http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1090281_many-car-dealers-dont-want-to-sell-electric-cars-heres-why
Many Car Dealers Don't Want To Sell Electric Cars: Here's Why
By John Voelcker  Feb 14, 2014

[image  
http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/2011-nissan-leaf_100348703_l.jpg
2011 Nissan Leaf at dealership after software upgrade, May 2011, photo by
George Parrott
]

The stories abound: A car buyer walks into a dealership, educated about the
electric car she wants to buy...and the salesperson tries to convince her
she doesn't want that car after all.

She really wants a gasoline car, he argues.

Hundreds of cases have been reported of customers walking into a Nissan or
Chevy dealer to buy a Leaf or Volt, then being aggressively steered toward a
Sentra or Cruze.

Doom, danger, dire predictions

A buyer will run out of charge and be left stranded at the side of the road,
he hears, or that very expensive battery will have to be replaced in five
years.

Then the electric demo car hasn't been recharged, so its electric range is
minimal on the test drive. And so forth.

A recent discussion in a Facebook group prompted us to write, once more,
about how car dealers work--and what motivates them to sell specific
vehicles.

The salient point is that it takes much longer to sell a plug-in electric
car, today, than it does a gasoline or diesel vehicle.

Maximizing profit

And dealers maximize their profits by exploiting the difference in
information about complex financial transactions between buyers who do it
once every five or six years, on average, and salespeople who sell multiple
cars a day.

As we wrote two months ago in another article on dealers:

Every salesperson's mission is to close the deal, today, at maximum profit
with minimum time invested. Selling a plug-in car takes three to five times
as long for a dealer as does selling a gasoline car.

It requires explanation, education, training, all of the fuss and bother
associated with installing a charging station in the garage if the buyer
wants one, and so on.

And, today's electric-car shoppers often know as much or more about their
desired plug-in model as the salesperson does. To get their questions
answered, several other people may have to be brought into the process. And
that takes time.

Time, complexity

To make plug-ins equally attractive for dealership salespeople to sell, they
would have to be three to five times as profitable per vehicle to sell--to
offset the extra time required.

They're not.

Add to that customers with complex questions about things like off-peak
charging and the need to coordinate inspection and installation of a
charging station.

Those and other issues--none of which apply to gasoline cars--provide the
very obvious reasons why most salespeople will default to the easier sell: a
gasoline car.

All salespeople are motivated by compensation. But as far as we know, not a
single automaker has structured that compensation to make it equally
worthwhile to sell plug-in cars.

The few dealerships that move high volumes of electric cars--we know of at
least two in California--have single-purpose salespeople who specialize in
nothing but plug-ins. Not every dealer will have enough plug-in buyers to
justify that.

Dealers agnostic

Returning to quote our earlier article one more time:

Aside from a few with strong political beliefs, most car dealers don't care
one way or the other about plug-in electric cars.

They care about moving the most cars in the least time at the highest profit
with the least hassle.

So until selling a plug-in electric car is as quick and easy as selling any
other vehicle that nets the dealer the same profit, many dealers will avoid
them, for very logical and understandable reasons.

That means that the appropriate question should be directed to makers of
electric cars: What are you doing to make selling electric cars as
profitable and painless for your dealers as selling gasoline or diesel
vehicles?
[© Green Car Reports]
...
http://autos.yahoo.com/news/many-car-dealers-don-39-t-want-sell-120011567.html
Many Car Dealers Don't Want To Sell Electric Cars: Here's Why
...
http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-why-dealers-dont-like-selling-electric-cars-2014-2
Here's Why Dealers Don't Like Selling Electric Cars
...
http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1089055_why-some-dealers-are-inept-at-selling-plug-in-electric-cars
Why Some Dealers Are Inept At Selling Plug-In Electric Cars




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