- May 1, 2006
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Vermont is like a third world country?
The introductions to the 2014 Vermont Gubernatorial Debate will tell you all you need to know

Vermont is like a third world country?

Wait.. so some dealership's leave more than one message for a customer?
What is the idea here? Maybe they didn't get the first one? Top of mind awareness? Piss them off?
That seems absurd. Voicemails aren't baseball - you get one swing at it; make it count.
I've called a customer & left several voice mails, only to call them and amazing! They pick up! I set an appointment, they show up & buy a car.
I'm not saying you can't call multiple times, just don't leave multiple messages.
I disagree - as long as you're not (like most people) saying the same exact voice mail every single time - why not leave multiple messages? The only thing you proved is that people without a voice mail strategy don't get call backs.... those of us who do have a strategy - do get calls back.
I will never never never never intentionally just hang up on a customer without leaving a voice mail message.
I still think I'm missing something.
I'd like to see hard numbers on the fact. Your example wasn't a callback, so I think that's why I'm not sold yet.
If you have numbers, I'm a data nut and that would help clarify big time.
# Summary The thread debates whether salespeople should leave voicemails when calling internet leads, with trainer Elise Kephart recommending hang-ups on second calls versus David Kain's approach of always leaving messages. The consensus that emerged strongly favors leaving voicemails, but only when they follow a strategic approach that gives customers a compelling reason to call back, rather than using generic phrases like "I have great news." The broader takeaway is that consistent follow-up itself matters more than the specific tactic, and most dealers fail by not calling enough in the first place.