“Tracy Myers is a visionary…
a Walt Disney for a new generation.”

– Brian Tracy, New York Times Best-Selling Author

Award Winning Ads Versus ROI Producing Ads

There are two types of ads: one wins awards for the agency that created it and one makes money for the client. It is rare for one ad to be able to do both. Below is an example of an award winning ad, or at least one that should be. It was created by BBH, London for Axe Body Spray. It’s visually stunning. In fact, I would even call it art. Here’s the problem. It won’t make one dollar for Unilever, the makers on Axe. The three cardinal sins of this ad? There’s not an irresistible offer, no call to action and no deadline for the offer. So the next time you’re creating the next ad or marketing campaign for your dealership, ask yourself if you want it to win an award or if you want it to make money. Unless you’ve got marketing money to burn like Apple or Coke, the answer should be apparent.

Award Winning Marketing

By |2014-03-10T18:40:50-04:00March 10, 2014|Blog|

Why Dealers Should Avoid This Type Of Advertising

I often talk about the 2 different types of ads: award winning ones and ones that produce an ROI, or Return On Investment. Click the photo below to see a perfect example of an award winning commercial. It’s by Apple and it’s beautifully done. The problem is that car dealerships who try and emulate this formula will fail. Why? Simply put, they don’t have “Apple money” (I called it Coke money before Apple’s heyday). If you own or represent a company smaller than Apple, take heed: STOP trying to create award winning ads. The bill collector doesn’t care, your dealership employees don’t care and your family doesn’t care. What they all care about is that your ad is a lead generator. So should you.

apple-our-signature

By |2014-03-08T11:15:37-05:00March 8, 2014|Blog|

21 Secrets Of A Money-Making Customer Experience/Part 6

Starbucks Experience SecretsGREG: Welcome to the fifth and final entry of Uncle Frank’s 21 Secrets of Creating a Money-Making Customer Experience. Today we’re wrapping up our final conversation with Tracy Myers, founder of the Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group and the owner of Frank Myers Auto Maxx in Winston-Salem.

Now that we’ve gone through all twenty-one secrets, let’s kind of break it down for everyone that’s been listening throughout these five parts.
Can you give some specific steps or some specific actions that are going to help all the business owners listening to improve and enhance their customer experience, which ultimately, really, is going to help them grow their business?
TRACY: Well, instead of lots of small ones, I’m going to share one big
one. That one big action step to take today: get creative or find someone in your organization who is, and learn to wow your customers.
Please know that you have to have the right people and processes in place first or the wow factor won’t work. It can’t be bad people, bad processes, and a wow experience. It doesn’t happen that way.
But if you’ve got the right people and the right processes in place, and you bring someone on or create a wow factor yourself in your business, then nothing will take your business like another level like the wow factor will.
The secret to wowing your customers is to look for problems they would love for you to solve, but don’t expect you to. Then when you do, you’ll wow them. I’d like to end with another story about Disney, for a matter of fact.
We just got back from Disney again; we love Disney. We were there about two weeks ago and I rarely rent a car when I go there and we didn’t stay in the resort.
I was there on part business, part pleasure; the family’s with me and the first couple times we took a standard cab. Anyone that’s rode in any cab, USA, in any city, USA, knows what that experience is like. There is no experience in a cab.
So when we were at the hotel one day, we were getting ready to leave, and I don’t really like riding the shuttles either because I like me and my family to enjoy that time together and when you’re on a bus, mass transit with fifty other people, that’s kind of tough, especially with smaller children that want to run up and down the aisles of the bus; that’s another story for another day.
I asked the hotel if there was another way that we could get to the park. They said of course. So we waited outside for five minutes and a big black Yukon came and pulled up right outside.
A guy came out in a white shirt, black tie, black pants: “Waiting for a ride, sir?” I said, “Absolutely.” “Going to Disney?” “Yes, I am.” “Please get in.” He opened the door, he pulled the stool out, we got inside, he said, “What radio station do you listen to?”
I said, “Sir, I have no idea, I’m from out of town.” “Well, what type of music do you listen to?” I told him; he found the station for me. He asked the kids- this is before we take off, now- he asked the children what kind of movies they like, and they were amazed that he was asking.
Of course, my daughter’s six, my son is nine, so the disconnect between Dora the Explorer and whatever my son’s into- Pokémon- they found something that they would watch together on the DVD player in the back, which made my wife really happy.
So we get a peaceful trip to Disney. Before we got out, the guy says, “When are you coming back?” We said, “We have no idea, sir. Whenever we get tired and get ready.”
He gave us a card and said, “When you get ready, you call me. I’ll be here; give me fifteen minutes.” Well, guess who we used for the rest ofthe week for our trips back and forth to the park, and guess who got a very, very substantial amount of money from tips at the end of the week?
When he took us to the airport there was a traffic jam; he found the alternate routes and got us there no sweat, no nothing. And guess who I’ll call the next time I’m in Florida and need transportation?
I’ll call him because he provided me the wow experience that I wasn’t expecting. When he delivered, he knocked that home run out of the park. And guess what I’m doing today?
I’m telling you, Greg, and all the listeners know about it as well, and there’s no better form of marketing and advertising than creating that wow factor and having an advocate like I am for this cab driver in Florida. You need, and business owners need, and I need consumer advocates like that for my business.
GREG: I guess all I can say after hearing that story and all twenty-one secrets to you is, wow. This has been a great experience and I want to thank you for taking the time out to go over all these secrets and strategies that have been so important to the success of not only your business but yourself, personally and professionally.
What I wanted to do now is after going through these twenty-one secrets, I’m sure that some of the people are going to have some more questions, or maybe they’re going to want to work with you. I know that you have some great services and some great ways of connecting with business owners.
I was hoping that you could share a little bit about what you do to help car dealership owners to have more success, deliver a better a customer experience into their businesses.
TRACY: The easiest way for businesses to learn more about the twenty one secrets that we talked about today, among other things, is to actually apply for membership into the Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group, which meets in Charlotte 3 times a year.
The Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group is a great idea; we actually bring automotive professionals together from across the United States and Canada and we moderate the conversation for people who are already top performers or who are ready to take the action needed to become one of the best in the industry.

