• This thread is just the tip of the iceberg.The people ahead of the curve aren't Googling for answers — they're already in here, having the conversations you haven't found yet. DealerRefresh is free.Get the full picture →

Websites, SEO, SEM, Display, Social, Marketing

Need help with your website or discovering the latest thing Google did? What about some digital marketing? Here's your spot.

The thread discusses whether guest posting is an effective marketing strategy for automotive dealers, with mixed advice from industry professionals. While one contributor suggests guest blogging is largely ineffective for SEO and risks Google penalties, others recommend a selective approach—vetting sites by domain relevance and organic traffic rather than metrics alone, and reaching out directly to quality publishers. The consensus leans toward guest posting being a slow, supplementary tactic at best, with local SEO optimization and comprehensive site strategy being more impactful for dealer websites.

Replies
6
Views
2K

Automotive professionals discuss the current state of influencer marketing in 2025, with consensus that micro and nano-influencers deliver better ROI and authentic engagement than major celebrity influencers, while AI influencers remain novelties lacking genuine trust-building appeal. Key recommendations include pairing local micro-influencers with complementary paid platforms like Snapchat retargeting to maximize budget efficiency and reach specific demographics effectively. The overarching insight is that influencer marketing remains viable for dealerships, but success requires strategic matching of authentic creators to brand fit rather than pursuing big names or experimental AI partnerships.

Replies
5
Views
3K

The thread argues that dealerships must advertise inventory across multiple social and search platforms—Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Google—rather than relying on their own websites, since modern car shoppers form purchase intent while browsing these channels before ever visiting a dealership site. The post frames this multi-platform advertising strategy as essential for protecting sales volume and managing marketing spend efficiently in a market characterized by unpredictable demand, high floorplan costs, and inconsistent used car values. The key insight is that generic advertising is obsolete; dealerships need strategically placed inventory visibility wherever shoppers are actively shopping online.

Replies
1
Views
848

The thread discusses an SEO checklist for car dealership landing pages, covering keywords, content quality, CTAs, and technical SEO optimization. A key insight emerged that **website speed is the most critical conversion factor**—citing Amazon's data showing 1% sales increases per 100ms improvement—making it potentially more cost-effective than simply increasing ad spend. Community members supplemented the checklist with tool recommendations (RankYak for speed/SEO audits) and specialized automotive SEO services to help dealers convert visibility into consistent leads.

Replies
3
Views
9K

Dealers discussing DDC's SEO services overwhelmingly report that the offering is ineffective, with vendors spending minimal time on sites while producing inflated reports showing trivial changes like updating meta tags and creating no-follow citations. Multiple respondents recommend doing SEO in-house or finding specialized vendors that invest in custom, market-researched content rather than boilerplate recycled material, with the consensus being that paying for these OEM website company SEO packages provides little to no meaningful ROI.

Replies
31
Views
11K

DjSec argues that automotive web developers and SEO professionals misrepresent their capabilities—claiming fast load times and ADA compliance they don't deliver—which constitutes false advertising, and that Core Web Vitals are fundamental to SEO success yet widely ignored by practitioners. The thread devolves into debate about whether DjSec's content is AI-generated, with more constructive feedback from Ryan Everson suggesting the conversation would be more valuable if focused on real dealership case studies and actionable results rather than theory. While DjSec cites Koons.com's claimed 1400% conversion increase from speed optimization, Alex Snyder urges skepticism about such dramatic performance claims without broader corroboration.

Replies
16
Views
4K

Dealers are increasingly using aggressive pop-ups, chat widgets, and overlays to capture leads, but the practice is backfiring: Google's June 2025 update explicitly penalizes intrusive interstitials for mobile, and real-world testing shows that removing full-screen pop-ups dramatically improves page speed metrics (CLS, INP) and lead quality, even if raw lead volume drops slightly. The consensus is that dealers should abandon stacked modals in favor of subtle footer banners and context-triggered tools, which compete better against third-party marketplaces while protecting their own site's SEO and user experience.

