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It’s Easy Rider: 9 Tips To Sell More Motorcycles

Have you ever sat down and figured out exactly how much money you were losing year over year? How about your sector of business as a whole?

I was interviewed on FOX last week by Kelly Wright on the jaw-dropping fact that motorcycle dealers’ sales fell nearly 44% last year and 4% below that for the first quarter of 2010. FOX received their tip from the Los Angeles Times story a week earlier, Motorycle Dealers Still Scrambling to Find Customers by Susan Carpenter

You can watch the clip here: Bob Phibbs on FOX News.

My take on the news? Here are 9 points for any retailer:

  1. Motorcycle dealers, like many retailers got lazy with their sales process. They filled the store with models and oftentimes clerked rather than sold the product
  2. On top of that, many dealers hired enthusiasts as sales people. That often means they identified with someone’s hard luck story. “I can’t buy it so I understand you can’t either.”   As a result, they sell what is cheap rather than what is best or profitable.
  3. Discounts and price-matching compounded those problems and for many have become a race to unprofitability and the out of business sign.
  4. Cheap credit bought people to their showrooms who couldn’t’ pay during the bubble, but the ones who could buy are still there.
  5. What are the sales team’s conversion rates of people walking in vs. those buying?.  People don’t come into any retailer any more to dream – they want to buy. Your sales people must help them do that.
  6. Many still display all the bikes like they were refrigerators, line after line – it doesn’t spotlight the joy of riding.
  7. New marketing has to include YouTube videos of people enjoying their bikes as well as dealer events.
  8. Where are their programs to attract women riders or first timers? Dealers could offer to pay for new riders’ classes in a rebate on their vehicle.
  9. Finally, no matter what product you sell, if you have a bunch of salespeople who continue to bemoan how no one is buying, give them sales training but if they can’t cut it, replace them – even if its your husband.

Motorcycle dealers have got to sell the thrill of a motorcycle, not a cheap piece of metal.  In the article a reporter from Dealer News hit it on the head, ”The enthusiasm for motorcycling never went away.”

You can’t wish for 2007 to come again – you need people without baggage to sell your merchandise.

To learn how to grow your business, check out my new book

Haggling Helpless Retailers

images-3Stories about haggling continue to abound with wild claims of amount saved and pervasiveness in America right now. Case in point was this article in the Los Angeles Times by Susan Carpenter, Go Ahead, Haggle. It quoted Pam Goodfellow with BIGresearch, a consumer intelligence firm that “Everybody’s looking for innovative ways to save a few dollars. If that means going to a garage sale and haggling a $10 item down to $5, it’s something people are doing right now.”  She said a 2008 survey found that 50% of Americans were haggling for better prices on all kinds of products in light of the economy.

Cheap people have been around forever.  You’ve had to deal with them before and so have I.  When I used to sell western wear in the 80′s I’d have guys ask me to “throw in the shoe trees and I’ll take ‘em.” No dice. I remember asking one guy, “So how do you buy groceries – say, ‘I’ll take the grapes if you throw in the Windex?’”  It usually got a laugh and a sale. Again, if you are a salesperson, you learn to read people and know how to be a chameleon with customers.

How did I develop thick skin to not discount? I saw the slippery slope I would be going down if haggling produced results.  The gal or guy gets their way. They tell their friends of the “great deal.” Their friends come looking for that deal. You have to remember what you did to repeat it.  Then the original person comes back and wants an even BIGGER deal for all the business they brought you.

The piece that I think so many businesses leave out is training their employees to not do it.  I don’t care that Seth Godin has said all employees should be “empowered to discount up to 10% to save a sale.” That’s not good management.

Your employees are hurting themselves and faced with debt. They identify with anyone looking for a deal. They already feel you are making boat loads of money off them. They don’t know how to sell to begin with so if someone will like them for giving them a “deal,” they’ll do it.  That can kill profits.

zeroperent-offHere’s how to stop the haggling virus:

  • Explain how much profit you make to your crew from every dollar showing rent, taxes, insurance, health benefits, advertising, the works; with most businesses it is about 3 – 5 cents out of each dollar paid.  Any less money is less to pay them.
  • Train employees how to sell (see product at end of this article)
  • Institute a “no haggling” policy. Just don’t do it.
  • Give scripts for what to say you can do if asked that might include: “No, we don’t have a lower price on this item but you can sign-up on our e-club to get the best prices right here.” “We have a similar item over here.”  “You can put it on layaway.”

You must have scripts or well-meaning employees say things like, “I’m sorry I can’t do that,” which implies that someone else can. Or they say, “Only the manager can do that,” which implies the manager can.

As more stories continue to pop up by writers identifying with people looking for discounts you have to arm yourself to stop it, or face becoming one of those haggling helpless retailers grateful for any sale.

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sales-rx-webHow to grow sales in a down economy? The Retail Doc’s Five Parts to a Successful Sale is Phibbs proven sales techniques on two DVDs with workbook.  You’ll actually see Phibbs training a crew with the exact exercises needed to instill a sales process into your store.

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