In fact, I believe in this group so much that anyone who can’t make an additional $100,000 in the next 12 months from what they learn from being a member, the chances are they won’t be invited back the following year. Anyone interested can find out more at UnfairAdvantageMastermind.com
GREG: That’s great, Tracy. Thanks again for sharing that resource; I encourage everyone to check out UnfairAdvantageMastermind.com. There are some great resources on the page and you can find out when they are having their next meeting. Tracy, once again, thanks for sharing these twenty-one secrets with everyone.
TRACY: It’s been all my pleasure and it has been lots of fun.
GREG: That’s one of the success principles and I had a lot of fun as well, and I hope everyone listening did. Again, at this point you should have a full action guide with a lot of things you can bring back to your business and to your team members and ultimately deliver a great customer experience. I want to thank you all for going through this program and we will speak to you all real soon.
– To Read Part 1 Of This Series, Click HERE.
– To Read Part 2 Of This Series, Click HERE.
– To Read Part 3 Of This Series, Click HERE.
– To Read Part 4 Of This Series, Click HERE.
– To Read Part 5 Of This Series, Click HERE.
– To learn more about Tracy Myers, visit his website HERE.
By |2014-02-18T16:42:16-05:00February 18, 2014|Blog, Winston Salem Business News|

21 Secrets Of A Money-Making Customer Experience/Part 5

Marketing Tips From Tracy MyersGREG: Welcome back to Part Five in Uncle Frank’s 21 Secrets of Creating a Money-Making Customer Experience. Today we’re speaking with Tracy Myers, founder of the Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group and the owner of Frank Myers Auto Maxx in Winston-Salem.

Over the first four sections, Tracy has covered a lot of different secrets that have really impacted his business and shared with you ways you can bring his same secrets and principles into your own business.

Here in the fifth module, we’re going to be revealing secrets sixteen to twenty-one and really show you how they can impact your business. Tracy, in this final section we’re looking at a few more of these secrets, and number sixteen says to make everything easy.

As a business owner I would love to make things easy so Tracy, how can business owners make things easy for the customers in their business or in their sales process?

TRACY: Well, look at how easy Apple made it to use a Mac. It took my six-year-old daughter three months to figure out a PC, three months! But it took her a day to figure out a Mac.

That’s a business model that I wanted to follow, so I created an “easy list” for businesses to follow. These things have helped my life easier, my team members and customers happier, plus they’ve helped make my business more profitable.

Number one: get organized.

Number two: help your team members distress. As a matter of fact, once a month, we hire a mobile masseuse to come to the dealership and give our team members massages. Pretty nice, right?

GREG: That would be, yeah.

TRACY: Most of my Team Members think so.

Number three: update your business as technology improves. It amazes me the dealerships that I go into across the country as I’m doing my consulting work and they’ve got outdated computer equipment. They’ve got computers that are four, five, and six years old, and the way computers and technology is changing, a five-year-old computer is like a hundred years old in the years of anything else. It’s way past its prime.

Number four: have all employees know what is expected of them, and this is a huge one. Also, let them know how decisions regarding their work will be made.

