This is a great article and looking back allows us at times a clearer image of where we are going.
Many manufacturers selling products through retailers and dealers were slow to embrace the Internet as a sales & marketing tool for fear of alienating channel partners. The idea of B2B trade exchanges as the means to lowest price using online auctions and sales proved to be by almost any measure a failure except via ebay and some of the larger independents. It maybe due to their huge success that there are not more competitors in this market.
Many manufacturers are still trying to figure out how to get closer to consumers online. Their biggest fear is in alienation of their dealers and channel partners. However when one OEM develops a successful model the others who are smart will follow quickly.
The real value of Internet marketing isn't talking to customers, but listening to them, which is the basis of the "Toyota Plan" to establish a more direct channel to their clients.
Another key integration leading to a more effective online presence is that of customer relationship management (CRM) systems which will improve over the next few years. Look at how much they have improved in the last few years and there are more companies now in the game, quality companies producing quality solutions.
Pity the poor company signing a contract to be locked into a 5-year agreement today with one of these "archaic" legacy companies.
This type of marketing relationship, OEM-Consumer, aligns the desires and wants of consumers with the capabilities of the "OEM Company", and the success results in a loyal customer.
Korea is a classic example of this as they have 23 million Internet users, one of the highest percent based to the country's population in the world.
KAMA (Korean Automobile Manufacturers Association) is an active model of how Korean OEM's are using the Internet to reach their Korean customers. It may pay some of the US Dealers to research this. As we all know Korea is moving very quickly up the ladder.
Some automotive manufacturers have been in the forefront of this change, streamlining their supply chains via the dealers and establishing a trading exchange, Toyota, Ford, and General Motors, are able to better manage the entire order-to-delivery process and differentiate offerings to customers according to their value, some better than others.
Toyota and Ford were one of the first auto manufacturers to use the Internet to reach Hispanic customers with great success. Even today, 2007, you will find dealers in Hispanic communities without a Hispanic site as part of their ecommerce solution…. Go Figure? The Hispanic market continues to be the fastest-growing consumer segment in the U.S.
Some OEM's for the most part know this and strive to offset the lag and inefficiencies of the present system.
Via the Internet, more power has shifted to the customer, and those companies that are able to integrate their supply chain and their customer strategies via the Internet will achieve breakthrough performance.
To date this channel has been filtered through the dealer system so the data in many cases is skewered. As the OEM companies centralize their process and channel direct to the consumer they will receive back exactly what the consumers are looking for, the complaints, ideas, desires and suggestions, also the OEM will be able to give the consumer correct product information and eliminate much of the misinformation that is in the market place today.