Replies
3
Views
1K

A dealer from southwest Florida asks about the unit economics and data sourcing complexity of Vehicle Detail Pages (VDPs) across dealership websites of varying sizes, noting that the estimated 30-35 million VDPs online create intense competition. Responses reveal that typical VDPs are assembled from multiple data sources (DMS feeds, photo providers, OEM window stickers, third-party specs, and add-ons like Carfax reports and video), with the key insight that used vehicle VDPs are significantly more valuable than new vehicle VDPs due to their uniqueness, while mobile traffic dominates at 70% and SRP pages actually drive more traffic than individual VDPs. The thread highlights an industry-wide problem where standardized platforms compete on price rather than quality, forcing dealers to rely on fragmented data sources that create a subpar consumer experience.

Replies
3
Views
1K

A 17-year-old launched a social media agency for automotive businesses, claiming youth-driven expertise in platform algorithms and offering video editing, organic growth, and paid advertising services. The thread discussion revealed important insights about social media success—namely that follower count is meaningless without engagement and that algorithms prioritize shares and interactions over vanity metrics—while also exposing the OP's skepticism toward follower-boosting apps and bot-driven growth tactics. By the thread's end, community members grew suspicious of the original poster's legitimacy after discovering removed videos, deleted Reddit posts, and no verifiable online presence.

Replies
22
Views
12K

Google's AI Overviews represent a new ad placement opportunity for dealerships, and most existing Search, Shopping, and Performance Max campaigns are already technically eligible to appear in these results. The thread explains that the real challenge is optimizing campaign structure, targeting, and landing pages to signal to Google why a dealership deserves these high-visibility placements. The key insight is that dealers don't need to create new campaigns, but rather need to ensure their current campaigns are properly configured to compete for AI Overview ad positions.

Replies
0
Views
1K

A small independent dealer asks whether Vincue's appraisal and inventory sourcing tool ($1,500-2,500/month) is worth the cost compared to cheaper alternatives like Stockwave and AccuTrade ($850/month combined). Responses are mixed: one dealer recommends vAuto instead, Vincue highlights their consolidated listing and pricing features with a newly shortened 90-day contract option, but critically, another dealer warns that despite impressive demos, the product is clunky with poor support and recommends sticking with existing providers like Dealerslink. The key insight is that price alone shouldn't drive the decision—actual user experience and support quality matter significantly more than marketing claims.

Replies
4
Views
7K

Ford's move to sell CPO vehicles through Amazon highlights how third-party platforms with superior user experience are capturing the initial customer touchpoint—search, browsing, and shopping—while dealers retain only inventory, pricing, delivery, and service. Industry participants debate whether dealerships can survive in their current form if they continue relying on slow, restrictive OEM websites, with the consensus being that dealers must compete on experience rather than try to out-engineer Amazon's platform. The key insight is that dealerships' long-term viability depends less on beating Amazon outright and more on fundamentally modernizing their own digital storefronts to match consumer expectations.

Replies
4
Views
1K

A vendor introduced a free QR code platform for dealerships that allows users to generate, print custom hangtags with QR codes, and track customer scans without requiring a credit card or trial period. The post provides step-by-step instructions for signing up and accessing the free QR code features through their platform. This appears to be a product announcement/tutorial for dealers looking for a cost-free solution to create trackable QR codes for their inventory.

Replies
0
Views
495

Brian Michael West provides a practical framework for car dealers to manage social media trolls by first distinguishing them from legitimate unhappy customers, then applying a five-step strategy that includes staying professional, using platform tools to hide or filter comments, and protecting community standards. The key insight is that trolls seek conflict rather than resolution, so dealers should document interactions and consider professional social media management to preserve dealership reputation while maintaining engagement with genuine customers.

