Billy Fuccillo is president of fuccillo automotive group Syracuse New York . Fuccillo Automotive Group is the largest automobile dealership in the state of New York.
Monday, October 30, 2017
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Cuneo: A Day in the Life of Billy Fuccillo
A man awakes in his bedroom to the sound of primal roaring. 7:15 a.m. is known to Billy Fuccillo as feeding time.
Fuccillo doesn’t often receive gifts, but when the Bosnian prime minister offers you a Bengal tiger as a token of gratitude, you take it. Sasha is 7 years old, and when she’s hungry, she’ll let you know about it.
“At ease Sasha,” Fuccillo mumbles. “Daddy’s home.”
Three uncooked filet mignon steaks later, and Fuccillo begins his morning preparations. He is still moving all of his belongings into the mansion he rented from Derek Jeter in Tampa, Florida, so his palace looks more like a Minecraft map with boxes scattered across the premises. This doesn’t distract Fuccillo from getting ready: Armani suit, gold Rolex and a Livestrong-style bracelet engraved with a four-letter word that rhymes with luge.
At the airport, he pulls into his normal spot in the hangar and heads to the Fuccillo Jet, fully equipped with food, drink and his favorite video game system — the original PlayStation. One “Crash Team Racing” game turns into two, into three, into twelve and before you know it, he’s in Syracuse.
After his usual Bruegger’s bagel with cream cheese and capers, Fuccillo heads downtown to the OnCenter to confirm a brand new billboard for Fuccillo Hyundai, his car dealership and diamond sanctuary. Upon request, he asked to see the advertisement firsthand to ensure quality.
“Just like you said,” mutters the billboard representative from North Syracuse as he tries to hide the fear in his eyes.
“This is not what I asked for. It’s too small.”
“Then what do you want?”
“It needs to be … bigger.”
“How much bigger?”
Fuccillo walks away from the representative from North Syracuse and leaves him to contemplate. As he walks, he hears behind him the open weeps of another grown man who has fallen beneath the weight of an iron giant.
In the limousine on the way to the Sheraton, he gets a phone call from “No Caller ID.” He knows exactly who it is.
“The River Thames begs to embrace the one and only Billy Fuccillo. The London skies are just a bit more gray when you aren’t around.”
“I miss the United Kingdom very dearly, you know this Sir Elton John, but I have prior engagements. My work here isn’t done.”
“When it is, you know who to call.”
A beat passes, and then at the same time they both answer, “Ghostbusters.” It’s the type of friendship that stands the test of time. The type of friendship where they say their first and last names on every phone call, as men do.
***
Fuccillo gets out of the limousine with the license plate that rhymes with refuge and cracks a grin. This is it, what he’s worked for: his induction into the Syracuse Car Salesman Hall of Fame. The National Car Salesmen of America voted him in first ballot, and today was the induction ceremony outside of Marshall Square Mall, where Fuccillo would be receiving his statue within the next 3-5 years, depending on city planning.
The crowd outside the diminutive mall was massive. Men in suits were throwing toilet paper out the windows of Whitman and Starbucks renamed each of its Frappuccinos after a different type of Hyundai model. Today was cause for celebration and, at the heart of it, was a monolith whose name will ring in the ears of our grandchildren.
“Today, I consider myself the luckiest car salesman on the face of the Earth,” begins Fuccillo at his personal podium made of gold, frankincense and myrrh. A stray, “We love you Billy!” echos from a passerby leaving the Sheraton, waiting to enter the brand new The Sheraton Presents: The Billy Fuccillo Atrium for Hyundais and Other Important Things.
“You don’t know what this means to me. I’ve shot so many commercials with so little care for the quality,” Fuccillo says. “I’ve sold cars to Sheiks, CEOs and even the original Joe the Plumber.”
The crowd “Oooohs,” and Fuccillo lets the awe sink in.
“But I just want to say that this town is where my heart will always be. Thank you for your money and trust. You see, it’s not the wheels or the engine or even the heated seats in our latest Hyundai Elantra that you can pick up with no down payment. A car cannot move without a brave soul to hit the gas.”
The crowd erupts into applause, anointing the patron saint of Hyundai in a sea of gray and brown snow that is thrown into the air like confetti. If it weren’t so gross, it would be mesmerizing.
And through it all stands Billy Fuccillo, car salesman extraordinaire with a satisfied smile on his face.
It’s huge.
http://dailyorange.com/2016/02/cuneo-a-day-in-the-life-of-billy-fuccillo/
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Billy Fuccillo, Kia Soul transform driving in Southwest Florida
The man who
transformed the cars people buy, drive or see on the roads of an entire region
wore dark slacks and a red Tommy Bahama shirt.
Billy
Fuccillo beckoned.
“Come and check out
mine,” Fuccillo said of his white Kia Soul, similar to the 96 new ones
available on his lot. His car featured an upgraded, 201 horsepower engine,
leather seats, a navigation system and a panoramic sunroof.
