12 Steps to F&I Succe$$ – Step VI Use a Menu
Think about driving by a fast food restaurant. The aroma of burgers lingers in the air. Your senses tell your tummy a burger would satisfy your hunger. You go with fast food because you do not have much time. You need to be somewhere in ten minutes. With time restrictions in mind you stop, park your car, enter the lobby and approach a smiling young clerk who immediately says, “I can help you!” And so you look at the menu and ask for a Number 4 with a diet soda.
Now did the menu you were looking at actually sell you the burger, fries, and diet soda? I think not. The aroma tickling your senses created the need. The thought process began before you pulled into the parking lot.
Use the Menu to Show Value
The same is true in the F&I office – the menu doesn’t sell anything to the customer. The menu doesn’t provide solutions. What the menu does is package the options available to the customer.
Back at the burger place, if you had purchased a burger and a soda separately or a la carte, you would likely have spent more than you did on the number-four “package”. Maybe that’s why the term “value” often precedes menu.
However, the menu itself doesn’t build value. Value in a product or service is created and sustained through communication of one person’s need and another person’s solution.
Be sure to establish value before you introduce cost. Is a price valid if the product does not meet the customer’s needs? I think not. The price means nothing because the customer will not pay for a product that does not meet his needs.
Use each Component of the Menu Menus should identify the vehicle selling price, any down payment, trade allowance and payoff. Payments must be quoted with terms and APR used to calculate the payment. The payment must not include any F&I products or services unless the retail amount of the additional item(s) is clearly identified and the items are clearly identified as optional. The customer has a right to know what the base payment is without any additional products or services. (Some states also require that retail prices of all F&I products are identified on the menu, in addition to the monthly payment.)
Use the Menu to Summarize Menus allow the presenter to show the customer the most popular product groupings in the shortest amount of time. Customers all have some place they must be in ten minutes! Time is your number-one obstacle.
If you use the F-A-B (Features-Advantages-Benefits) outline to present the value of these products to the customer and obtain the 7 little yes’s through- out the presentation, the only step that remains is to answer the customer’s concerns and ask her to select the plan that meets her needs and fits her budget.
Using the menu as a summary of benefits – the first step in full disclosure – avoids the possibility of failing to offer something to everyone. Fatigue makes cowards of us all. When the hour grows late and the lights are casting shadows we all want to use the shortest path to get home. Often the shortest path is to shortcut the presentation. Unfortunately, the quickest trip home can be the longest way to meeting your sales goals, since people do not buy what they do not know about.
Use the Menu to Let the Customer Choose
The professional finance representative acknowledges the nature of his clients. Today’s marketplace is comprised of informed buyers who, courtesy of the media, have at least one side of the F&I story. It is your responsibility to introduce customers to the rest of the story so they can make an informed choice.
Your customers want choices. They want to be in control. They want to save face. If they begin with a negative response and you make a case that leads them to purchase, they do not want to be insulted along the way.
When you use a menu, your presentations and closings will be more consistent.
Make the Menu Part of Your Process
Reevaluate your F&I process. The sooner you can get the customer into the F&I office, the more receptive he will be to listening to the options for customizing the vehicle and loan.
Simply put, one size does not fit all. Each customer is different; each customer has a different set of needs. Each customer wants to feel special. When you can tailor your products and services to meet a customer’s needs, your deals will succeed.
F&I Management & Technology Magazine, Sep/Oct 2004, p.42.