We at Web-Est just recently posted a contest on our site
requesting marketing ideas from our customers by offering a prize
to the best idea. We are pleased to announce the winner!
The winner is....(drum roll please)...G&G Automotive from
Texas!
The G&G Automotive team offered to us one of the keys to
their success:
We purchase incident police reports weekly, since they
are public data, then we offer free estimates to them by phone and
buy post cards in the mail letting them know we work for them not
the insurance company. The post card covers all the pros about my
shop.
In a word: brilliant. After doing a little more research on that
idea, we found that this is a practical and very efficient way to
communicate with people in your community that are in need of your
services. The incident report that local police departments produce
should be public information, so all, including businesses, should
be able to have access to it at a fee. Most police departments will
not offer the report at an itemized rate, where you can pick and
choose which incidents you would like to have information for. You
will most likely have to purchase the entire report that includes a
list of all the incidents in your area. These reports should be
available on a weekly basis.
Upon purchasing the report, send post cards or business cards in
the mail to the persons listed in the incident. By providing
information about your services to a person in need of services
your business provides offers an excellent opportunity to connect
with potential customers your community directly. In the post card,
include information about your business that will seem relevant to
the customer: special pricing, works with all insurance companies,
willingness to cover the deductible if over a certain amount, free
transportation and estimates, etc. Make it easy to read, yet
directly to the point. The pricing of getting post cards developed
is not much. An internet search of printing companies that provide
post card services shows that 1,000 post cards cost only $100. That
many post cards should last 6 months to a year...well worth the
$100.
Do some research in your area to see if the local police
department offers the incident police report to the community. Of
course, since the decision to offer that information will be made
by local officials, not state or federal, we can't guarantee that
every municipality in the U.S. will offer this information. We
encourage you to contact your local police department to see if
these reports are offered to the public. Find the contact
information to your local department by visiting usacops.com.
We were overwhelmed by the responses people provided in the
contest, but the practicality and efficiency of the idea provided
by our winner seems the most creative, yet accessible method for
shops to attempt. Give it a try and let us know if it works out for
you.
Below you will find honorable mentions from the contest:
-We accept referrals from new car dealers who have no bodyshop.
In return, we buy the parts for the repair from the refering
dealer, handle their warranty and used car repairs, along with
sending back to the referring dealer any mechanical repair we do
not perform here. We currently provide this service for 6
dealerships and the referrals provided by satisfied customers as a
result of those referrals is incalculable.
-internet ads, flyers
-do seminars at the body shop for customers
And of course, a Web-Est staff favorite:
We give away a new Mercedes with every oil change. We hope to
make up the difference on volume. So far its not working , but
accounting says to give it 6 months. You know they are always
right.
We don't encourage you try that strategy, but good luck with
that.
Thanks for participating. Congrats again to G&G.