ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
20.07.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Create a Positive Buying Experience

Author: Chris Stiehl Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 07-03-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 8 | Rating:  (55) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

A few years ago, when I worked at Cadillac, we studied the customer-buying experience in great detail. Our customers talked about how uncomfortable they were when buying a car. They felt cheap and as if the dealer was taking advantage of them in the negotiations. The proverbial used car salesman approach was well earned.

Customers typically felt as though the negotiations were not honest and above board. They would make an offer. The salesman would disappear to check with the sales manager to see if the customer offer could possibly be accepted. The customers believed that the salesman was actually in the break room having a cigarette, making them sweat. In that way, they would be more likely to accept any counteroffer he made.

The customers believed these negotiations were insincere. They felt cheated. How could they know that they had received the best price on the car? Their neighbors bragged about the deal that they had received. Was the price they negotiated as good, or, did they lose out in the deal? No matter what eventually happened, the customer often felt bad about the experience. They said so in our research and in J. D. Power surveys about the buying experience. But we were in the business of making the customers feel good about their purchase, not uncomfortable!

When GM decided to create Saturn, the intent was to create a new customer experience. GM had not performed particularly well in the small car market. To compete with the Japanese, top management decided to locate Saturn in Tennessee, away from Detroit and all that was typical of GM. Many of the leaders assigned to Saturn were from Cadillac and were aware of the research concerning the purchasing experience. They set out to create, as they said in advertising, a decidedly different customer buying experience.

Saturn management listened carefully to customers. For starters, executives decided that there would be one price, and it would not be negotiable. In that way, the buyer need not worry that someone else was getting a better deal. The hard sell approach was dropped. Customers were encouraged to look over the cars and ask questions, but the intent was to let the customers and cars interact on their own, without the salesperson being involved until needed or unless there was a question.

This approach was founded upon serious retraining on the part of the sales staff. They were taught what tactics and sales strategies would create the best sales experience for the customers. The Saturn ad campaigns echoed the sales strategy. They highlighted the sales experience as being different, fair and fun. They showed salespeople driving hundreds of miles to show a car to a customer in a remote location. The message from Saturn was clear: We want you to have a pleasant sales experience, and you will love your car! Saturn executives had listened and heard their target market asking for change in how cars were sold.

The entire sales experience was designed to relieve the customer anxiety about the purchase price and the purchase decision. Saturn was the first new car division for a U.S. automotive manufacturer since Ford introduced the Edsel in the late 1950s. Saturn leaders had been given a chance to design their sales process and customer experience from a clean sheet of paper. They listened well and reinforced the message in their ads. The focus was on having a great sales experience as much as it was about the innovative qualities of the car. In a very real sense, they were selling the customer buying experience.

Saturn sales for the first couple of years were quite brisk. Saturn products and the sales experience continue to evolve. Sales growth was better than 6 percent for both 2006 and 2007. Saturn has been able to launch innovative new products while maintaining the fun and fair mantra of the customer sales experience.

Obviously, the experience after the customer has bought the car is important in the long run. However, Saturn was launched in an attempt to change the customer experience with GM small cars. By almost any measure, including sales, that was achieved by listening well to what the customers described as their desirable experience as well as the pains that they had experienced.

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/sales-articles/create-a-positive-buying-experience-353282.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Chris Stiehl is an author (co-author of the soon to be released Pain Killer Marketing), teacher and consultant. He has 35 years of experience working in Fortune 500 companies to improve customer satisfaction and performance.Find out more at http://www.stiehlworks.com.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Maori - The Tattooed Face Of Native Marketing
By: Hirini Reedy | 24/06/2006 | Marketing
In a global world, your marketing must align with the culture of each market. You need to think like a native. Show respect for ancient custom. Tap into the cultural vein so that you understand the wisdom behind the tattooed face.


By: | 31/12/1969 |

Become Friends and Then Do Business
By: Brian Strachan | 03/01/2007 | Leadership
Maximize your results with everyone you deal with. Get to know them first and then conduct business. It works.

Emotional Types Mastery
By: Kurt Mortensen | 11/01/2007 | Leadership
Over the centuries, philosophers have tried to categorize the very many complex emotions of humanity--no easy task. Philosophers argued emotions are largely influenced by one's time period and culture. In the persuasive process, you want to eliminate negative emotions while constructing positive emotions. Aristotle came up with fourteen emotions: * Anger * Patience * Friendship * Enmity * Fear * Confidence * Shame * Shamelessness * Emulation * Contempt...

Engaging The Five Senses
By: Kurt Mortensen | 17/01/2007 | Leadership
We were all born with five senses, each one helping us to make generalizations about the world. You should engage all five sensations when trying to persuade an audience. However, keep in mind that there are three dominating senses we gravitate toward. They are sight, hearing and feeling, or, visual,...

