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jakehughes

Hat Trick
Feb 17, 2021
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Jake
Welcome to the REV. A briefing that goes deep into the Widewail Automotive Reputation Index data, surfacing the most interesting insights. Every 3 weeks we Rank, Explore & Visualize automotive reputation & sentiment data.

All data is sourced from the
Widewail Automotive Reputation Index or related Reports. The Index aggregates over 1.6 million Google reviews from 16k new car dealerships in the U.S. Customize the dataset like it's your own personal spreadsheet. Try it out. It’s free.

Read online. Subscribe.



RANK

Customer Service is (Still) King


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Before the holidays, we published the Voice of the Customer report. In it, we studied 800,000 dealership Google reviews and analyzed the 27 topics that come up most frequently in reviews, which you see listed above.

We wanted to know which topics are skewed negatively and which trend positively. To do this, we found the frequency of mentions in positive and negative reviews and calculated the spread.

Here’s what I mean by “spread.”

Personnel is mentioned in 57% of positive reviews but 17% of negative reviews. That’s a 39% spread, favoring positive reviews. +39% is charted in the visual.

We identified staff-related topics; personnel, helpfulness, professionalism and knowledge account for most positive topics. Customer service is still king.

Take note of how positive the sentiment is related to the sales department. Sales stand out dramatically from service, which resides in no man’s land - in the middle. The topics in the middle are not serious influencers of positivity or negativity, averaging mentions in 1.75% of reviews. They have a negligible impact. The only exception is service, which shows up in approximately 40% of both negative and positive reviews.

On the right is the who’s who of bad actors: communication, maintenance, wait times, price. These topics have a significant role in negative reviews but a limited role in positive reviews.

Go deeper with the 2023 Voice of the Customer Report.


EXPLORE

High Alert


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Nobody will praise me for reporting that an $800 brake service generates more price mentions than a $50 oil change, but hear me out.

What I can tell you is that the moment a customer shows up on the lot for a brake repair, your team is immediately 47% more likely to receive a 1-star review that mentions the price of the service compared to all negative reviews that mention price.

Not all service appointments should be treated equally.

Pricing is mentioned 20% more often in reviews that mention brakes compared to oil change reviews.

This isn’t surprising considering new brakes cost an estimated 16x more than an oil change. But your team needs to be ready and work to make the customer experience highly positive to mitigate the risk of a 1-star review that mentions pricing. The same goes for transmission work, in which pricing mentions come up 45% more often. Your team must be on its A-game with strong communication and effective repair work.

We cover a whole chapter on how consumers think about price, starting on page 27.


VISUALIZE

Monthly Review Volume Heatmap


REV 4 Visualize


Above, we mapped review volume leaders for each state. View this as the gold standard in your region. In California, Longo Toyota stands out at 466 Google reviews/month. In Maine? Rowe Ford Westbrook dominates with 61 monthly reviews.

While high volume makes sense in California and Florida, North Carolina stands out. Hendrick Toyota Apex leads the way at 370 reviews/month on average.

Curious about benchmarks in your state? Go to the Index.



We are launching the 2024 Brand Scorecard report at NADA, on 2/2. We've looked at the reputation data and topic & sentiment analysis of 32 OEMs to determine the winner. Subscribe ahead of time here. Or stop by booth #6306N and I'll walk you through a physical copy of the report myself.

Jake, Marketing @Widewail


Subscribe to The REV
 
Welcome to the REV. A briefing that goes deep into the Widewail Automotive Reputation Index data, surfacing the most interesting insights. Every 3 weeks we Rank, Explore & Visualize automotive reputation & sentiment data.

All data is sourced from the
Widewail Automotive Reputation Index or related Reports. The Index aggregates over 1.6 million Google reviews from 16k new car dealerships in the U.S. Customize the dataset like it's your own personal spreadsheet. Try it out. It’s free.

Read online. Subscribe.



RANK

Customer Service is (Still) King


Sqv3LBtqo2TGWKfSuBj-xuJ0rWYiVG2ABK408oby_DIkVfUwfrhIwU97kvsecbx_T0T_lrMQCj54JePlBoE46QL7DtAz6Jl6SMUtTBHRoAYula9x5w3SvUaHhl9h5IbE-B5NUGHC5zUTeeD_BlMZCt4
Great information and insight. Thanks for providing this. I would argue that several of the negative tops would be reduced just by addressing the worst one: communication. It's not what happens, it's how you respond to what happens.
 
Great information and insight. Thanks for providing this. I would argue that several of the negative tops would be reduced just by addressing the worst one: communication. It's not what happens, it's how you respond to what happens.
Agreed. Effective communication is the end all be all for reducing negativity or backlash. If you set expectations up front, no bs/beating around the bush, 90% of price complaints will vanish. The average consumer doesn't understand the costs of service so you as the dealer have to communicate the difference between a brake job and oil change

Overall great stuff. Love the data!
 
Great information and insight. Thanks for providing this. I would argue that several of the negative tops would be reduced just by addressing the worst one: communication. It's not what happens, it's how you respond to what happens.
Yes, exactly. The topics related to communication are, in many instances, subtopics of the greater communication theme. And, to make a detailed point, when we tag reviews, a single review can contain many tags.

One way to think about how we assess topics in Widewail's research is to consider the "most common" scenario. Think of it as the combination of topics with the highest probability to be found in a positive or negative review.

Most common positive scenario:
The customer had a good experience with a staff member in the sales department, mentioned that individual by name, and communicated that the dealership representative had some combination of professionalism, knowledge, and friendliness.


This is not to say positive outcomes don't come out of the service department, but simply, it's slightly more common in sales.

Most common negative scenario:
The customer had an issue with poor communication in the service department, usually about the repairs, wait time or price.


As a dealer, focusing on these scenarios first will lead to the most impactful outcomes - better reviews, better reputation, more customers etc.
 
Agreed. Effective communication is the end all be all for reducing negativity or backlash. If you set expectations up front, no bs/beating around the bush, 90% of price complaints will vanish. The average consumer doesn't understand the costs of service so you as the dealer have to communicate the difference between a brake job and oil change

Overall great stuff. Love the data!
Glad you find it helpful!