Haleem Mediouni says success in selling high performance (HP) and ultra-high performance (UHP) tires boils down to one word: trust.Â
âYou need to get your customer to trust you,â says the owner of Merrimack, N.H.-based HM Motor Works. âAnd to get them to trust you, you need to befriend them. There needs to be a relationship.âÂ
For the last 13 years, Mediouni has developed close relationships with numerous vehicle owners who entrust their expensive, high-end cars to his care. He doesnât take the faith they place in his shop lightly.Â
A car guy
It helps that Mediouni is a self-professed âcar guy. Growing up, I was the kid with the poster of a Porsche 911 on his wall.âÂ
His daily driver is a Land Cruiser, which shares his home garage with an Audi A3 and a 23-year-old BMW M5. Â
âI also have a Mitsubishi Galant VR-4. And I have a restoration project on the lift â a 1972 Porsche 911.âÂ
Before he founded HM Motor Works in 2010, Mediouni worked in a European car repair shop.Â
Opening his own shop was a natural next step, he says. âThis is a very well-to-do town. There are a lot of Audis and BMWs that come with UHP tires. There also are a lot of Italian and British exotics within a 30- to 40-mile radius.âÂ
New car dealers are âover an hour-and-a-half away,â which forced many vehicle owners to explore local options when it was time for new tires and wheels.Â
âWord got aroundâ that HM Motor Works could meet their needs. âWe started selling more low-profile HP and UHP tires.âÂ
Mediouni also is an amateur racer. He says word about his shopâs expertise spread among local âtrack day addicts.Â
âIâd get a lot of inquiries from guys on track days. âHow can I shave 2/10 of a second on my lap time? What kind of tire can I put on this car to make it faster than my buddyâs car?ââÂ
Since then, Mediouni has only deepened his involvement in racing. âWe have a Champ Car team that I use as a team-building tool. My staff loves it. Having a team that shares the same passion adds an accelerant to the whole thing.Â
âMost guys who have a track day car drive something similar at home. The guys who drive a 3 Series BMW (at an event) will drive a BMW M3 as their Sunday car. They bring their track day cars to me and they bring their daily drivers to me.âÂ
Many of HM Motor Worksâ enthusiast customers do their research, according to Mediouni. Â
âThey are typically very tire-loyal â not just brand-loyal,â he says. âWhen a company discontinues a tire, these customers go into panic mode. They are very data-driven.âÂ
But not all the data they uncover is correct, he adds. Â
âThere can be some misinformation. Itâs our job to educate them and set the record straight. After we educate them, they never question us. Trust is built through educating your customers. Thatâs how Iâve always done it.âÂ
While money is no object to many of HM Motor Worksâ customers, some of them are budget-constrained, says Mediouni. âAnd we work within that budgetâ when selling HP and UHP tires to them.Â
However, this often requires a deeper discussion at the sales counter.Â
âWe ask customers, âWhat are your wants? What are your needs? What are you doing with the car? What are your performance expectations? Do you have a long commute? Do you work from home?âÂ
âHow do they perceive their car? Is it a tool or is it a big part of their life? All of that factors in.Â
âWeâve found that people either use their cars because it gets them from point A to point B or they cherish their vehicles. Then weâll figure out what the best package is. Do we sell them a General AltiMax or a Continental Extreme Sport?âÂ
Sterling reputationÂ
What happens at the sales counter is one part of the equation, says Mediouni. The other is what happens in the service bay.Â
âMy technicians go to a lot of training classesâ to stay current on the latest products, machines and procedures.Â
âWe have a good relationship with K&M Tire,â one of HM Motor Worksâ suppliers. âThey always point us in the right direction for education. They have allowed us to go to (training) events hosted by various tire companies.Â
âWeâre proactive â more than I think most shops are. Weâre also very proactive when it comes to equipment. We update our tire equipment every three to four years â all brand new machines. Itâs a huge investment.âÂ
Mediouni says his dealershipâs hard-won reputation for excellence is paying dividends.Â
âOne of my most memorable moments is when we had a new Mustang Shelby GT350R in our shop,â he recalls.Â
âThe customer told me, âIâm bringing this to you because Iâve heard about you. Iâve never been here before, but I expect excellence. I need tires. But just so you know, the wheels (on the Mustang) are $3,000 to $5,000 a piece because theyâre made of carbon. I know exactly what they look like. I know every single ding thatâs on them. And I expect to receive them in the same condition Iâm giving them to you.âÂ
âThe anxiety of that conversation spread throughout the shop like wildfire,â says Mediouni. âEvery single one of us was concerned.Â
âMy foreman took the project under his wing. He pulled the car in and waited until after 5 p.m. to work on it. He told everyone to go home â including myself. He said, âYou all need to leave so I can mount and balance these tires. Iâm not going to have nine people staring at me.â He wanted to minimize all distractions. He spent three-and-a-half hours mounting and balancing four tires!âÂ
The customer, says Mediouni, was thrilled with the results âand has since come back and spent well over five figures with us in the last year.Â
âWeâre not afraid to take on challenges,â he adds. âItâs a brain trust here. Weâll figure it out.â
About the Author
Mike Manges
Editor
Mike Manges is Modern Tire Dealer’s editor. A 28-year tire industry veteran, he is a three-time International Automotive Media Association Award winner, holds a Gold Award from the Association of Automotive Publication Editors and was named a finalist for the prestigious Jesse H. Neal Award, the Pulitzer Prize of business-to-business media, in 2024. He also was named Endeavor Business Media's Editor of the Year in 2024. Mike has traveled the world in pursuit of stories that will help independent tire dealers move their businesses forward. Before rejoining MTD in 2019, he held corporate communications positions at two Fortune 500 companies and served as MTD’s senior editor from 2000 to 2010.