“Of all the
manufacturers I’ve represented in more than 30 years, the Soul is the only car
that appeals to 18- and 19-year-olds and 78- and 80-year olds,” Fuccillo said.
“People who are 52 like the Soul. People who are 32. People who are 18. People
who are 80.”
Prior to Fuccillo Kia
opening in December, 2010 at 404 NE Pine Island Road, in Cape Coral, no
Kia-branded cars made the top 10 list of new, registered cars in the combined
areas of Charlotte, Collier, DeSoto, Glades, Hendry and Lee counties.
Every year since 2011,
at least three and sometimes four – the Soul, Optima, Forte and sometimes the
Sorento – have made the top 10 for new cars registered in those six counties,
according to data gathered by IHS Markit, a Michigan-based marketing firm.
Between opening more
than six years ago and mid-July, Fuccillo Kia has sold 36,850 new cars. Of
those, 24 percent, or 8,965, have been Souls. Kia corporate verified Fuccillo’s
claim that the Cape Coral dealership is in fact the world’s largest Kia dealer
in terms of volume.
Consider: Kia Soul
ranked 29th of the nation’s top 398 new cars sold in 2016. The Kia Optima
ranked 36th. But in Southwest Florida, those cars ranked sixth and fifth,
respectively, according to IHS Markit.
Gender-wise, 53
percent of the region's Soul drivers are female, and 47 percent are male,
according to IHS Markit.
“Younger people like
the car because it’s cute,” said Greg Hood, general manager of Galeana Kia,
which also sells the Soul. “Older people like the car because it’s practical.”
Greg McCarter, 52 and
from Cape Coral, stands 6 feet and weighs 450 pounds. He and his wife,
Calondra, rented a Soul for a 2015 cross-country trip to California instead of
their Toyota Sequoia, which gets 17 miles per gallon on the highway to the
Soul’s 30-31.
“I didn’t think I was
going to fit in it, because I’m a really big guy,” McCarter said of the Soul.
“But once I got in it … I’ve got all kinds of pictures of every state that I
was in with that Kia.”
This year, McCarter
bought a 2017 Soul from Fuccillo for $20,000.
The Kia Soul
demographics also include the 6-foot-3 Fuccillo, 61, who declares ad
nauseam in numerous television and radio commercials and flyers that his cars
are: “HUUUUU-JA!”
The marketing major,
psychology minor and former tight end for the Syracuse University football
team, drives his Soul when visiting Cape Coral from his Tampa home. He
owns five Florida dealerships with a sixth in the planning stages for Clermont.
He also owns 24 dealerships in upstate New York, where he sells more than a
dozen brands of cars, including the Kia.
“You have an
exceptional dealer in one area who does an exceptional job with one brand,”
said Tom Libby, an automobile analyst for IHS Market. “That can raise the
volume for a model or brand. It might be a part of the country that gravitates
to a certain concept. Four-wheel drive vehicles traditionally do very well in
mountain areas, for example.
“In the case of the
Kia Soul, it’s most likely related to an exceptional dealer performance. Now I
will say that the Kia Soul does well across the country, but it’s not in the
top 10.”
The beginning
In the fall of 2010,
Fuccillo and Percy Vaughn, now the executive director of the southern region
for Kia corporate, had dinner in Orlando. They discussed Fuccillo entering the
sales market for the Korean brand in Southwest Florida, having had success in
upstate New York.
At the time, Cape
Coral was at the epicenter of the nation’s housing crisis. The economy was in
shambles. Kia and Fuccillo took a gamble during a critical time at a location
that had been an out-of-business Saturn dealership.
“He’s one of the most
unique guys in the entire automotive industry,” Vaughn said. “He said, ‘I think
I can make a big splash in this market.’ He came in and never looked back.
“With Billy, when he
does these promotions, people come from as far away as Miami or Tampa. They
would drive down to buy a car from him, even though we had other dealerships in
those areas.”
In May of 2012, less
than two years after opening, Fuccillo had a concert on the Cape Coral lot. He
hired the classic rock band, Styx, which had top 40 hits such as "Come
Sail Away." The event drew thousands of fans. Fuccillo said he sold
dozens of cars.
Billy Fuccillo said at the start of each year, he sets a marketing budget,
usually about $350,000 to $850,000 a month.
“He’s very
aggressive,” Libby said. “He’s motivated. He’s very shrewd. That concert you
mentioned probably drew an audience that was a good fit for the Soul.”
In 1996, Fuccillo had
Robbie Knievel, son of daredevil Evil Knievel, jump his motorcycle over 19 cars
outside his Adams, New York, dealership. Fuccillo said he sold a record 523
cars in one day.
“When I got out of
college, I went to a Chevy dealer in Buffalo, looking for a job in sales,”
Fuccillo said of 1978. He was turned down three times.
“The fourth time I
went back, they finally hired me.”
Big man, big
personality
Fuccillo worked his
way into buying dealerships. He once bought a Hyundai store in Albuquerque, New
Mexico, where he went by the handle “Billy Fernandez” and did his “H-U-G-E!”
catchphrase. He said he bought the bankrupt store for $25,000 and sold it two
years later to Utah Jazz owner Larry Miller for $7 million.
