EV Education –The Move from Selling to Telling
Consumers harness information from online and offline resources in their decision-making process and — according to a recent Urban Science Harris Poll4 survey — 84% trust the automotive manufacturers who provide that information.
That same poll, however, reports that consumers are demanding a low-pressure sales experience when buying a car. It’s not trust, but rather hard-sell methods that are driving consumers away during the initial stages of investigation — regardless of the type of new vehicle being shopped.
A recent survey published in Nature Energy further quantifies the problem, with consumers reporting that salespeople — two-thirds of the time — strongly steered potential customers away from EVs (even at dealerships with EV inventory in stock).5 That same survey found that in 71% of dealership visits, salespeople exhibited low or no knowledge of EVs.
Dealers who show reluctance to embrace an EV future are clearly missing out. One in three respondents in a recent J.D. Power study state the reason shoppers give for not considering an EV purchase is a lack of knowledge.6 That same study finds that — although 50% of the car-buying population has never been in an EV, once they gain firsthand experience with one, their consideration nearly triples: from 7% to 20%.