CRM No Longer Draws Blank Stares From Dealers
Dealership use of CRM systems surged when the recession hit and auto sales plummeted.
Data-base mining helps dealers sell to customer sweet spots, Ord says.
Ord oversees the business side. He says CRM systems help dealers stay in touch with customers, offering them relevant, timely and personalized information.
For instance, a system can crunch purchasing data to determine when a customer might be in the market for a new vehicle and what type of vehicle that might be. Emails with specific and rich content go out to them.
The same process relies on mining records of customer service history to drum up backshop business.
“When a dealer knows about me, they can sell to my sweet spot,” Ord says.
Dealerships also can use CRM to identify and contact customers whose vehicles are 3 or 4 years old, offer to purchase them and sell them as one-owner used cars, Ord says in noting a trend. “As dealer margins shrink on new cars, used-car sales are becoming more critical.”
Recalling DealerSocket’s early days, Perry says it was necessary for him and Ord to take a crash course in auto retailing. That became clear after original product demonstrations to dealers.
“They said, ‘Your stuff is great, but you’re not car guys and the lingo you’re using isn’t car-oriented,’” Perry says. “So we went into dealerships to watch how dealers sell and service cars.
“We worked for free so they wouldn’t fire us. Then we took what we learned and changed the software to be more automotive.”
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