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
@Michael- The problem with your theory is that the Truecar prices are real! Those dealers are really selling my customers that car for those prices! The issue isn't "laying out the information for an informed customer" as you suggest. It's that customer believing in the message that has been beat into them for years. Credibility is at the core of the issue here. We do all the things you reccommend and in fact, take it much further. We discredit the pricing issues but what you forget about is the reach of social media! Customers talk through social media and cars purchased at or below costs are discussed at lenght. What about that customer that never makes it into my dealership? The person who goes online and drives to that dealer without ever contacting us? The person(s) who live in our PMA and work in my marketplace. This lends credo to the business plan.
It's easy to critique a dealer for not overcoming this "objection". But the fact of the matter is what's at the core of this discussion. TC and other third-party vendors are dictating prices below costs and the dumb %#ss dealers are paying them for the privledge of selling below costs!
@Mark..Thanks! It is interesting how the industry justifies stuff that shouldn't even be mentioned. If ANY of my stores would have tried to convince me of running crappy #'s, I woulda fell out of my chair! I KNOW BETTER(been there and sat every chair!) Point is, they knew better! I owned a stand alone Suzuki store in Leesburg, Florida. We ranked 14th in the country(632 total stores) selling 700 new yearly, and over 3800 used. When the "LEADER" sets the bar low, and allows excuses, the creative excuses come out!----There is one excuse that I haven't heard..."gross is a direct result of units sold." That is a bunch of bull also...One has NOTHING to do with the other...Okay, off my soap box, and back to making money!! Best to ALL...
Considering the posts in this forum, I'd say that if TrueCar/Zag were a dealer do you think they had a reputation problem with many here? What would be their CSI to cause all this ruckus? Have they ignored the larger dealer body with published interviews about commission-less sales floors and standard pricing? And pricing that ignores the "lifts" that make a dealer accept a price? And, apparently, the fees needed to do business on a car for a dealer? What advice would we give if they feel they are being misrepresented?
JIM... When I pull up a Camry LE in Truecar you find http://www.truecar.com/prices-new/toyota/camry-pricing/2012/
$21,632 is what Truecar shows. That car wouldn't even have the Carpet Mats, South East Toyota fees, or Destination.
When I pull an invoice excluding destination and Southeast Toyotas fee (5 state region) the invoice should reflect $20,589. Their TRUECAR "GREAT PRICE" is $21,073. So that's a $474.00 LOSER out of the gate. TRUECAR isn't taking into consideration that all Lexus and Toyota vehicles in the Southern 5 States have an Admin fee. For the Camry it's $675 SET FEE then add the Destination of $815. $22,147 WOULD BE INVOICE INCLUDING DESTINATION, SOUTHEAST TOYOTA ADMIN FEE, WHICH INCLUDES THE GAS CHARGE ON THE INVOICE = $22.83 AND SET DISTRIBUTOR PLUS FEE OF $46.75
Total difference with no added options = <-$1074>
Now imagine that customers print up the Truecar price and want a car with Carpet mats and a power seat package.
"You can throw that in.. I know you people make pleanty of money!"
"Go get your manager" "I've got a cheaper price at the other 7 stores already:
So if we agree that the TrueCar pricing isn't, then we are left with the question of what to do when someone comes into the dealership with the printout in hand. I would think that muddying the water and instilling doubt about the validity of the information would be the best path. How do you handle a shopper that has been let out on a rocket somewhere else? First, show them the real invoice on the car they have chosen. I have found that if you lay all of the information out in front of an "informed" customer, it is too much for them to process. It also gives you credibility for being willing to give them the insider information. Now the tide is turning. Explain that all dealerships have the same cost. Romance them a little, and hold on the trade, and you may have a car deal.
What not to do...Don't blow them out! If they do leave, you want to make it ok to come back when they don't get the price they think they can get. Eventually they have to buy a car. It may take realligning their expectation levels a bit, but you want to be there when they become more realistic.
I really like your style Wendell
The more I read this thread, the more I REALLY believe that some/most have been "drinking the koolaid"..Are we REALLY gonna justify investing 10's of thousands of dollars to make/lose a few hundred dollars? JUST SAY NO!! These 3rd party companies are NOT ON YOUR SIDE! There are also ways to advertise YOUR inventory, without paying these types of companies. HISTORY LESSON...AutoNation was going to "change" the car business in the '90's, by offering a one price no haggle deal..."We are going to show those dumb 'ole car guys how to do business!" That took about a year or so, then they rehired those "dumb 'ole car guys" to become a profitable company. People sell cars...AND IT'S OKAY TO SAY NO..IN A NICE PROFESSIONAL WAY!! Stop making excuses about why your pvr is as low as it is! SELL SOMEBODY SOMETHING!!
@Larry...Since your dealership doesn't collect a dealer fee, you are really up a creek!
@Larry: Where does the "Dealer Cost" of $21,184 fall compared to your NNN cost after all SET fees, etc.? It sounds like you are a lot further off than the Honda example.
So we know that TrueCar has Honda wrong. How about a GM dealership that has a convoluted incentive structure. I can't imagine how TrueCar would know what to include and what to ignore.
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