Monday, December 1, 2008

What You Need To Focus On To Sell Cars

By Mak Nawab

What do you think it takes to be a successful car salesperson? Do you think its specialized auto dealer training or a combination of using selling tips and tricks that work for everyone else? Is it the ability to face adversity when the pressure is on, keeping your cool and that smile plastered to your face as you get shot down by potential customer after customer? Or is it being a naturally born leader? Whatever it is, people have been making a successful living out of selling cars for over a century now and everyone has their own way of handling the ins and outs of how to sell cars.

Dodging the economic bullets

With an economic global crisis in full swing, you are probably finding that selling a car is a bit of a frustrating proposition. You have to sell yourself and your products as well as work with lenders to get your customers financing. During an economic crisis you are going to find that you will have to work twice as hard to sell a car. This is when you are going to have to be at the top of your game in order to get customers in the cars they want and lenders convinced that they can afford them.

Focus on three things

There are three main focal points every car salesperson needs to concentrate on in order to be successful selling cars.

Focal point 1: Attitude plus action equals sales. If you have a great attitude about selling vehicles and you have a developed a presentation that really spotlights the customer's needs and wants, then your actions in helping them choose the right vehicle will ultimately be rewarded by a sale. Your customers will see your actions as benefitting to them and they will appreciate the time you take to really make them feel comfortable during the selling process.

Focal point 2: The customer
In any retail business - a sector car sales could fall into - your customer must be number 1 at all times. If you do not have customers, then your product isn't worth anything. Focus on the customer and not the potential sale until the time is right. If the customer really intends to buy a vehicle then the way you treat them will have them signing the papers. Otherwise, they'll go elsewhere.

Focal point 3: You environment makes a world of difference when it comes to sales. Some auto dealerships are feeling the strain of the economy and they are so discouraged that they simply stop trying. If you continue to try and make your environment a welcoming one, customers are going to come to you and not your competition because they see you as being the welcoming and caring company that you are. - 16738

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