Tom, I guess my question is how many people search for 'best price impala", much less do a video search for "best price impala"? Then the next question is how many of those folks are likely to click on a specific Michigan Chevy dealer? And then how many of those convert?Is everyone convinced that we can not optimize for a broad term? Are we sure we have to go rely on PPC for terms like "toyota camry". Ed, sounds like you are.... Brian Pasch made a similar statement to yours last week about broad terms like "toyota camry" not being able to be optimized for organic search by a dealer and show on page one. I think it is not the length of a term that makes it broad or short necessarily ...."lowest price impala" is 3 words but very broad...(.no year, no city)...we did a broad term campaign last February for "lowest price impala"... finished it in two weeks , did not touch it for over six months and it remained on page one, position #3....two days ago we added some fresh content to it for the first time since February, (less than one man hour) and now are holding positions #3 #4 #5 and #7 on page one on a clean machine using a proxy server in the UK.....we actually booted our own "6 month old 3rd position" off the page. We are positioned for that broad term directly behind Chevrolet.com who is at #2. If you search "best price impala", there are only lead aggregation sites and Chevrolet.com on page one....and our store in position #8....we are currently doing a campaign on an even narrower term and "best price impala" is getting a free ride for us. Then if you switch search results to "video" from "web" for the broad term "lowest price impala", we hold positions 1,2,4,5,7 & 8. Our current campaign is a very broad , two word term and I have every expectation it will be on Page One in two weeks or less and it will have staying power. Google Instant in the longer term I believe may help organic search for broad terms if you can get there and I know we can. This is an old mans opinion, it and a buck will get you a coffee most places.

This thread debates how Google Instant's auto-complete feature will reshape search behavior and digital marketing strategy for car dealers, with particular concern that it will suppress long-tail keyword searches in favor of shorter, more generic queries. Participants discuss downstream effects including reduced organic search visibility for local dealers, increased PPC impression metrics (potentially inflating performance reports), and lower click-through rates, ultimately suggesting that dealers must invest heavily in PPC advertising to maintain visibility as users rely more on auto-suggested short-tail searches rather than typing complete local queries.