Replies
1
Views
831

The thread discusses whether AI writing tools like ChatGPT and Jasper are beneficial or harmful for automotive marketing, with Ryan Everson sharing an evolved perspective: AI should not be used to auto-publish entire SEO landing pages, but can effectively serve as a brainstorming tool, outline generator, or content starter for SEO work, while being fully acceptable for non-SEO content like event promotions. Google's official stance—rewarding "high-quality content, however it is produced"—becomes the guiding principle, though some participants remain skeptical that Google can actually detect AI-generated content at scale. The practical consensus is that strategic, human-reviewed use of AI for content efficiency is acceptable, while lazy full automation is not.

Replies
15
Views
10K

A Honda dealer solicits honest feedback from the dealer community about CarGurus' value proposition, pricing changes, and ROI on premium features. One respondent pivots the conversation to propose a dealer-owned alternative platform that would leverage AI automation and eliminate middleman marketplace fees. The thread captures dealer frustration with third-party listing platforms and explores whether a cooperative, dealer-controlled solution could be more profitable than current marketplace options.

Replies
2
Views
5K

This thread debates the legality and ethics of using AI to edit inventory photos, specifically whether removing damage, rust, or imperfections constitutes misleading advertising. Key insights include: reputable vendors like CarCutter maintain strict transparency policies (only editing backgrounds/lighting, not vehicle flaws), some participants argue the auto industry is largely unregulated on this issue, and there's a clear distinction between acceptable enhancements (lighting, backgrounds) versus deceptive edits (concealing damage). The consensus leans toward transparency as both the ethical and practical approach, though opinions vary on actual legal risk.

Replies
9
Views
3K

Esteban explores practical applications of AI tools for creating video marketing content in dealerships, following up on earlier discussions about AI's potential in automotive sales. The post provides a detailed guide for dealership professionals interested in implementing AI-generated videos, with the author sharing test results demonstrating that while imperfect, these videos show promise for engaging online car shoppers. The core insight is that AI video marketing, when executed properly, can be a competitive advantage for dealerships by creating more engaging content than traditional formats.

Replies
0
Views
3K

A dealer seeks a solution to automatically display Monroney labels on their website for Toyota vehicles without manually downloading and uploading each VIN individually. The thread identifies several vendors offering this service (including monroneylabels.com and a tool at withclutch.com), though there's conflicting information about Toyota OEM label availability and pricing typically ranges from $7 per vehicle. The key insight is that no plug-and-play solution appears to exist for bulk automated integration—dealers must choose between per-VIN services or manual processes.

Replies
17
Views
13K

A Honda dealer questions whether their dynamic SEM campaigns for used vehicles are cost-efficient, noting that popular inventory sells within 7 days regardless of ad spend while budget is wasted on vehicles that don't need help. Respondents suggest solutions ranging from analyzing third-party listing impact and inventory age data, to using tools like Vauto/Hoot Interactive for automated bid management, or simply limiting ad feeds to vehicles 7+ days old. The consensus emerges that dealers can significantly reduce SEM spend by implementing bid strategies tied to inventory age rather than running full-budget campaigns on all vehicles immediately upon listing.

Replies
11
Views
6K

Alex Snyder initiates a crowdsourced compilation of dealership website hosting companies, starting with an alphabetical list of major providers, and community members contribute additional vendors and corrections throughout the thread. The discussion reveals a fragmented market with dozens of hosting options available to dealers, ranging from established players like Dealer.com (Cox Automotive) and Dealer Inspire (Cars.com) to smaller, specialized providers. The key insight is that the dealership website hosting space is highly competitive with numerous vendors competing for dealer business, though the thread doesn't provide guidance on how to evaluate or compare these options.

Replies
130
Views
66K

This thread outlines eight video SEO best practices for car dealerships, with the original post focusing on using customer-relevant keywords (like "2025 Honda CR-V review" instead of generic terms) and writing clear, descriptive titles that balance SEO with clickability. A follow-up reply reinforces these points while adding additional tactics like custom thumbnails, captions, video schema markup, and cross-platform promotion to maximize visibility and engagement. The core insight is that dealership videos perform better when optimized for how actual car shoppers search, rather than using industry jargon.

Replies
1
Views
3K