Great thread idea Edward!
Craig already covered the importance of a "real" review strategy. That can be a huge hole in the digital front line. I also know that you submitted a few chapters to the "how to do reviews in automotive" book when it was written.
I think the best idea is to take off your dealer hat and interact with your business in the same way that a consumer does. That really is the best equivalent to discovering a hole in the front line. You have a great list developing, but here are a few more things to check:
-Look at your VDP's on your website and 3rd party sites - What is missing? What could be better?
-Chase links to your site to make sure that you know where they land - Does it make sense to a consumer? Are they getting what they want?
-Use a tool to make certain that N.A.P. is correct and up to date on all business listing sites on the web - N.A.P. = Name, Address, Phone - Consumer Experience is NOT good if I call a dead 800 number trying to reach you.
-Check the "Meet the staff" page - SO MANY of these are just short of terrible. Blank pages, no pictures or bad pictures, no contact information etc. - We need to start merchandising the front line of our dealerships, the sales and service staff, just as well as our front line of inventory! This might be the biggest hole in the digital front line. It is a complex issue that could be its own thread, but I'll say this. If you are churning out your sales staff so fast that you can't keep your "meet the staff page" updated, your problem IS NOT your website provider!
One of the GREAT one-liners that I took away from DSES was this: "
STOP trying to sell cars and
START trying to help people buy them!" That concept is foundational and so much more than semantics. I could probably have summed up this whole post with that simple line. I'd try to use it as the litmus test for holes in your ENTIRE strategy not just your digital front line.