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
Hello everyone I am working onsite at a Toyota Dealership. Sorry I haven't been more active here.
Revenge of the Phone Ninja!
Death to the beast
@ Mike: What we need is a message to those investors. TrueCar/Zag will let you out of an agreement . . . and 5,500 dealers lost due to this is a big message . . . regardless, let's take them OUT of the data. LET THEM SCRAPE. And let's start a discussion on/with DealerTrack and what THEY are now obviously doing with the data. Who else can folks work with? DealerTrack has competitors. TrueCar has . . . on or off switch.
Let's turn them OFF. Thanks! :)
Even if we get them out of our data, they are not going away. Before we gave them the keys to the castle, they were scrapping registry records for transactional data. What we can do is take away their revenue stream and make them a lot less attractive to VC money and Wall Street. Imagine saying to every customer with a Truecar certificate, "Oh, I'm sorry you have that. I could have saved you an additional $299 but I have to honor that price and send that $299 savings to Truecar instead of giving it to you."
Not sure where my post went but the long and short of it was that on 25 Truecar deals last month, our average gross was under $200 after paying Truecar and before paying the salesperson their mini. I have never been a fan of ZAG or their new incarnation Truecar. I can remember when ZAG used to try to tell us where we had to price our cars, that's what caused their initial slide and forced them to rethink their business model. They got around that by creating the Truecar piece which basically says, "Your competitors are $500 under invoice but go ahead and price however you like. We're only going to show the top three dealers and we may suspend you for not generating enough deals but we don't tell you how to price."
While I build my case to ownership to move on from Truecar, I'm also thinking about ways to combat them online. I'm thinking that an SEM campaign built around Truecar's/ZAG's keywords with a landing page that describes what their intentions are and why we would rather give the customer a $300 gift card than pay Truecar a fee. If I'm going to give someone $300, I'd rather it go to our customer than venture capitalists in CA. If we look a little deeper into what dealership's do in their communities, I think we can make a very compelling case why turning dealership's into convenience stores isn't the way to go. Money for a softball team - sorry can't help you - call Scott Painter. High school needs a new computer lab - sorry, no money - call Scott Painter. Help raise $150,000 for Breast Cancer Awareness like we did last month, sorry our margins have shrunk and we need to cut back on giving to the community to remain competitive. When we make a profit, we allow our employees a better standard of living and pump that money back into our communities. What the public doesn't understand is that the profit margins on cars, especially new ones are razor thin. Please tell me another industry where you can sell a $25,000 product and make a $150 commission. I do surveys and I always like to ask the customer, what do you think a fair commission on a new car purchase should be. Over 85% think a "fair" commission would be $350-$400. Customer's have no idea that the person who sold them their $32,000 car made a $150 mini. Transparency has infected every aspect of the car business except one - the general public still thinks we make a ton of money selling cars so there is always a little more room to grind. There has to be more room, Scott Painter said so...
Jerry we can not wait to view the video
Great news, I just finished editing a new video and it should be ready within the next 30 minutes. I am coming back with more punch and I am going to stab the beast!
@ Steve: I agree with all you say, with one exception. I'm not sure the horse is out of the barn, especially if it is "de-saddled" from the Dealer's data.
And that is actually a few horses drawing a coach, as DealerTrack is in there, too.
Depends on what the dealers want to do; more than that, it depends on what the dealers KNOW to do.
Zag/TrueCar isn't YET a requirement to do business. Until, if ever, it is, I'll firmly recommend NO to anybody who asks me. And, as it turns out over the last few days, to a LOT MORE who didn't initially ask me! :)
Thanks.
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