if there is any body damage, even a scratch, post a close-up of it). 

Car inventory online SEO tips   Video is the new darling with sales managers because it creates tremendous emotion with shoppers.   It’s the new darling of SEO experts, too, because video causes clicks as well as visitors to linger on your page.  Videos (and photos) also ensure you get into blended search results (blended search results include related news, images, videos, books, maps, dictionary listings, etc., in addition to the standard blue text listings).  Optimize videos using branded and non-branded alt tag phrases.

Pictures and video enhance listings in blended search results    Analytics: Make it a goal to understand the numbers behind the traffic coming to your site from search engines.  If your numbers are declining, why?  There are many places to do keyword research (check out Google Insights) to test the value of your keywords. To avoid mixing oranges in with your apples, it’s best to measure brand engagement (the percentage of visitors who searched for you or your product by name) separately from traffic that used some of your top 10 keywords in their search.  Regularly evaluate low-ranking pages, and don’t hesitate to change your keywords, title, URL, content positioning, add video, etc. on poor performers.

Bounce rates decline when content matches keywords    Bounce rate is a single page visit that results in the visitor leaving your site altogether.  To a search engine, a high bounce rate means the content on that page is unrelated to its title, keywords, alt tags, etc., and it penalizes that page.  Generally speaking, a bounce rate of >30% is good, 50% is concerning, but any pages near 70% should be immediately reworked. 

SEO is not SEM (search engine marketing)   Site maps help search engines easily index your site and find all those pesky internal pages.  For instance, the Googlebot crawls the web by following links from one page to another, so if your site is new or isn't well linked, it may be hard for search engines—and prospects—to discover it.

SEMM integrates organic SEO and PayPerClick SEO    Page load time may be coming soon to Google’s search ranking methodology.  That said, slow page load times won't negatively impact your rankings, but fast load times may have a positive effect.  Search engines want to ensure a quality experience for browsers, and next to content, fast load times are a big part of that.  People today are used to broadband speed, and if they aren’t getting it, they’ll bounce (see #8).

Finding the millions of online browsers who will be buying a car in the next twelve months is an ongoing challenge.  By implementing these ten suggestions in 2010, however, you can increase your chances that they’ll find you.  

About HomeNet:  HomeNet’s Inventory Online (IOL) Internet Marketing Suite is a vehicle marketing solution that helps thousands of automotive dealers to sell more cars online.  IOL’s web-based applications streamline the process of converting raw DMS data into consumer-friendly and emotional online ads.  IOL offers rich functionality for video, search engine optimized (SEO) vehicle display pages, price analysis, unlimited photos, text messaging, email ads, automated distribution to 3rd-party services  like eBay, Craiglist, and Oodle, mobile lot management (IOL2Go), and more.   IOL quickly turns every vehicle on the lot into a compelling, online point-of-presence… and a gateway into the showroom. 

Visit HomeNet at www.homenetinc.com.  For more information, contact HomeNet at salesteam@homenetinc.com or 866-738-3313.

© 2009 HomeNet Automotive, Inc.

2 comments December 9th, 2009


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