Sep
21
2009
0

ContactAtOnce! Announces License Agreement with CarsDirect

Today we announced that CarsDirect has licensed ContactAtOnce! and is making it available to all dealers with their premium advertising package at no additional charge.   

If  you are already using ContactAtOnce! on your dealership’s website or another 3rd party site, and you use CarsDirect, ask your rep to get you hooked up.

If you aren’t using CarsDirect, give them a try.   From the release:

“CarsDirect has always excelled at connecting consumers shopping for new and used vehicles online with reputable dealers,” said Ken Potter, Vice President and General Manager of Automotive Sales and Industry Relations at CarsDirect. “Adding car dealer chat features to our rich portfolio of products and features makes it even more convenient for our users to ask questions and set appointments and as a result, we are delivering more qualified leads to our dealer partners.”

CarsDirect Screenshot Showing ContactAtOnce!

CarsDirect Screenshot Showing ContactAtOnce!

Written by admin in: Why Chat? | Tags: ,
Sep
17
2009
0

Marketing to Car Shoppers - Get Educated

Last month we featured a post about Dennis Galbraith’s new business, RevenueGuru.    Dennis recently released a new white paper entitled “The Preference-Engagement Matrix” that we’d recommend to anyone involved with dealership marketing.  Yes, there’s a chat angle (Dennis knows from his Cars.com experience that chat helps shoppers engage the dealership in a conversation), but the white paper isn’t about chat.  The following paragraph pretty much sums things up:

Whether advertising is online or offline says nothing about its contribution to connecting the shopper with the store. Contact is a result of preference, for the vehicle and the dealership. Until the shopper has some level of preference for a vehicle at the store or preference for the store itself as the solution for finding a vehicle, most shoppers will avoid contact. For the shopper, searching online or across a variety of print ads until a preference is established makes a great deal more sense than hopping from store to store on an exploratory basis.

Dennis’ analysis is excellent and insightful.  Read the free white paper and get educated about marketing to car shoppers.

Written by John Hanger in: Uncategorized |
Sep
14
2009
1

Chat Basics You Already Know (Even Though You May Not Have Realized It…)

We all know how wonderful live chat is and how it benefits the dealership; however, is it being used effectively? Every chat customer is a potential buyer and should be treated that way. Here are a few common sense tips that you already apply in phone conversations but are sometimes forgotten while chatting:

  1. Answer a customer’s questions promptly, even if you are looking up information for them. In a phone conversation you’re naturally going to say, “Hang on for a second while I check on that info.” In chat the need to acknowledge the customer is even more important because they can’t hear that you are actively doing something and might think you forgot about them. In the ContactAtOnce client you can use the predefined Status shortcuts to help you out, for instance “Bear with me a moment while I look that up.” Is the very first shortcut in the Status group.
  2. Be polite and professional. In a phone conversation, if a customer gets heated and begins to raise their voice, you remain professional and do not raise your voice back. The same goes with chat, you do not have to YELL just because the customer is YELLING. Your attitude could make or break the customer’s experience and could send them, and their money, down the road to your competition. You would never want your receptionist to answer the phone “ABC Dealer, what do you want?”, just as you would never answer a chat “You’re bothering me, what do you need?”.   As your mom said, “Be nice and saying please and thank you can go a long way”. And remember that if you use another application that requires caps to turn off your caps lock when you answering the conversation.
  3. Tell the customer who you are. Just as you would on the phone, say “Hi, My name is ___”. Usually the customer will respond with their name, and you didn’t even have to ask. Now that you have their name, it will be easier to get their contact information later in the conversation. For example, if the customer asks if a certain vehicle is available, you can say “Mark let me check on that for you, but it could take several minutes. Can I call or email you when I have the information?” Since they asked the question, they want the answer, and will usually give you their contact information.
Written by Jill Skurtovich in: Conversations, Uncategorized | Tags:

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