Why most aged-lead campaigns underperform
They treat every old record as the same person. A customer who completed a credit application and scheduled an appointment is not the same as someone who clicked an ad and never replied. A shopper who needed a co-buyer is not the same as someone who simply stopped answering. When all of them receive “Are you still interested?” the dealership throws away the most valuable information it already has.
Prioritize by intent before you prioritize by age
| Segment | Prior intent | Reactivation priority |
|---|---|---|
| Completed app + no-show | Very high | Highest |
| Scheduled then canceled | Very high | Highest |
| Incomplete application | High | High |
| Pathway customer | High, but conditional | High when timing fits |
| Two-way conversation, no app | Medium | Medium |
| Never engaged | Unknown | Lower |
Use age bands because timing changes the conversation
Still relatively fresh. Acknowledge the recent interaction and reopen with a low-friction next step.
Use a stronger reset. Ask whether anything changed and connect the message to the customer's previous application or appointment.
Do not pretend the conversation happened yesterday. Reintroduce the dealership, remind them why they originally engaged, and ask one direct question.
The best reactivation question is usually specific
Reactivation should feel like a new opportunity, not harassment
The goal is not endless frequency. It is intelligent persistence. A dealership should use lawful, consent-aware communication practices, reasonable cadence, clear opt-out handling, and channel rules appropriate to its systems and jurisdiction.
A practical aged-lead workflow
- Pull the database. Include age, source, application status, appointment history, last response, and known barrier.
- Remove obvious bad records. Duplicates, invalid contacts, sold customers, and people who opted out should not enter the campaign.
- Build high-intent segments first. Prior applicants, no-shows, cancellations, pathways, and incomplete apps.
- Create one message strategy per segment. Do not use a universal blast.
- Use timing windows that fit real customer behavior. Morning, evening, and Saturday windows can matter, depending on the store and customer base.
- Track qualified outcomes. Replies are not enough. Measure apps, appointments, shows, and sold units.
What a serious reactivation dashboard should track
- Total leads contacted by segment
- Delivery rate and opt-out rate
- Reply rate
- Qualified-reply rate
- Applications completed
- Appointments set
- Appointments shown
- Sold units from reactivation
- Revenue or gross generated from the recovered database
Why aged leads can be especially valuable in BHPH and special finance
Customer circumstances change. Income can improve, job time can increase, savings can grow, a co-buyer can become available, documents can be completed, or a previous transportation problem can be resolved. A “not today” customer is not always a “not ever” customer.
Frequently asked questions
How far back should a dealership reactivate leads?
There is no universal cutoff. The right window depends on prior intent, consent, data quality, the reason the customer stalled, and whether the store can still offer a relevant next step.
Should the dealership mention the old application?
Usually yes when it is accurate and useful. Context helps the customer understand why you are reaching out.
What is the best first segment?
Prior applicants who scheduled but no-showed or canceled are often among the strongest because they demonstrated several layers of intent.
30-to-90-day reactivation · No-show reactivation · Pathway follow-up
How much opportunity is sitting in your CRM?
Start with a conversion audit and identify the highest-intent segments worth reviving first.
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