Jim Ziegler asks...
I am hearing a lot of discussion about True Car and ZAG. I continually scratch my head and wonder if desperate dealers are doing the marketing limbo "How Low Can You Go?"
Are we so bad at what we do that we have to line up and pay vendors to lose money? AND, who is giving these people access to your data that is used against you?
Who owns these companies and what might be their ulterior motive? Sometimes I ask questions to which I already know the answer.
Am I wrong?
What do you think... JIM
Jim Ziegler's Guidance and Recommended Action Plan:
Ten Areas We Need to Concentrate on to Bring This Monster to It's Knees...
Read this article as a reference: http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F20110831%2FFIN...
AND, if you doubt the mission... read this... http://www.zag.com/websiteASSETS/whitepapers/ZAG-WhitePaper3.pdf
Comment
Sent to Scott Painter, no response, didn't expect one.
With some editing. I posted this on my blog autosandeconomcs.com on Moday:
Open Letter to the Automotive Industry from Scott Painter, Founder & CEO of TrueCar, Inc. and responses by Ruggles
Monday, December 12, 2011 12:01 am
Painter :Our world is changing. Unprecedented access to information and a massive shift in consumer behavior has resulted in a challenging new automotive retail landscape. It has also enabled a consumer appetite for data transparency. To hide from evolving consumer behavior is to deny change. At TrueCar, we embrace this opportunity. We also believe that transparency is the centerpiece of trusting relationships. Some in the industry disagree. We would like to make our position clear.
Ruggles: Transparency is NOT the objective of auto dealers. Survival is, followed by net profit. It takes gross profit to have some net profit left over at month end. Is there another industry where consumers feel they have the right to know a sellers actual true costs? What gives consumers the right to that information in the first place? Your aim of providing transparency is NOT your only aim. Making money in the doing is. The behaviour by consumers wanting to know a car dealers bare costs is NOT something new. In 1970 credit unions would arm their members with "dealer cost." There were books available on every news stand. The delivery of the information is what is different.
If you want total transparency, give consumers actual bare cost down to net net net. Then allow the negotiation to be based on the gross profit, say a thousand or two. Do you really think consumers understand gross profit. Do they understand the expenses that are paid out of gross profit? More importantly, do they care?
Over the course of time car dealers have had their margins trimmed dramatically by their OEMs. When I started in the business the margin on large cars was 22.5% with a 2.5% hold back. "Trunk money" was available only for special promotions, but it was no where near as prevalent as today. The profit a dealer makes these days has moved to "trunk money," as the dramatically narrowed margin and increased availability of information to consumers has dictated it. And you are looking to disclose this information as if consumers have some kind of inherit right to it.
The auto business is a business of negotiation. AND consumers can shop. Consumers aren't bound by the same rules that auto dealers are. You seem to be saying that you would like to remove the negotiation aspect of the business while making money for your own company in the doing. Its not like you are performing some needed public service. You think an efficient market for new vehicles is good for everyone? How does that jive with the dealer, who has made substantial investment, making a reasonable return? If they don't, who will be around to provide other essential services to the consumer? The factory?
You're a business man and have closed some deals where negotiation has been required to reach agreement. You also know that in negotiation if neither party gets their feathers ruffles at some point, money has been left on the table. I suspect that in your very best negotiations, you negotiated without appearing to negotiate at all. I suspect that is how you have gotten so many dealers to sign on initially. That might even be how you gathered in $200 million in venture capital. I take my cap off to you for being such an artful negotiator. But don't in the same breath talk about transparency. Your objective is to make your deal while adopting the APPEARANCE of transparency as a negotiating tactic. How do you expect to make money in a negotiating busin
@ Stanley: They will take my position from me when they pry my cold, dead hands from around it. :) They haven't changed a thing, and until they DO change then I will be right on this issue the same as always. Kill The Beast!!
No doubt Jim! I can see that happening...just a matter of time.
Here's another question... What happens when a consumer that paid MSRP or an addendum price over MSRP decides to file a "price gouging" complaint by leveraging TrueCar data? I can't think of a courthouse in the golden state of california that wouldn't find on the side of the consumer. It is only a matter of time...... Imagine the discovery process of any dealership you know where every sale price is scrutinized for fairness against the low water mark published by Painter and the lot........ Spooky!
I remain unchanged... working behind the scenes stirring up poo-poo
TrueCar has done a great job of taking $299.00 worth of profit from the Dealers pockets and put it in their own!
Kill the Beast!
@Stanley, NO! NO! & NO!
This is interesting. I guess I will see what kind of power Scott Painter has. He has been in communication with some of the most outspoken people from this blog. Will the tone of the post change? Has they changed already? Have any opinions changed?
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