Service Repair | |||
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| Panelists (from left) Terry Wynter, Diane Larson, Mike Brewster and Mitch Schneider listen to attendees' suggestions during a shop owners class Friday morning at CARS. |
Panelist Diane Larson, owner of Larson’s Service, Inc., in Peabody, Mass., says with all the new ideas, one easy way for the owners to go about implementing them is to print out all of their expenses and attack two of them each week.
And of course, curbing expenses is easier with more money coming in. Marketing and advertising is part of the budget, but is a key expense some shops have been neglecting. Many, like Brewster’s shop, are starting to turn around their marketing and advertising plans. He says he realized the need and talked with his team about it before starting from the ground up.
Brewster says his approach started by sending out cards, but now is more proactive, calling customers and moving toward the point where they schedule the next appointment when the customer is leaving. It also is acquiring more customers through short radio sponsorships.
“We’re not selling specialties, we’re just selling good value,” he states.
Wynter is moving his advertising to the digital side, but is working more with messages rather than sales pitches. By helping customers, they will respond better than being sold on something, he suggests.
Also, his shop is collecting e-mail addresses on every customer to send out promotions and information. Attendees echoed how important this is to their businesses. One attendee suggested to group that contests and drawing through e-mails, Web sites and electronic newsletters are great ways to boost e-mail lists.
And Wynter says the e-mails his shop sends are in addition to text alerts, Twitter, Facebook, Google local search (a free service), a Web site and blogs. After all, many of these things are low-cost or free, and a great option to shop around.
“We try to stay with the digital era and it works very well for us,” Wynter explains. “And you’ll find the age barrier, I thought it would be 40 and younger, but I found 65, 70-year-old people are doing it as well. It’s everyone now.”
Once you get the customers’ attention and into the shop or on the phone, how you treat them is crucial. Larson says a good attitude expressed to the customers will benefit your shop. And it all starts with a smile. In fact, the script for answering the phone at her shop starts with the word “smile.”
“It’s awesome to hear them answer the phone with a smile,” she notes.
Brewster says phone skills are key, as everyone has dealt with bad phone calls in the past. While they don’t use scripts like Larson’s shop does, the team at Gil’s Garage continually discusses key points and has recorded calls to see where improvements could be made.
Inside the shop, presenting a good appearance also helps those customers in these changing times. Larson runs her shop like a dentist’s or doctor’s office, from scheduling appointments at the end of the current one, to making sure cleanliness is top of mind.
“Would you like your doctor coming out dirty,” she poses?
Brewster says this also has tied in with his marketing approach. “It’s so basic, but you have to have those things in place before you go out and start marketing,” he offers.
Attendees suggest information is key. Making sure you have the proper information at the front of any message works, as there are more things vying for people’s time than every before.
In the end, some things haven’t changed over the last couple of years — you’re selling yourself to fix more than just cars.
“We fix the customer and we help them through their car issues, but we fix the customer,” says Brewster. “It’s not rocket science and if you take care of the customer, they’re going to want to come back.”