Number five: have management question all employees about your process as to whether there’s a better way to do something.

Number six: focus on giving more to the customer. Solicit ideas for what else they may want, but always test these ideas on a small scale before plunging in; in an earlier module we talked about testing.

Number seven: focus on your competition and learn why they are better or worse in every aspect.

Number eight: focus on creativity by looking for creative people in your business. Hand them problems and review their solutions. Too many businesses hand problems to analytical people, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but I would like them to encourage them to give problems to creative people. They’re possibly the most underutilized people in business today.

Number nine: focus on directing rather than managing, especially micromanaging. Cut that out altogether.

GREG: That was great, I love those nine things you just shared. Much like the nine things you just shared and everything you’ve been sharing over the course of this product it builds into secret number seventeen which is to go the extra mile.

I can tell that you go the extra mile in everything that you do in just speaking with you for the last couple sections. What are some ways that make you look like that hero to your customers by going the extra mile and what does that do to the mind and the psychology of the customer, especially when they’re making the purchase and after they make the purchase?

TRACY: I’m going to keep this really simple by sharing a quote from the excellent book The Go-Giver by my friend Bob Burg and John David Mann: “The secret to success, to gaining it, to having it, is to give, give, give. The secret to getting is giving. And the secret to giving is making yourself open to receiving.”

Remember, the more you have, the more you have available to give. Don’t shut off the flow. To answer your question, there are lots of ways to go the extra mile, but the way that makes the most impact is to give, give, give back to your customers.

It doesn’t have to be monetary; it can be kindness, it can be calling your customer on their birthday, remembering their name, remembering the name of their spouse and asking how their kids are doing. All these things make a massive impact on your customers, their families, and their lives, and especially your relationship with your customer, which is what you’re trying to grow.

GREG: That’s great and you know, I’m sure you have examples for days of the ways that you’ve gone the extra mile in your business, or how team members in your business have gone the extra mile.

I was hoping you could share just maybe one or two of these examples where you’ve gone that extra mile to please a customer and really everything changed, put a smile on their face and you really looked like the hero at the end of the day?

TRACY: There are literally hundreds of specific instances that I can recall since I’ve been here so long, but from my experience the one thing that most customers want you to do that most businesspeople don’t do is to listen to them.

I don’t mean talk back to them or even just let them talk to you; I mean intently listen. I remember many years ago, I sold a car to an older lady. Two years later she came back to me, she asked for me, I greeted her, and she wanted to know if she could talk to me.

Of course I said yes; I thought she wanted another car. We went to my office. She talked and talked and talked for over an hour about everything under the sun except a car.

She was all over the place, and me being a lot younger and a lot less patient, I was asking myself, what in the world does this have to do with selling this lady a car? So I interrupted her and I was very rude to do so but I said, “What kind of car are you looking for today?”

Well, she looked at me, she stared at me for a moment, dropped her head, and she started crying uncontrollably. When she pulled herself together she apologized and she explained that she didn’t want a car; her husband had passed away three weeks earlier and she just needed someone to talk to.

Well, that statement, of course- that lady changed my life forever. Plus, she’s bought more than a dozen cars from me over the years. It was definitely a win-win situation because she got a car, she got someone to listen to, but I got a life lesson that I could never have paid for.

GREG: Wow, that’s a really moving story and I think that’s a really, really great example of how you can just take a little extra time and go that extra mile with a customer and at the end of the day you learned a lot, but it turned into a lifelong customer for you.

That actually rolls right into secret number eighteen, which is, you say,to get people talking. In another sense of it, how do you get your customers talking, raving and saying all this great stuff about you and now, through social media, going out and tweeting and Facebooking and leaving reviews about your business?

TRACY: You know, a few years back, Duct Tape Marketing Blog posted an article titled “Five Ways to Get Your Customers Talking”. We were doing a lot of those things already but I liked all five of those ways so much that I implemented them all that day.

Number one: ask them, not only in person, but also online. Find your most rabid customers, the ones that love you, and ask them first, and then branch off from there.

Number two: teach them. Sometimes great word of mouth just happens, but sometimes you’ve got to help it along.

Teach them how to leave great review on review sites such as Yelp or Citysearch. For us as a car dealer, we’ve got DealerRater or Car Dealer Search; just so many things to do online and so many places to leave a  review, your customer doesn’t always know how or know where you need that review. So teach them how.

Number three: include them. One of the most successful things I’ve done here at my dealership, and I’m going to do it for my other businesses, is I created a round table discussion group made of select customers, and I asked them to advise me on potential marketing and business initiative.

These round table members have become ambassadors for our brand.