Team Focus - How to Re-set the Sights
By: Andrew Wood | 09/03/2007 | Leadership
Identifying a team members complacency is often the key to re-generating a workforce, it's a common problem and one that can have disastrous effects.

Three Steps To Using The Law Of Dissonance
By: Kurt Mortensen | 31/03/2007 | Leadership
Just like anything in life, there is an art an a science. In this article I outline the step by step science to using dissonance effectively. Take the material I teach you and use your art to apply the most effective method in a given situation. STEP ONE: GET A COMMITMENT You...

The Blame Game: Selling Negative Motivation
By: Barry Maher | 06/04/2007 | Leadership
How you handle your mistakes (even when your mistakes aren't yours)can make all the difference in the results you get.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Frequently Asked Questions

Does anyone happen to know how much does a market ..
By: anne gr | 09-07-2008
Does anyone happen to know how much does a market day sales account representative make?

Advertising Sales
By: homeintheusa | 09-07-2008
Does anyone have any experience with Southeast Publication, of Florida, either selling for or using the service they offer?

4th of july sale
By: suzys | 03-07-2008
any 4th of july sales going on??????? thanks,suzy

Have a bunch of stuff I'd like to sell but dont ...
By: Carla | 03-07-2008
Have a bunch of stuff I'd like to sell but dont have time to do the whole e-bay thing, anybody know of anyone who could sell on ebay for me or of any good consignment shops that will sell my stuff

Would there be any harm to a private business ...
By: drabsv | 03-07-2008
Would there be any harm to a private business enterprise if they keep their whole (monthly) budget open to the public?

How many nursing homes are in Illinois
By: robert | 03-07-2008
how many nursing homes are in Illinois

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Sales Articles

Business Custom T-Shirts: How to Promote Sales
By: Ron Subs | 19/07/2008
Small businesses need every tool available to make as many sales as possible. Custom T-shirts can be used in several ways to increase business success.

Corporate Gifts, to Promote the Company
By: John Mahoney | 19/07/2008
One of the common ways to promote a company is through the distribution of the corporate gifts. Corporate printing gifts are an easy and appropriate way to promote a company.

4 Keys To Making Your Cold Call Stress-Free
By: Adam Price | 18/07/2008
From the traditional point of view, cold calling conversations should constantly lead towards making sale. We've been given only one path to follow, and that's getting a "yes."

Using A "Sales Pitch" Kills Cold Calls
By: Adam Price | 18/07/2008
The moment you use the old-school cold calling approach the traditional pitch about who you are and what you have to offer you trigger the negative salesperson stereotype. And that usually means instant rejection from your prospect.

Sell Wholesale Products Online And Earn!
By: Konrad Braun | 17/07/2008
Once you join (and pay for the membership) you will be given products from other people that you can sell on sites like eBay, amazon, or your own sites.

The Services of a Freight Forwarder UK
By: Ken Wilson | 17/07/2008
The United Kingdom, a prosperous country that handles a lot of goods, needs options for the transportation of those goods. Where there is lots of cargo, there will be a lot of companies that will provide transportation services. But how do you know if you made the right choice?

The Basics of Freight Forwarding UK
By: Ken Wilson | 17/07/2008
One of the oldest occupations in this world is trading. Since ancient times people have traded one thing they didn’t need for another they thought useful. With the passing of time, all of the trading activities that were based on product exchange have been brought to common ground with currency.

Freight Forwarding Basics
By: Ken Wilson | 17/07/2008
Freight forwarding companies are essential to the proper functioning of the global economy. A freight forwarder – often referred to as a forwarder – is a professional logistics provider. Freight forwarders are third parties and their objective is to dispatch shipments via asset based carriers such as ships, airplanes or trucks. The main purpose of turning to the services of freight forwarders is arranging cargo movement to an international destination quickly and easily. Freight forwarding compa

More from Chris Stiehl

What if the Person Building Your Product Met the Customer Who Would be Buying It?
By: Chris Stiehl | 01/06/2008 | Marketing Tips
Would your employees be happy to meet the customers, and vice versa? Study an example where this idea came true.

Manage Key Accounts As If They Were Key
By: Chris Stiehl | 07/03/2008 | Sales
In too many companies key accounts are not managed as well as they should be. Often, too many accounts are given this status, resulting in poorer service for the best customers. This article describes how to correct this situation and treat your key accounts as if they really were key.

Treat Your Sales People Like Customers!
By: Chris Stiehl | 25/02/2008 | Sales
In many companies, if a salesman doesn't sell well right away, he is fired. In smart companies, sales people are as valued as customers.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below