In this high-energy episode of Loyalty-Based Sales Strategies, Jen Suzuki reveals a powerful strategy for revolutionizing your sales calls—focusing on loyalty-building tactics that turn prospects into long-term customers. Through 20 key questions, she demonstrates how your sales team can improve phone performance, build rapport, and convert more leads. If you’re looking for ways to enhance your sales process, these actionable tips will give you a competitive edge in today’s fast-paced automotive market.
Key Takeaways
1. Suzuki emphasizes the importance of building pipelines through outbound prospecting and actively engaging in the service drive. She notes that sales teams should continuously capture loyalty by maintaining quality conversations and ensuring constant touchpoints.
2. While traditional phone scripts are outdated, Suzuki introduces the concept of a “guide” that ensures a fluid, customized, and relevant conversation with customers. This allows salespeople to be flexible without sounding robotic.
3. Suzuki’s 20 questions are designed to keep conversations on track, humanize interactions, and personalize the buying experience. Suzuki suggests that the sales team should ask critical questions like
- “What vehicles have you been researching?”
- “What features are you looking for?” to help guide meaningful dialogue.
4. Incoming calls represent low-hanging fruit, meaning these customers are often already in the market. Sales teams should strategically approach these calls, seeing each as an opportunity to close deals by staying prepared, focused, and conversational.
5. Today’s customers expect personalized and human experiences. Sales teams must shift from a “sell, sell, sell” mentality to one that builds trust and creates rapport through thoughtful, relevant questions that serve the customer’s needs.
“It takes a lot of money to drive phone calls today. It takes a lot of marketing and a lot of your dollars to get internet leads. We've got to tighten up these sales processes and our phone game—because if there’s one thing I’ve learned, not many people are good on the phones. But guess what? Now you've got your 20 questions. Come on, let’s go!” – Jen Suzuki.