About
seventeen years ago a car dealer in Dallas, Texas wrote a book entitled Customers for Life. His name is Carl
Sewell and the book describes in detail why treating your customers with care,
courtesy, respect and dignity is the surest way to success in the retail
automobile business. When I first read this book many years ago, I wished that
I had written it myself. I learned a lot from Customers for Life and it had a major impact on my business and my
life.
If
you would like a free copy of this book, just go to my Web site,
EarlStewartToyota.com. Click on the link under the picture of the book where it
says “complimentary copy click here”. Some of the chapters in the book are “The customer will tell you how to provide
good service, if the customer asks, the answer is always yes, there’s no such
thing as after hours, under-promise and over-deliver, and you can’t give good
service if you sell a lousy product. When you read this book, you should
have a pretty good idea of how you should expect to be treated by your car
dealer, or any retail business establishment.
Remember
that Carl Sewell is not just a “nice guy”, but also a very shrewd businessman.
He learned that by treating customer so nicely and fairly that he actually
exceeded their expectations, these customer continued to buy from him “for the
rest of their lives”; Hence the title, Customers
for Life. Back in 1990 he calculated that the average customer for life
bought $517,000 in cars and service from him over their lifetime. Adjusted for
inflation, that would amount to closer to $1,000,000 today. Furthermore these
customers referred their friends, neighbors, and relatives. Also, Carl Sewell
did not have to spend any advertising money to persuade them to buy from him.
It is no wonder that he is one of the largest volume and most profitable car
dealers in the USA.
Carl
also believes in treating his employees with the same courtesy, care, and
respect that he treats his customers. Have you ever been embarrassed in a retail
business when a boss chewed out a subordinate in front of you? Chapter 13 is
entitled “Who’s more important? Your
customer or your employee? A: Both.
When you enter a car dealership where the employees are more like team
mates and genuinely care for each other and their supervisors you can
practically feel it in the air. You feel more comfortable and trusting and more
confident that, if they treat each other like this, you will be treated
similarly. This is a direct quote from Customers
for Life. “It’s very rare to see a manager who treats his customers one way
and his employees another. And it’s awfully hard for employees to treat
customers well if the boss treats them badly.”
After
you read Customers for Life, why not
loan it to your car dealer? Remember that this is not a “do-gooder” kind of a
book. The message is that a businessman can be more successful and profitable
by employing the recommendations of this book. Loaning your car dealer this
book would be doing him a favor. Most car dealers should have heard of Carl
Sewell. He is one of the most successful car dealers in the county and his book
is considered by manufacturers and dealers to be the “bible” for customer
satisfaction. If they haven’t heard about Carl Sewell, feel free to use me as a
reference. Reading Customers for Life
had a major positive impact on my success and the reputation I enjoy as a car
dealer.
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