Dealers

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Remote services are all the rage these days following the first pandemic wave in early 2020 that forced many business, including dealerships, to close their doors to the public. We’ve come a long way since then, but many car dealers are still bucking the trend of offering remote delivery.

Not everyone is sold on the practice though, including Alderman’s Chevrolet-Buick-GMC in Rutland, Vermont, which had experimented with delivering their vehicles all over New England free of charge for seven years, from 2011 through 2018 before ending the service for good. Even during the pandemic lockdown, the dealership decided to go against the prevailing wisdom and continue serving customers locally exclusively with in-story delivery.

What happened?

The decision to end remote services, the practice of delivering vehicles to buyers from hither and yon for free, was not reached easily. Intended as a way to improve customer service, the offer was taken up by many buyers, but the dealership found itself dedicating employees to making deliveries and retaining fewer and fewer customers.

“What we were doing was really spreading ourselves thin, not executing as well and raising expenses,” Mark Alderman, general manager, told Automotive News.

Read Also: Chevy Technician Caught Red-Handed Driving Customer’s C8 Corvette At Over 100 MPH

It’s all comes down to returning customers

The dealership found that up to 30 percent of the 1,100 new and used vehicles it sold annually were delivered across state lines, to people for whom it would not make sense to return for service. It also found that finance and insurance revenue was hurting as a result of the free deliveries.

“We were doing it because we wanted to sell more cars,” Alderman said. “When we looked back on it, there were a lot of benefits to the dealership and the customer experience that get lost when you ship a car.”

By 2014, the dealership reached its lowest customer retention rate of 42 percent. In 2018, Alderman decided to stop offering the service and instead mandated that each new vehicle be delivered in the dealership’s service lane, where customers could take a picture with their new car and a sign proclaiming where they got the car. The photos would then be posted to Facebook and the customers tagged.

Even through the pandemic, when low inventory meant that people from all over New England were shopping for cars anywhere they could find them, Alderman says he doesn’t regret focusing on local. Salespeople do have to make their sales online, but they’ve taken to posting videos that demonstrate vehicle features and hosting Zoom chats with customers to talk them through the purchasing process.

All of which is leading to some of the highest loyalty levels the dealership has ever seen. In 2020, 62 percent of customers were returning customers and so far in 2021, 69 percent have purchased a vehicle with Alderman before.

Dealerships “are afraid of the customer walking away,” Alderman told Autonews. “We just made a deep commitment to not try to be everything to everybody, of trying to be just really excellent in our space.”

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While some dealers are using the coronavirus pandemic to try to force customers into extending their lease, that’s nothing compared to dismal treatment people received from a Hyundai dealership in Culver City, California.

As told by the LA Times, customers dropped off their vehicles for service at Nissani Brothers Hyundai and expected them to be fixed.  While this typically wouldn’t be a problem, the cars were reportedly towed away without warning.

If that wasn’t bad enough, a storage company began asking the dealership’s customers to pay thousands of dollars for their “abandoned vehicle.” In the case of one customer, her 2019 Hyundai Kona was raking up $150 (£122 / €137) in daily storage fees and was told their vehicle would be sold unless she paid approximately $6,000 (£4,884 / €5,483) in cash.

Also Read: Ferrari Dealer Reportedly Totals Customer’s Car And Doesn’t Tell Them About It

Posted by Nissani Bros. Hyundai on Sunday, August 20, 2017

That obviously shouldn’t have happened, so the paper went looking for an explanation. After multiple attempts, the publication got in touch with someone claiming to be the dealership manager and they said Nissani Brothers Hyundai closed in March due to the coronavirus. The person went on to claim less than five cars were towed and only after the dealer made repeated attempts to contact owners.

While that sounds plausible, there’s more to the story. The LA Times reached out to Hyundai and a spokesperson told them the coronavirus had nothing to do with the dismal customer service. Instead, the “dealership voluntarily ended its relationship with Hyundai on April 6th” and, prior to this, “moved vehicles that had been dropped off for service to an off-site facility in order to vacate the property, without informing Hyundai nor the customers who had vehicles at the dealership for service and repair.”

That sounds pretty shady and Hyundai spokesman Jim Trainor revealed the company is aware of at least 11 vehicles that were towed from the dealership. He went on to apologize and say Hyundai will “make this right.”

Thankfully Hyundai is keeping true to their word as they’ve gotten cars out of storage and taken them to a nearby dealership. The company also said anyone who paid to get their cars out of storage will be fully reimbursed.

The whole story is worth a read and you can check it out here.

 

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