- Dec 30, 2009
- 1,883
- 480
- First Name
- Yago
We are mixing "being social" with "social media". While they are related in the surface what customers expect from a biz via social media is not friendship. Maybe if anything they expect an "insider" deal,
That got me interested, so I checked it out, mine was only 1% Fake, 1% Inactive and 98% real.
So then I looked up a few people..... just sharing!
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Thanks for sharing! Everyone might want to go check out a few other well known automotive people that have over 50% fake followers!!
Hey KCar, what's your twitter handle?
Doug, just what is the definition of "yearsago"?
Good stuff. Thanks for sharing this Eley. I wasn't aware of this crafty little tool..
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Just hit 4,000 followers this week. Not too shabby!
If you don't like old car guy stories, don't bother with this.
I figure you might have been a freshman in High School. I had been there about 5 years and left about the time you graduated to be the General Manager of a store in Baton Rouge. It was there that I met Regi Williams. He told me that he didn't catch ups, didn't go to meetings and only came to the dealership to deliver his appointments. I would have never hired him but he listed two references of people that I knew very well. For the next 4 years, he was my top salesperson in volume and gross. Every morning, he got up and went where people congregated: churches, parks, barber shops, beauty parlors, and the farmer's market. He seemed to know everyone. Monday through Friday afternoon, he would be at the dealership with his appointments. He had a blues band and played weekends in the French Quarter. When I left, he went to the Mitsubishi store. He was the number one Mistusbishi salesperson, in the country, for three years. Regi was overweight and didn't take his blood pressure medicine. He had a massive coronary when he was only 45. He was the best retail guy that Ihave ever known. I am convinced that Baton Rouge is the toughest market in the country.
Eley, being a Chevy guy, I bet you know Ken Thompson. He is at Classic Chevrolet but I was the Used Car Manager at Frank Parra when he was there. Both he and Regi built their business the same way. One on one, Regi was the better salesman. Ken went to businesses of all types. He passed out and collected business cards and made friends. Once he got your name, he would call and send letters. He sent out enough letters that the dealership bought a machine that stuffed envelopes. When Sonic bought the store, the General Manager couldn't stand the fact that Ken made more money than he did. Ken went to Classic with a huge sign-on bonus and they built him his own building. I don't know how many years that he has been the volume salesman for Chevrolet. Ken has to be around 80 and has about 10 or 15 people that work for him including his wife and son.
Yes, this is old school. Will it work today? I believe that a green pea salesperson could pass out business cards at the mall and generate more business than facebook. Beyond the additional business, can you imagine the goodwill people like this develop in the community. Their CSI is perfect.
Think about this as you walk past the floor salesmen with their noses pressed against the glass.
Jeff, that was Jeremy that shared it earlier in the thread, give that credit to him.
Thats pretty cool on 4,000 followers.
I was surprised by a few, like JD Rucker, he has 100K followers and the stats were; 56% fake, 22% inactive and 22% good?
One of your favorite people Ralph;
@DigitalRalph was 5% fake, 82% inactive, 13% good
@ralphpaglia was 6% fake, 70% inactive, 24% good
@ADMcommunity was 1% fake, 77% inactive, 22% good
Course, who knows if this thing is accurate.
If you don't like old car guy stories, don't bother with this.
I figure you might have been a freshman in High School. I had been there about 5 years and left about the time you graduated to be the General Manager of a store in Baton Rouge. It was there that I met Regi Williams. He told me that he didn't catch ups, didn't go to meetings and only came to the dealership to deliver his appointments. I would have never hired him but he listed two references of people that I knew very well. For the next 4 years, he was my top salesperson in volume and gross. Every morning, he got up and went where people congregated: churches, parks, barber shops, beauty parlors, and the farmer's market. He seemed to know everyone. Monday through Friday afternoon, he would be at the dealership with his appointments. He had a blues band and played weekends in the French Quarter. When I left, he went to the Mitsubishi store. He was the number one Mistusbishi salesperson, in the country, for three years. Regi was overweight and didn't take his blood pressure medicine. He had a massive coronary when he was only 45. He was the best retail guy that Ihave ever known. I am convinced that Baton Rouge is the toughest market in the country.
Eley, being a Chevy guy, I bet you know Ken Thompson. He is at Classic Chevrolet but I was the Used Car Manager at Frank Parra when he was there. Both he and Regi built their business the same way. One on one, Regi was the better salesman. Ken went to businesses of all types. He passed out and collected business cards and made friends. Once he got your name, he would call and send letters. He sent out enough letters that the dealership bought a machine that stuffed envelopes. When Sonic bought the store, the General Manager couldn't stand the fact that Ken made more money than he did. Ken went to Classic with a huge sign-on bonus and they built him his own building. I don't know how many years that he has been the volume salesman for Chevrolet. Ken has to be around 80 and has about 10 or 15 people that work for him including his wife and son.
Yes, this is old school. Will it work today? I believe that a green pea salesperson could pass out business cards at the mall and generate more business than facebook. Beyond the additional business, can you imagine the goodwill people like this develop in the community. Their CSI is perfect.
Think about this as you walk past the floor salesmen with their noses pressed against the glass.
Will it work today? Yes, I of course. But why would you now limit yourself to just these tactics when nowadays you have technology and "online" social to support you?
The business card handed out can now direct the customer to your "personal (social) CRM" where you are not only touching the potentional customer during their birthday and a random phone call (that less and less people appreciate) but you now have the potential ability to cultivate relationships ongoing.
Social media is today's business card. And so much more if leveraged correctly.