Xavier Villarreal, a Fort
Myers High School graduate and Hall of Fame football player there, worked in
sales and then as a manager at Sam Galloway Ford in Fort Myers. In late 2010,
he applied to be the general manager of Fuccillo Kia.
Fuccillo told
Villarreal he wanted him to train in Rochester, New York, and to pack his bags.
Villarreal said he
hadn’t had time to book a flight yet.
“Who do you think I
am?” Fuccillo told Villarreal. “I’ve got my Lear jet waiting for you at the
airport.”
“Thirty minutes later,
I’m 10,000 feet in the air, taking off and heading to New York,” Villarreal
said. “I spent four weeks there. I never saw all of this coming. I know a lot
of people in the community. I know what this community is about. But I never
foresaw it being on the scale that it became on a day-to-day basis.
“He has a heart of
gold. I know sometimes people wish he could do more. There’s always somebody in
need. But with what he does for our customers – 70 to 80 percent of our
customers come back and buy another car from us.”
The competition
The Kia brand already
existed in the region prior to Fuccillo’s arrival. Galeana Kia, at 14483 S.
Tamiami Trail in Fort Myers and Airport Kia at 3325 Westview Drive, Naples,
each opened in 1996.
“I love him,” said
Greg Hood, general manager of Galeana Kia for the past two years. “When I was
offered this job, my boss said, ‘The No. 1 Kia dealer in the world is about 8.5
miles from you.’ When I came to the store, I knew that Kia products were so
well-branded in our market that I couldn’t fail. Billy Fuccillo came to town
and raised awareness. He spent an enormous amount of money. We’ve also been a
beneficiary of that.
“He has a
tried-and-proven formula. He floods the market, and they respond to it. The
difference between him and me is, first of all, it’s not my money.”
Hood said at first,
Fuccillo outsold Galeana Kia at a 10-to-1 clip. That has been narrowed, he
said, to about 2.5-to-1.
But Galeana Kia
doesn’t have to beat Fuccillo Kia to be successful, Hood said.
“His method was to
focus on new car sales,” Hood said. “He didn’t care as much about used cars. We
don’t do it that way. Our desire is to sell both, because they’re both good
markets.”
Lots of Soul
The Soul base model
starts at $16,100 with a manual transmission and $18,795 with an automatic,
although the dealership has various incentive programs that could drop those
prices. The new, fully loaded, “Exclaim” model Fuccillo drives goes for
about $26,500, minus incentives.
“I love the car,” said
Francesca Simonelli, 46, a Cape Coral yoga instructor. She has bought two Souls
from Fuccillo, a green one in 2012 and then a gray one last summer. “I love the
look of it. It’s all very practical for me.
“My credit was shot. I
had filed for bankruptcy. I knew if anybody was going to get me a car, it was
going to be that guy. He’s in it for the money, obviously. He was going to make
it work. It was like a dream come true.”
Lisa Terrill, 44, and
the manager of the Bayfront Bistro restaurant on Fort Myers Beach, bought her
green Soul from Fuccillo four years ago. Her Volkswagen Passat had been totaled
in an accident, hence the need for a new car. Her Soul from Fuccillo included a
trip to Miami Beach with a one-night stay in a resort and a party, another of
the dealership’s many promotions.
“At first, I was kind
of annoyed by all the commercials,” Terrill said. “But when it came down to it,
they had a good reputation or so many wouldn’t be purchasing it from them.
“I will tell you this,
I would take that car a million times on a road trip. It’s a smooth ride. It’s
very roomy on the inside. It’s like a SUV, really, but with great gas mileage.”
McCarter, Simonelli
and Terrill all said they had poor credit at the time of their purchases. Billy Fuccillo Kia
found them loans ranging from 72 to 75 months at interest rates between 4.9 and
6 percent.
The business of buying
and selling cars worked out for all parties.
Working the room
When Billy
Fuccillo visits his Cape Coral
dealership, he does not keep a low profile. He works the showroom, posing for
pictures with potential buyers. He hams it up with the sales staff.
In his office,
Fuccillo, a New York Yankees fan, has some sports memorabilia and posters and a
framed photograph of Robbie Knievel’s motorcycle jump.
Fuccillo defended his
dealership’s practice of selling cars to customers with low credit scores. He’s
aware of a negative article about that practice that has been floating around
on Facebook.
“How are you going to
get people financed?” Fuccillo said. “I think we did a lot of things to get the
community turned around, and they in turn, helped us. Sell cars, that’s what
we’re here to do.
“We don’t know what
transpires in their life. We work real hard to get them financed. So many
people are living week-to-week. We find them the best rates we can.”
Fuccillo finished a
photo shoot and then an on-camera interview. At the end, he was asked to do his
famous catchphrase.
“Catchphrase? What
catchphrase?” Fuccillo said, before looking into the camera and getting back
into character. “Southwest Florida, it’s
gonna be HUUUUU-JA!”
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