Number four: star them. We make our customers the star of the party. We film the red carpet celebration after they buy a car, then we post it on the web, then we send them a link to share with their family and friends, and you know what?

They actually send it to their family and friends, and guess who sees that? Their family and friends. It’s the most profitable way to use a video camera in the world today.

Of course, with the smaller video cameras and iPhones, the way they are now and as inexpensive as they are now, there’s no reason why everyone shouldn’t have a video camera on them at all times and film every customer interaction that’s positive.

And Number five: surprise them. Nothing gets people talking more than surprising them. You know, I remember being at a restaurant with my son and seeing one of my customers and her family sitting across from me. Before I left, I asked my waiter to bring me her check, and I paid for their dinner. Guess who she told? Everybody.

GREG: Five really, really super-powerful ways to get your audience talking, get your fans talking and raving. Those are just some really, really great tips. I can just get the sense, Tracy, just talking to you, that  you just live customer experience secret number nineteen, and that’s to treat customers as friends.

How can businesses and your team members and associates make customers feel like they’re a part of something bigger, a part of your family, yet still have that working business relationship?

TRACY: Greg, the only way to make customers like they’re a part of our family is to build a proper relationship with them. Proper relationship building creates a connection with our customers and converts strangers into friends, and that’s what we’re really trying to do in business.

People want to do business with people they like. They stick with what makes them feel safe, secure, and comfortable. Companies that understand the principles of belonging, friendship, and dependability treat their customers accordingly. The way we treat our customers has a direct impact on our business relationships.

GREG: That’s great, I love that advice a lot. Rolling into secret number twenty, it says to always make the customer right. I know as I said that I heard some business owners just cringe and you know, that’s not always a popular thing to do, but how do you overcome your own pride or your own ego and really lay it on the line and make the right decision for your customer?

TRACY: Once again, Disney really does this right. Their cast members are taught that every customer is special, and that each interaction between a customer and staff is a link to the chain of the customer’s experience.

Disney understands if they do something wrong, they’re erasing the customer’s memories of good treatment up to that moment, but if they do something right, they can undo any wrong that may have happened before.

GREG: That’s great, and I can only imagine that in the car business you have your share of stories. I’d love if you could share a story when you really had to dig deep and make a tough decision in your business and put the customer in the position to be right and ultimately help them get what they wanted or what they needed?

TRACY: Oh, the stories I could tell. I’ll share one; I received an email from someone who had called my dealership and spoken to one of my noncommissioned sales pros. She said, quote, “He was the rudest human being that had ever walked the face of the earth”.

That’s pretty strong. Normally I would have called her immediately to apologize, but her words were so harsh about this sales pro and this person was someone who always, and I mean always, receives praise from his customers, I was really caught off guard.

So since I record all the phone calls, I went back and listened to the call. Realistically, I was shocked at how nice and polite my team member was to this lady while she was literally shouting at him.

He never raised his voice and even apologized for himself, and I’m not even sure why he apologized. He had done nothing wrong. Of course, my first instinct was to call this lady and give her a piece of my mind; I am only human.

Instead I called, apologized, and listened. For more than thirty minutes, I listened, and then she apologized to me and thanked me for listening to her.

She admitted that she was frustrated with car salesmen and had took it out on my team member. That lady ended up buying a car from us and ended up being one of our biggest fans in the community.

GREG: I love that story and I think a lot of people can really just learn from that one experience and really transcend it into their business, no matter what vertical they’re in or what industry they’re in.

There’s a lot to be learned there and that really brings a lot of secrets that you’ve been talking about together, from listening to making the customer right and the whole experience. This really brings us to the culmination, which is secret number twenty-one.

The final secret here is to make a difference. After all of these twenty one secrets, and everything that needs to be done to make an exceptional business that puts their customers first, how can businesses make the world or their community or their place in the world a better place?

TRACY: A key principle at Starbucks is the idea that you should get the chance to leave your mark. The idea is that we’re not just in business to sell things; we should also make a difference, not just in our communities but in the world.

For some people, that may be about being socially responsible. For others, it may be about being involved in our communities. Quite simply, small businesses can and should come together in communities and do big things.

GREG: I love that, I love that a lot, and Tracy. Now we’ve gone through all twenty-one secrets and next time let’s kind of break it down for everyone. Thanks again for joining us and we will see you again soon to wrap this series up.

– To Be Continued. Stay Tuned For Part 6 Coming Soon.

– To Read Part 1 Of This Series, Click HERE.

– To Read Part 2 Of This Series, Click HERE.

– To Read Part 3 Of This Series, Click HERE.

– To Rad Part 4 Of This Series, Click HERE.

