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Is there room in automotive for another CRM?

Shawn Ryder

Full Sticker
Sep 25, 2013
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Shawn
Started down the path - and before I get too crazy and far - is there room for another CRM in the industry? If so - some questions as thought starters - please let me know.
  • Current Challenges: What challenges are you facing with your current CRM?
  • Feature Wishlist: What features or functionalities would you like to see in a CRM tailored for the automotive industry?
  • Integrations: Which tools or platforms would you want a new CRM to integrate with seamlessly (e.g., inventory management, digital marketing tools)?
  • User Experience: How important are ease of use and mobile compatibility to your team?
  • Customer Communication: What communication tools (texting, emailing, follow-up reminders) are must-haves?
Just some early steps and have a demo environment in progress - contact me directly if you want.
 
Wow what a big question Shawn. I'll think about from a 10+ year old CRM's perspective who is looking forward and how they see it.

They are focused on adding layers on top of their infrastructure to make it easier to use. They are polishing services like chat, email, customer outreach recommendations, etc. by leveraging 3rd party usage-based priced AI products. They are trying to pass these off as new products to increase revenue to pay for the dev labor and 3rd party AI costs but the reality is they are features. They are features because they will quickly be the standard and the price will need to reflect that.

So now flip this and think if they could build without this burden what would they do differently. How would the infrastructure look, what are features that are standard and where is the real innovation. Take DR embedded coms with vehicle media and AI, this is standard. What becomes interesting is how to build empowering user experiences that engage dealership users rather than alienate them, I think that's where the innovation comes in. If you are building this fresh you are able to think about human in the loop design versus human has to click all these buttons and that's pretty exciting especially when you think how light your application can be.
 
The biggest problem with building a CRM: the feature chase.

No matter how innovative you are, dealers are very comfortable with certain features (at least they think they are). You're going to have to develop much of what dealers already have in decades-old tech that will allow your sales team to get 5 minutes into a demo.

This is one of the many reasons I say FUCK CRMs! They only serve three purposes: printing paperwork, desking deals, and doing last-minute email blasts. You won't change dealers' CRM utilization; you must change the technology genre. Or play the feature chase and duke it out with the old guard.
 
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