Alex,
First, allow me to applaud you on my favorite sentence in your article:
"I do think the notion of saving your way into a profit is silly."
I was recently in Florida working with our Sales Managers and visiting many of the Dealers in the Tampa area. As we met with these very seasoned and very intelligent men and women we heard them one after another say: "We're just trying to survive so we've really cut back on our advertising everywhere..."
Roughly translated: "We've cut every bit of our exposure, have somehow managed to rationalize this as being a wise decision and believe for some unknown reason that we'll end up more profitable than we were when we had our name in front of 20,000 shoppers."
Let's face fact; there are really only two reasons to advertise online:
Reason #1: To protect the hundreds of thousands of dollars that a Dealer has invested to build their current customer base. Advertising online with the sites consumers visit most is the best way to PROTECT YOUR PRIOR INVESTMENTS.
We all know, and Joe Verde has preached it for years, that your current customer is your best prospect because they like trust and respect you already - otherwise they wouldn't have purchased from you.
If a dealer isn't keeping their name available on the sites that most consumers visit - they are handing their customers over to the competition on a silver platter.
Reason #2: To go after the business that your competition is either too lazy, or to ignorant to protect.
This may sound harsh but as far as I knew we're all people in the car business in a down economy so there is no time to patty-cake the situation.
If your competitors aren't smart enough to protect their current customers you need to go after them yourself.
Getting back to my Florida visit I met with one Dealer who absolutely blew me away. This man is in his 60's and we all know that many Dealer's who are that age are typically a bit more old school and not as online savvy.
When we stopped to visit this friend, and I do consider him a friend as I always grow from our conversations, he validated everything I just shared with you.
When I asked how business was going his exact reply was: "We are doing excellent."
When I asked how he was doing excellent when everyone else on his street was crying he said to me: "Mat, while everyone else is pulling back their advertising and trying to save their way to a profit I have increased mine substantially....If they're to ignorant to protect their business I'm going to take their customers..."
He is truly doing an excellent job of running his VERY successful dealership in spite of the economy. Oh, did I mention that he is an independent who stocks about 50% of the inventory that his large franchise competitors stock and he blows them out of the water?
I applaud you all for your thinking and I would encourage you to keep tracking well so you can prove that your dealers are getting a good return from your efforts.
I also want to recognize that it is NORMAL for the GM, Owner, GSM to blow off everything that you recommend - and it isn't your fault.
Being a guy that started in the business before the internet took off I have to accept partial blame for the issues that ISMs face today.
When the internet became big, most of the top salespeople didn't understand how it worked and many still don't understand that EVERYONE is an internet customer.
Truth is, at many dealerships the guy or girl who understood the internet best was usually the weakest salesperson in the dealership.
Let me say that I don't believe this is always the case today, however, this is still the mentality of many of those 'old school' folks that some of you referred to earlier. I too was one of them at first.
If we had a salesperson who was "nice" and could "write an email" we made them the 'internet manager' and they got all the email leads.
In those days there weren't too many leads and the top salespeople thought internet folks were just 'tire kickers' so they wanted nothing to do with email customers.
Owners and Managers at that time thought to ourselves: "What the heck, if this kid can get lucky enough to land a couple appointments from this email stuff we can go in and close for them. If they can't no big deal because it isn't enough of our business to worry about."
This was short sighted thinking but it lends perspective to why you face such a challenge today with those 'old school' folks.
We have to remember one thing: The Dealer, as Alex said earlier, is calling the shots and pulling the strings. Whether their thinking is old school or not, it's still their money. That said it would appear that we need to help them see the value that YOU bring to the dealership.
The best way that I know how to help your Dealer or GM to see value in you and to see value in the internet department is for you and your department to make them money.
Based on the posts I see on this site I'm confident that improving sales and increasing revenue should be easy for many of you.
Congratulations in advance on your 2009 successes and good luck on your future promotions!
Helping the best get better,
Mat Koenig
Sales Training Manager
Cars.com
To get more information on Mat Koenig go to
www.matkoenig.com