– To learn more about Tracy Myers, visit his website HERE.

By |2013-12-23T15:28:01-05:00December 23, 2013|Blog|

Business Owned By Tracy Myers Wins Award

INC Award Given To Tracy MyersINC magazine has named a business owned by Tracy Myers one of the fastest growing small businesses in America. Winston-Salem based used car dealership Frank Myers Auto Maxx, was on the list for the second consecutive year. The exclusive ranking was celebrated with a gala on October 12, 2013 in Washington DC and featured Gary Vaynerchuk, Jim Collins, Marc Ecko and other notable speakers. Past members of the INC list include Facebook, Intuit, Zappos, Under Armour, Microsoft, Jamba Juice, Timberland, ClifBar, Patagonia, Oracle and Zipcar. In addition to Frank Myers Auto Maxx, the list added such powerhouses as Publix Supermarkets, CDW and Levi Strauss.

“For more than 30 years, Inc. has celebrated the fastest growing private companies in America. To be honored this year is a particularly notable achievement. To rank among the Inc. 500/5000, the companies had to thrive through three of the toughest years this economy has seen in recent memory. Success in such times is eloquent testimony to creativity, resilience, and tenacity,” said Inc. Editor in Chief.

“When my great grandfather opened the first Frank Myers store more than 83 years go, I would like to believe that he wanted his family to carry on the excellent business legacy that he began. This award is dedicated to him, my dad, and the other Myers family members who came before me and who will come after me,” said Tracy Myers, owner of Frank Myers Auto Maxx.

Complete results of the Inc. 5000, including company profiles and an interactive database that can be sorted by industry, region, and other criteria, can be found at www.inc.com/5000.

The 2013 Inc. 500|5000 is ranked according to percentage revenue growth when comparing 2009 to 2012. To qualify, companies must have been founded and generating revenue by March 31, 2009. They had to be U.S.-based, privately held, for profit, and independent—not subsidiaries or divisions of other companies—as of December 31, 2011. (Since then, a number of companies on the list have gone public or been acquired.) The minimum revenue required for 2008 is $100,000; the minimum for 2011 is $2 million. As always, Inc. reserves the right to decline applicants for subjective reasons. Companies on the Inc. 500 are featured in Inc.’s September issue. They represent the top tier of the Inc. 5000, which can be found at www.inc.com/500.

For more about Frank Myers Auto Maxx, visit their blog at http://www.WinstonSalemUsedCars.com

For more about Tracy Myers, visit his blog at TracyMyers.com

By |2013-12-22T17:39:38-05:00December 22, 2013|Blog|

Lie With The Dogs & Rise With The Fleas

 Positive 2014I remembers the old saying: “If you lie with the dogs then you’ll rise with the fleas.” That’s why I encourage you to look closely at your relationships going into 2014. Put them into one of two categories: toxic or nourishing. It’s easy to spot the difference. Toxic people have a tendency to make you feel inadequate, angry, frustrated, or guilty. On the other hand, nourishing people make it a point to make others feel loved, valued, capable, appreciated and respected. Milton Glaser developed an easy test to determine if someone was toxic or nourishing in your relationship with them: After spending time with someone, observe whether you are more energized or less energized. If you are more tired then you have been poisoned. If you have more energy you have been nourished. PLEASE take time to detoxify the poisonous relationships in your life as soon as possible. This is one of the easiest ways to move onward and upward in 2014! Accentuate the positive…. Eliminate the negative. It’s an easy formula to follow and it works.

About Tracy

Tracy is an award-winning small business marketing & branding solutions specialist, car dealership owner, best-selling author, Emmy-winning movie producer, speaker, business coach and entrepreneur. He is commonly referred to as The Nation’s Premier Automotive Solutions Provider while Best-Selling author and legendary speaker Brian Tracy called him “a visionary… a Walt Disney for a new generation.”

He is also a Certified Master Dealer and was the youngest ever recipient of the National Quality Dealer of the Year award by the NIADA, which is the highest obtainable honor in the used car industry. His car dealership, Frank Myers Auto Maxx, was recently recognized as the number one Small Business in NC by Business Leader Magazine, one of the Top 3 dealerships to work for in the country by The Dealer Business Journal, one of the Top 15 Independent Automotive Retailers in the United States by Auto Dealer Monthly Magazine and one of the fastest growing privately owned small businesses in America by Inc. magazine.

