The First 10 Minutes: Why Speed-to-Lead Is Only Half the Equation

April 10, 2026

QUICK TAKE

Most dealerships think that responding too slowly leads to a loss of leads. In many cases, this is not true. The real culprit is that the dealership’s first response fails to do the real job: create trust, control the next step, and earn a kept appointment. Your own operating math already proves this. Performance runs through contact ratio, appointment rate, show ratio, and sold ratio on appointments, which means speed-to-lead is only one tiny link in a giant chain.

HOOK

You’re probably familiar with the following scenario:

A lead comes in. Your team responds fast and gets them out the door in under ten – maybe even five – minutes. The CRM says the store was quick, so everyone feels good about it. You clock out feeling accomplished, you’re confident in your sale, and you sleep like a baby that night.

Then the lead ghosts you.

No reply. No real conversation. No appointment with commitment. Or worse, an appointment gets set, but it ends up going absolutely nowhere. No value was built. No expectations were set. No urgency was created. The customer ghosts, and the store tells itself the market is tough.

But the market was always tough, and you still were able to get sales. So, what went wrong?

A lot of stores have spent years treating speed-to-lead like the win. It is not. Instead of rushing the appointment, treat the first 10 minutes of an appointment as the most vital part. If you make a good impression at the beginning of the appointment, getting a sale will be much easier.

EVIDENCE

The cleanest proof is in the way Pinnacle’s own sales goal framework is built. It breaks a salesperson’s performance into contact ratio, appointment rate, show ratio on appointments, and sold ratio on appointments. It also pushes managers to work leading indicators rather than lagging outcomes. In plain terms: a fast response matters, but the response still has to generate a sale, no matter the speed.

Too many dealerships treat a speedy appointment and a successful appointment as one in the same. However, across dozens of assessments, we consistently see teams with decent speed-to-lead but weak appointment outcomes because the first touch is built around information transfer instead of relationship control. The rep answers the question, sends the price, confirms availability, maybe tosses in a generic “when can you come in?” and moves on. It’s fast, and you’ll get to log another appointment booked for the day. But will it generate a sale in the long term? Sadly, probably not.

There is a strong parallel in fixed ops. The Diagnostic Checklist teaches advisors to lead their interactions with customers with empathy, explain why they are asking the questions before asking them, mirror the customer’s language, repeat details back, and set expectations before scheduling. When a customer feels heard, they are more open to the next steps. And if this takes an extra 10 or 20 minutes? So be it.

That same principle applies in sales and BDC. In the first 10 minutes, the customer is most likely barely noticing how fast the appointment is going. But what they are noticing is whether your store feels organized, whether anybody listened, and whether showing up will be worth their time.

The Campaign Planner reinforces the same point from another angle. It separates activities, contacts, appointments set, appointments sold, conversions, and revenue targets. That is operationally important. A store could log a trillion appointments in a day, but if none of them escalated to the next steps or generated a sale, it wouldn’t matter.

WHY

This problem exists because dealerships are already extremely overworked, and speed is the easiest metric to log.

The CRM gives you a timestamp. Vendors sell response-time dashboards. Managers can coach “faster” in one sentence. It feels measurable and controllable, so it gets attention.

What is harder to see is whether the first response did these five things:

Did it acknowledge the customer’s intent?
Did it create confidence in the dealership?
Did it answer just enough without killing the conversation?
Did it give the customer a reason to act now?
Did it ask for a specific next step in a way that feels natural?

That is where most opportunities get lost.

A lot of BDRs and salespeople have been trained on how to respond fast rather than how to respond well. So the first interaction with the customer becomes an information-dump session instead of a structured move toward an appointment. The rep treats the lead like a metric in the CRM instead of a human being worthy of a productive and meaningful conversation.

FIX

Here is what stores can implement this week.

First, stop managing speed-to-lead as a standalone KPI. Keep it as a metric, yes, but don’t let it dominate your reports. Pair it with contact ratio, appointment rate, show ratio, and sold ratio on appointments by source, by rep, and by daypart. If speed is green and appointments are flat, you know that speed is not the issue.

Second, rewrite the first-touch objective. The goal of the first response is to earn a conversation and move the customer into a committed next step with intention instead of desperation. That means your BDC and floor need word tracks that sound human, show urgency, and create confidence.

Third, borrow the fixed-ops discipline around empathy and expectation-setting. Make sure to treat every customer as an individual person, and personalize the conversation instead of just rattling off talking points and information like a robot.

Fourth, audit the first 10 minutes, not just the first response. Pull 20 recent leads and review the full opening window to see what you did well:
● How fast was the first touch?
● Was there a real attempt to connect by phone, text, or personalized email?
● Was value built?
● Was a specific appointment asked for?
● Was there a confirmation process?
● Did the rep sound like a person or a template?

You will usually find that the problem is a weak structure in your interactions with customers.

Fifth, tighten the handoff between the BDC and showroom. A soft appointment is almost the same as no appointment. The customer should know who they are meeting, when they are coming, and why the visit is worth making. If your team is setting appointments without commitment language, without confirmation, and without a clear value prop, your show rate will tell on you. The same logic already exists in your process: appointment rate alone is not enough; show ratio on appointments is where the quality of the first 10 minutes shows up.

Sixth, coach to language, not just counts. Managers love to inspect activity because it is easy. But stores improve when managers listen for specific details in the customer interactions, such as whether the rep built trust, lowered friction, and controlled the next step. That is what changes outcomes.

TAKEAWAY

The first 10 minutes should be about earning a customer’s trust, not about how fast you respond.

Posting

LinkedIn: Your BDC responded in under five minutes. The CRM is green. Everyone feels good. Then the customer ghosts. Speed-to-lead gets all the attention, but it’s only one link in the chain. What happens in the first 10 minutes after that response — whether you earned trust, built value, and set a committed next step — is what actually determines if that lead turns into a showroom visit. Here’s the audit your team can run this week: (link)

X: Speed gets you a chance. The first 10 minutes determine whether that chance turns into a showroom visit. (link)

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