Auto Dealership BDC Appointment Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The BDC Appointment-Lock Hour is a 60-minute training for auto dealership BDC and internet sales reps who turn web leads, phone-ups, and third-party inquiries into confirmed, shown showroom appointments. The core ritual is simple and disciplined: hit a five-minute speed-to-lead window, sell the appointment and not the price, set a specific day-and-time with a name attached, and run a three-touch confirmation sequence so the guest actually arrives.
It is built on NADA (National Automobile Dealers Association) workforce and digital-retail guidance, the proven five-minute lead-response benchmark, and the BDC discipline that one agent should own roughly 150 to 200 monthly leads. Reps leave able to book and confirm an appointment on a live call without quoting an out-the-door price.
Section 1 — Why the Phone Beats the Price (5 min)
Open with the number that reorders the whole room. A lead contacted inside five minutes is far more likely to convert than one called back in thirty — speed-to-lead is the single biggest lever a BDC owns, and most stores blow it. NADA's workforce research ties better tools and faster response directly to higher store performance and rep retention.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The losing rep: Answers "how much?" with a number, emails a quote, never sets a time, waits for the guest to "think about it."
- The winning rep: Calls in under five minutes, sells the visit, books a named day and time, and confirms three times before it.
- The one job: Your product is not the car. Your product is the appointment. The car gets sold on the floor by the closer.
Read the BDC law aloud: "You cannot sell a car to an empty chair." Every quoted price over the phone is a reason for the guest to shop you against the next three dealers. Every confirmed appointment is a reason for them to drive to *your* lot first.
Section 2 — The Appointment-Lock Call (15 min)
This is the heart of the hour. The rep is not negotiating; the rep is booking a meeting. Walk the room through the verbatim template and have every agent run it against a real lead in their queue right now.
Verbatim Appointment-Lock Template (rep fills out and says aloud):
- Open with the name and the vehicle: "Hi [First Name], this is [Rep] at [Dealership] — you reached out about the [Year Make Model], is it still on your list?"
- Build one point of value: "Good news — we actually have [that exact one / two of those in stock right now]."
- Bridge to the visit, not the price: "The best way to see if it is the right fit is a quick look in person. I want to have it pulled up front and ready for you."
- Offer a choice of two times (alternative-of-choice): "Are you better in the [morning] or the [evening]? Great — does [today at 5:30] or [tomorrow at 11:00] work better?"
- Lock the name + commitment: "Perfect, I have you down for [day and time]. Ask for me, [Rep], at the front desk — I will have it ready and a [test drive / appraisal] set up."
- Set the confirmation expectation: "I will text you a confirmation now and again the morning of, so you have my direct line."
Coach the appointment-not-price rule hard. When the guest pushes for a number, the rep deflects to the visit: *"I do not want to give you a number that is wrong by two thousand dollars — let me get you in front of the actual car and the actual numbers."*
Section 3 — What Kills the Appointment (10 min)
The fastest way to lose a booking is to say something that turns a warm guest into a price-shopper or a no-show. Drill the language.
What to NEVER say on an appointment call (read these aloud, slowly):
- "It depends on a lot of factors, so I can't really say." (sounds evasive; the guest assumes you are hiding the price)
- "Just come in whenever you're free." (no time, no commitment, near-zero show rate)
- "The lowest I can do is..." (you just negotiated against yourself before they arrived)
- "Let me email you all the details." (an email is where appointments go to die)
- "We're pretty busy, so it might be a wait." (gives them permission to go to the dealer down the road)
- "No problem if you can't make it." (signals the appointment does not matter, so they skip it)
The discipline mirrors NADA-aligned BDC best practice: the call exists to set and protect a specific time, and every sentence either moves toward that time or away from it.
Section 4 — The Confirmation Sequence (10 min)
A booked appointment is not a kept appointment. Show rate is where the BDC actually earns its keep, and confirmation is a script, not a vibe. Run the verbatim sequence.
Verbatim Confirmation Script (three touches across the visit window):
Rep (text, right after booking): "Hi [Name], it's [Rep] at [Dealership]. You're confirmed for [day at time]. I'll have the [Vehicle] pulled up front and ready. Reply C to confirm or call me directly at [number]."
[Wait for the C. If no reply in 2 hours, place one brief call.]