Tracy has been featured in publications such as Forbes, USA Today and Success Magazine, been profiled on The Biography Channel and The History Channel, written for Fast Company, been a guest business correspondent for the FOX News Network plus he’s appeared on NBC, ABC and CBS affiliates across the country. His inspirational stories and strategies for success have given him the opportunity to share the stage with the likes of Jack Canfield, Zig Ziglar (Author of See You At The Top), James Malinchak (Star of ABC’s The Secret Millionaire), Brian Tracy, Bob Burg (Co-Author of The Go-Giver), Tom Hopkins and Neil Strauss (Author of The Game & Co-Author of The Dirt with Motley Crue)… just to name a few.

Tracy is recognized as one of the top thought-leaders in the business world and has authored or co-authored 7 best-selling books alongside Brian Tracy (Author of Eat That Frog), Jack Canfield (Author of The Secret, Creator of the Chicken Soup for the Soul Series), Tom Hopkins (Author of How To Master The Art Of Selling) and many others, including the breakthrough #1 hit YOU Are The Brand, Stupid!. He was also featured in the Emmy nominated film “Car Men”, which won 5 Telly Awards, and won 2 Emmy Awards as the Executive Producer of the films “Esperanza” and “Mi Casa Hogar”.

As the founder and co-moderator of the Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group, he helps facilitate and stimulate the thought process of some of the auto industry’s brightest minds 3 times a year in Charlotte, NC.

As founder of WrestleCade Entertainment, he produces and promotes one of the largest sports entertainment events held annually on the East Coast which has raised thousands for charity and broken attendance records.

Tracy spends his spare time with charities that are close to his heart and has made his home in Lewisville, NC with his wife Lorna and their two children, Presley and Maddie.

By |2013-12-21T20:45:03-05:00December 21, 2013|Blog|

Strong Customer Relationships: The Six Pillars/Part Three

Customers Have ChociesIn part one of Strong Customer Relationships, I introduced the six vital pillars that support strong customer relationships. I also discussed pillar #1: Making The Right First Impression (read about it HERE).

In part two, I discussed pillar #2: Being Easy To Do Business With (read about it HERE).

Each of these pillars have an important role to play and the stronger each of them are, the better your overall relationships will be. Today, let’s talk about pillar #3: Remembering Your Customer Has A Choice.

Pillar #3: Remembering Your Customer Has a Choice

One thing we can never afford to do is take our customers for granted. We should always remember they can usually go somewhere else to have their needs satisfied

For example, I recently had to make a claim on my home insurance policy after we’d suffered some particularly bad weather damage.

I’ve had cover for my home with the same company for years and they have been lobbying me for years to move my business insurance to them as that’s worth a very substantial premium to them.

In this case, part of our home got damaged and needed an urgent repair. It was fairly small in terms of cost but important to get it fixed quickly. Even so, the company was imposing strict rules about the way it should be fixed and who should do the work. It was going to take some time to get it all resolved.

In the end, it was easier just to get a handyman to do the repair and forget the insurance.

In this case, the money wasn’t that important but, with insurance, you want to be sure that if something goes wrong the whole process will be as smooth as possible.

Although I’d been paying them premiums for many years – and never claimed a dime – I felt they were letting me down at the one moment when I was looking to them for assistance.

That experience makes it unlikely I’ll be giving them more business. They allowed their procedures to get in the way of our relationship. They were making me jump through hoops when I needed urgent help.

The result was one of major inconvenience – and extra costs – for a good customer.

Their procedures – which may well be sensible in many situations – made life difficult for me when I needed assistance and they have lost business as a result.

The lesson from that experience is that we often create policies in the heat of the moment when something bad happens at the store level. This may be an overreaction to something that rarely happens – and we actually end up creating impediments to the very customers we are trying to help.

If you want to build long-term relationships with your customers, make sure you get rid of any unnecessary policies and procedures that make it harder for them to do business with you.

The way to make things easy for your customers is to be able to trust your frontline staff to do what’s necessary to serve and please them. That means your frontline staff needs to know that you stand behind them and will not come down on them for trying to please a customer.

The key to building strong relationships with your customers is remembering that your customers have many other places they can go to get what they need.

If you remember they have a choice, you will make it easy and enjoyable for them to do business with you!

– Stay Tuned For Strong Customer Relationships: The Six Pillars/Part Four. Coming Soon.

By |2013-12-05T16:34:22-05:00December 5, 2013|Blog|

7 Ways Smart Technology Can Make Customers Happy

small business technologyWith more people using smartphones and tablets to connect to the internet, they increasingly expect to be able to make purchases and get information wherever they are and whatever the time.

Businesses of all sizes that fail to meet these expectations will find themselves losing customers.

Yet those businesses that harness the potential of technology can use it to create an advantage.

In fact, a major benefit for smaller businesses is that they can offer the best of both worlds by combining the attractions of the latest technology with the old-fashioned personal touch.

