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You need to train your RV salespeople as an RV dealership. When you work in both RV and automobile dealerships, you see the differences in how salesmen are trained.<br>
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RV Sales Training With Pearl Lemon Sales
You need to train your RV salespeople as an RV dealership. When you work in both RV and automobile dealerships, you see the differences in how salesmen are trained. While most RV dealerships do a decent job of generating leads for their sales staff, not all of them do a good job of training them. To make a sale at an RV dealership, marketing and sales must collaborate.
Someone needs to be held accountable if marketing is providing solid customer leads, but your RV sales force isn’t completing deals. Your sales training is that somebody! RV sales training from Pearl Lemon Sales can help both new RV salespeople who may still lack the basic RV sales skills they need and experienced RV salespeople who want to boost their sales numbers even higher.
The RV Sales Training Problem Sales training programs and trainers for a sales force are popular in the automobile industry. It doesn’t appear to be the same in RV dealerships. It’s more of a sink or swim situation. It’s as though you’re throwing your salespeople to the wolves. Many sales jobs are like this now, but we know there are significant benefits to be had if you begin professionally training your RV salespeople.
Why? RV sales are not the same as car sales. Customers don’t need an RV in the same way that they do a car, so you can’t force them into a contract. Instead, you must understand how to evoke your clients’ actual feelings and desires, and then capitalize on them. Just doing this one thing will help you sell more RVs…
Make sure your RV salespeople are well-trained. RV sales training from Pearl Lemon Sales, custom created for your company and your sales challenges, will do just that, and more.
Consultative Selling RV Sales Training Ideally, your RV salespeople are very familiar with the vehicles they are selling, and can quote their basic specs off the top of their heads. However, as important as that information might be, it’s not what most consumers are interested in when it comes to buying an RV. Price, which is also going to matter to a customer, is not usually their biggest concern either. So trying to sell an RV based on price and specs alone is often not very compelling. And if your RV salespeople are unable to demonstrate to customers why their (large) investment in an RV is a good one, often the sticker price can be harder to get past on the way to the sale than it should be.