Rep (call, morning of): "Hi [Name], [Rep] at [Dealership] — just confirming we're still good for [time] today. I've got the [Vehicle] reserved for you. Anything I should have ready when you arrive?"
[Guest confirms or reschedules. Either way, you keep the relationship and the time.]
Rep (text, 1 hour before): "On my way to pull your [Vehicle] up front now. See you at [time] — ask for [Rep] at the front desk."
Do NOT:
- Confirm only once and hope — single-touch confirmations show roughly half the rate of a three-touch sequence.
- Let a "no reply" sit silently; an unconfirmed appointment is a no-show you have not booked over yet.
- Hand the guest to a salesperson without a warm intro — the appointment was set in *your* name, so protect it through the door.
Section 5 — The Math and the Objections (15 min)
Build the business case on the whiteboard so reps see why every minute and every confirmation matters.
The math (for one BDC agent on 150 leads/month):
- 150 leads at a 35% set rate = about 52 appointments set.
- With a disciplined three-touch confirmation, show rate runs near 65% = about 34 shown — versus roughly 40% (about 21 shown) for set-and-forget.
- At a 30% floor close rate, that gap is 10 cars versus 6 from the same lead count.
- At an average $2,500 in combined front and back gross, those four extra cars are $10,000 a month — about $120,000 a year from confirmation discipline alone.
Common rep objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"They asked for a price, I had to give one."* — You had to give them a reason to *come in*. The price lives on the floor, next to the car.
- *"They confirmed once, I didn't want to bug them."* — One text is not confirmation; it is a hope. Three touches is the job.
- *"My leads are junk."* — At 150 leads even a junk pool sets 50 appointments. The pool is not the problem; the call is.
Have every agent pull three live leads and book all three before they leave the room.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each rep leaves with three written commitments, taped to their monitor:
- I respond to every new lead in under five minutes during my shift — speed is the first sale.
- I sell the appointment, never the price — a named day, a named time, my name on it.
- Every appointment gets three confirmation touches — text now, call the morning of, text one hour before.
Close by reading the BDC standard aloud: "The store does not pay for leads. The store pays for shown appointments." Then pin the appointment-lock and confirmation scripts in the team channel so every agent runs the same play on the next call.
FAQ
Q1: What if the guest absolutely refuses to come in without a price? A: Give a transparent range tied to the visit — "These trim levels run from X to Y; let's get you the exact out-the-door on the actual car." You anchor honestly and still book the time. Never quote a single hard number you cannot defend on the floor.
Q2: How fast does the first response really need to be? A: Under five minutes. The five-minute window is the BDC benchmark NADA-aligned stores chase because lead quality drops sharply with every passing half hour.
Q3: Should I text or call first? A: Both, fast. Call within five minutes; if no answer, text immediately and email third. Multi-channel speed beats single-channel patience every time.
Q4: How many leads should one BDC agent own? A: Roughly 150 to 200 monthly leads per agent is the accepted BDC staffing ratio. Past that, set rate and speed both collapse and you need another seat.
Q5: What do I do with a no-show? A: Treat it as a reschedule, not a loss. Call within the hour — "We missed you, the car is still here, can we do [tomorrow at 11]?" A confirmed reschedule shows nearly as well as the original.
Q6: Isn't this just pressure selling? A: No. You are offering a specific, convenient time to see a car the guest already raised their hand for. Pressure is quoting a fake price; service is a ready car and a reserved slot.
Sources
- National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA), *NADA Workforce Study* and dealership digital-retail guidance, nada.org, 2024-2025.
- NADA Academy, *Business Development Center (BDC) Operations* curriculum, National Automobile Dealers Association.
- Maritz, *Dealership Internet Sales Metrics and Speed-to-Lead Benchmarks*, maritz.com, 2024.
- Cox Automotive, *Car Buyer Journey Study*, Cox Automotive Research, 2024.
- Grant Cardone, *Sell or Be Sold*, Greenleaf Book Group Press, 2012.
- Joe Verde Group, *Earn Over $100,000 Selling Cars* and BDC phone-training materials, joeverde.com.
- Phone Ninjas, *Automotive BDC Phone Scripts and Appointment-Setting Training*, phoneninjas.com.
- CDK Global, *Friction Points: Automotive Dealership Lead-Handling Study*, CDK Global Research, 2024.