Today’s customers want the power of technology but they also want to be treated as individuals.

The key is to ensure technology improves your service rather than creates a barrier between you and your customers.

Here are seven ways smaller businesses can make the most of technology while ensuring their service to customers is highly personalized.

  1. Providing better information: One of the easiest ways to enhance your customer service is to ensure customers have easy access to the information they need. A good start is just making sure that people can easily find details of your products and services online and find out where you are and how to contact you.
  2. Enhancing relationships: Creating a strong social media presence can help you stay in touch more easily with customers and help them learn more about you.
  3. Answering customer questions: Being able to handle questions quickly and easily can help you improve relationships and make more sales – this can be done through social media sites such as Twitter, through live online chat services and by using email. Speed of response is critical to success.
  4. Improving communication: Technology such as call-routing can make things easier for customers by ensuring they are talking to the right people to deal with their questions or issues. It’s vital to make sure this technology makes it easier for customers rather than raising barriers.
  5. Tailoring services to individuals: The more you know about your customers and their preferences, the easier it is to give them what they want. Collecting the right data will help you deliver information and services relevant to each individual.
  6. Making it easier to buy: The right technology makes it easier for people to buy what they want by simplifying and speeding up the purchase process. You can help people to find the right solution for their specific needs.
  7. Offering more channels of contact: The more ways someone can contact you, the more likely they are to buy. You can integrate different methods of purchase and communication – especially to take advantage of the growing popularity of mobile. Orders can be placed and tracked on smartphones and text messages can be used to communicate important information.

Many business owners worry that technology comes between them and their customers but the truth is that technology can enhance the relationship. Used correctly, it helps you get to know your customers, communicate with them better and satisfy their needs more effectively.

Customers want to work with businesses that use technology to save them money and make their lives easier. And most employees adapt easily to technology without needing time-consuming and costly training.

The key to success for the modern business is harnessing the full advantage of developing technologies while still delivering the personal touch that encourages customers to keep coming back.

– For More About The Author, Tracy Myers, visit his website at: TracyMyers.com

By |2013-10-19T14:04:38-04:00October 19, 2013|Blog|

Tracy Myers Guests On The Sean Moffett Show

Sean Moffett Radio ShowTracy Myers, CMD. Founders of The Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group, was interviewed on the nationally syndicated radio program The Sean Moffett Show.  The show was heard on October 10, 2013 on the Lifestyle Radio Network.

The Sean Moffett Show is a weekly, one hour, call in radio show in New York, NY. Sales, Business, and the use of Social Media are the focus of the show. Topics include how to excel in social media, why social media is the only way to grow your business today, and how to monetize your social media platforms for business success. Callers and listeners are lead through the do’s and don’t of sales, business, and social media today to provide success on all levels.

Moffett spoke with Myers about the upcoming Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group meeting. The Unfair Advantage Mastermind Group is a gathering of an exclusive group of the top automotive professionals in the country who are committed to recession proofing their incomes and are serious about increasing their business ten fold. The Growth Sessions are held 3 times per year in Charlotte, NC and are by invitation only. Preferred Vendor Partners include: Promax Unlimited, Dealer World, America’s Most Liked Dealer Services, Fidelis, What’s Next Media, DealerRE and Autopro Training Solutions.

About The Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group

The Unfair Advantage Automotive Mastermind Group will hold its first meeting October 13, 14 & 15 2013 at the Embassy Suites in Charlotte, NC. It’s NOT an auto conference and NOT a 20 Group. It’s the best of both w/ NO sales pitches & FREE for members! For more information or to apply for free membership, visit http://www.UnfairAdvantageMastermind.com

About Tracy E. Myers, CMD

Tracy is an award-winning small business marketing & branding solutions specialist, car dealership owner, best-selling author, speaker, business coach and entrepreneur. He is commonly referred to as The Nation’s Premier Automotive Solutions Provider while Best-Selling author and legendary speaker Brian Tracy called him “a visionary… a Walt Disney for a new generation.”

He is also a Certified Master Dealer and was the youngest ever recipient of the National Quality Dealer of the Year award by the NIADA, which is the highest obtainable honor in the used car industry. His car dealership, Frank Myers Auto Maxx, was recently recognized as the number one Small Business in NC by Business Leader Magazine, one of the Top 3 dealerships to work for in the country by The Dealer Business Journal, one of the Top 15 Independent Automotive Retailers in the United States by Auto Dealer Monthly Magazine and one of the fastest growing privately owned small businesses in America by Inc. magazine.

