When your client has money to burn but very particular demands, car sales rely on finely-tuned skills and years of experience.
Imagine your ideal client. Plenty in the bank, right? Maybe they’re a generous spender too. Very easy to persuade into up-selling deals and a pleasant person to deal with to top it off. If only everyone in the world was like this.
When salespeople get into the sales profession, many aim their sights on the glamorous world of luxury sales, namely yachts, private jets, helicopters, bespoke cars…you get the idea. The commission for big-ticket items like these can stretch almost indefinitely, which makes these highly-desirable dream jobs the hardest to break into too. Everyone wants a piece of the high life.
Top level car sales isn’t as simple as it seems from the outside, however. With money comes the knowledge that this money could pay for almost anything. Clients demand more. Clients are harder to work with. Products are far rarer and more difficult to source. Facing these challenges is not for the faint-hearted!
Standing out
In car sales, in order to make an impression, you need to stand out from the pack. Until you even get to make your pitch you need clients to know that they should come to you first. After all, they don’t need a new Porsche so they won’t be popping into your forecourt to talk through finance options. To wealthy customers, purchases like these are often made in the spur of the moment, and you need to be there when the idea pops into their head.
Brett Davies, the CEO of Prestige Imports, Miami has sold $1 billion worth of cars over the past eight years. The biggest Lamborghini dealer in the USA and aged only 26 years old, he’s certainly doing something right. But what?
“I try to think creatively about marketing,” he said to American news network CNN. “It’s really about building a brand.”
Using social media and word of mouth to build that brand, his is a marketing mix of top quality products, service and impressive clients. He sold his first Lamborghini to Missy Elliott. He gets heads turning on his daily grind too, driving a gold-plated Lamborghini Aventador to work every day.
“I want to show people that these are great cars to drive every day, even a gold one,” he said. “I drive it every day and I love it.”
Do you think this works? There’s no doubt that it does – his sales reputation speaks for itself. Thinking outside the box has made the business he inherited aged 19 from his father into the success it is today.
Davies’ skills are easily and very well replicated in every-day sales pitches. His combination of brand visibility, personality and staying ahead of the social media curve are successfully implemented into car sales plans regardless of the type of sales they might be.
In fact, utilising these skills in any aspect of sales can provide incredible results. Clients no longer want efficiency over personality – social media has brought people closer in ways that even a decade ago wouldn’t have even been considered. The personal touch is more important than ever. Do not underestimate your customers’ need for real interaction in order to close that deal.
Visit our site for all the latest car sales jobs and sales jobs in the UK.
[simplyjobs site_url=”https://www.simplysalesjobs.co.uk/” placement=”post” site_name=”Simply Sales Jobs” username=”SEO_TEAM” password=”fmgseo” feed_identifier=”blog_car_sales” category=”Car Sales jobs”][/simplyjobs]
Do hobbies help or hinder a sales CV?
Opinions are divided on whether there is any purpose to the ‘interests’ section of a CV. The traditional view is that your hobbies and pastimes show something of you as a person and demonstrate how rounded you are which could help in your sales job application.
I’ve tailored my CV but still can’t get a sales job interview
We all know how important it is for job applicants to tailor their CV or online application to the specific sales job, rather than send generic details about themselves. But increasingly – as more and more people apply for each advertised vacancy – those who apply for sales jobs they are fully qualified for, are finding that even this isn’t working in their favour.
Sales Advice: Preventing buyers’ resistance to sales people
What can sales professionals do to at least lower the resistance barriers to making a choice? We may not have caused that resistance ourselves, but we certainly have to face up to it every day. We have to do everything we can to minimise indifference and negative pre-disposition to our sales approach. What can we do to help prospects welcome us rather than resist us?