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"The biggest obstacle to gaining a new
customer is proving that you are uniquely qualified to meet
their needs"
Competition for
rental customers is fierce. Negative advertising has become more
prevalent; ie "Forget rent to own, come lease from us". In this
competitive environment, turning a first time shopper into a
paying renter is more important than ever before.
Sell Yourself
Sounds like "sales 101", but it is especially true for rent to
own dealers. There is an old saying ; "customers buy from a
person, not a company." If you're gaining customers, it's not that your furniture is
irresistible, or that simply laying eyes on your latest
Whirlpool washer makes customers swoon, it's you. You represent
the value over your competition. You are the only thing your
competition doesn't have and cannot acquire. You are what makes
your store unique.
Name 3 things you do for your customers that no
other rent to own in the market does? Memorize them and never,
ever let a customer spend more than 3 minutes in your store
before you tell them exactly what makes you unique. If you can't
name three...perhaps there are other issues...here are some
examples.
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I deliver in one hour
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I guarantee same day completion of repairs
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I give a free week for every family
member that opens an account
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I don't go home until you're satisfied
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I guarantee damage free delivery or we bring
a new (fill in the blank) and the next week is free
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I will walk through fire and crawl through
glass...oh, sorry
The biggest obstacle to gaining a new customer
is proving that you are uniquely qualified to meet their needs.
Never Let Them Leave
This is an exaggeration of course, but the bottom line is a
"be-back" is a lost agreement. Do whatever it takes to gain the
customers favor. Take five dollars to get a signature and hold a
piece of inventory until payday if necessary. In a business
where a few dollars gets merchandise delivered and switching
rental companies can be done with a phone call, renting is the
ultimate impulse-buy. "I'll be back tomorrow" translates into
"You didn't light my fire so I'm going down the street."
Rent to own customers are no different than
retail customers, it's just that there is very little downside
to making a bad rent to own decision. If a customer isn't satisfied with
your service in week, they'll terminate and go elsewhere. You
must capture their hearts and minds on the first visit and do
whatever it takes to "get the D". There is no room for error.
If All Else Fails...Get a Name And Number
If you pull out all the stops, and still the customer is about
to walk, get a name and number. Make up a reason if you have to;
"We have another load coming in next week," "We may have some
specials later in the week,"...anything to get the contact
information. Keep a list (hopefully it won't
be a long list) and once per week, begin calling. "This is Rufus
from XYZ Rent to Own, we met the other day. I'm sorry we
couldn't serve you. If you are ever disappointed with your rent
to own's service...oh you haven't found anything...etc?"
Hammer away at the list every week. Cold calling is not at the
top of anyone's favorite jobs list, but it's a good beginning to
a long relationship.
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