Tracy has been featured in publications such as Forbes, USA Today and Success Magazine, been profiled on The Biography Channel and The History Channel, written for Fast Company, been a guest business correspondent for the FOX News Network plus he’s appeared on NBC, ABC and CBS affiliates across the country. His inspirational stories and strategies for success have given him the opportunity to share the stage with the likes of Jack Canfield, Zig Ziglar (Author of See You At The Top), James Malinchak (Star of ABC’s The Secret Millionaire), Brian Tracy, Bob Burg (Co-Author of The Go-Giver), Tom Hopkins and Neil Strauss (Author of The Game & Co-Author of The Dirt with Motley Crue)…just to name a few.

Tracy is recognized as one of the top thought-leaders in the business world and has authored or co-authored 7 best-selling books alongside Brian Tracy (Author of Eat That Frog), Jack Canfield (Author of The Secret, Creator of the Chicken Soup for the Soul Series), Tom Hopkins (Author of How To Master The Art Of Selling) and many others, including the breakthrough #1 hit YOU Are The Brand, Stupid!. He was also featured in the Emmy nominated film “Car Men”, which won 5 Telly Awards, and is an Executive Producer of the film “Esperanza”.

As the founder of his own coaching & consulting program, Tracy teaches ambitious professionals, entrepreneurs and business owners how to get noticed, gain instant credibility, make millions and dominate their competition by building their expert brand.

Tracy spends his spare time with charities that are close to his heart and has made his home in Lewisville, NC with his wife Lorna and their two children, Presley and Maddie

For more info about Tracy, visit his official website at http://www.tracymyers.com

 

 

By |2013-10-10T12:40:47-04:00October 10, 2013|Blog, Events|

Strong Customer Relationships: The Six Pillars/Part Two

success pillarsIn part one of Strong Customer Relationships, I introduced the six vital pillars that support strong customer relationships. I also discussed pillar #1: Making The Right First Impression (read about it HERE).

The six pillars are as follows.

1) Making the Right First Impression

2) Being Easy to Do Business With

3) Remembering Your Customer Has a Choice

4) Making Life Better for Your Customers

5) Exceeding Expectations

6) Treating Your Customers as Individuals

Each of these pillars has an important role to play and the stronger each of them is the better your overall relationships will be. Today, let’s talk about Pillar #2: Being Easy To Do Business With.

Pillar #2: Being Easy to Do Business With

If you want to build strong customer relationships, you have to make sure that it’s as easy as possible for people to deal with you.

You are in business to take care of your customers and make their life easier so there are some fundamental issues you have to get right as part of that process.

The first element of that is that you need to be easily accessible to your customers. They should be able to contact or visit you when and how it is most convenient to them.

It sounds simple but the key to happy customers is often as basic as returning calls, answering e-mails, and addressing complaints promptly.

It is basics like these that sustain long-term relationships. But, when you fail in the basics, any extras you deliver will count for nothing.

My support team knows I expect all customer inquiries and problems to be addressed within twenty-four hours if at all possible. They are proud to measure up to that standard.

However, things go wrong in even the best run businesses and the occasional problem or complaint can actually be an opportunity to create a lifetime fan. You need to be ready to react quickly to put things right.

While we all need the help of technology to make systems smoother and more efficient, you never build trust and strong relationships if you always hide behind automated systems and voicemail.

When you put the focus on people over technology, you will strengthen the bonds between you, your employees and your customers. If people feel they have some sort of personal contact available, the trust and relationship will be stronger.

If you want to make things easy for your customers, you need to avoid setting up rules and procedures that are designed to make life easy for you rather than for them.

Doing that can often create blocks and obstacles for customers who would otherwise be ready to give you money.

For example, most of our customers want to take test rides before they buy an auto. That’s perfectly reasonable.

However we once had a car stolen during a test ride, and our insurance company started bringing in additional policies to help avoid theft. They sent us new rules and conditions that had to be mounted next to the front desk.

As a result of the new policy, customers who wanted to take a test ride had to leave a credit card or driver’s license.

I saw this as an overreaction to a rare situation and believed it would become an impediment to doing business. For me, the idea of creating policies and procedures to combat the tiny percentage who might seek to take advantage of me makes it more difficult for the vast majority.

Of course, you need to be sensible as a business owner but you should design your business as much as possible to make things easy for the people who want to give you money.

If you make it easy for people to do business with you, and if you are polite and courteous, you will have happy customers.

If you go just a few extra steps to make your customers’ experiences with you memorable, they will be singing your praises from the rooftops!

– To Read Part One, Click HERE

– Stay Tuned For Strong Customer Relationships: The Six Pillars/Part Three. Coming Soon.

 

By |2013-09-12T12:27:10-04:00September 12, 2013|Blog|
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