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Joe Pistell said in July 17th, 2008 at 12:12 pm

Our pals Jeff Kershner and Alex Snyder over at DealerRefresh are tackling this exact question now. http://www.dealerrefresh.com/my_weblog/2008/07/are-internet-sp.html

IMO, if the store is large enough, then it needs a dedicated MARKETING manager who oversees all media and assists the UCM with merchandising tools for his lot.

I am a Marketing Director of a large Used Car retailer in NY.There are so many marketing points these days:

Traditional Media
TV, Radio, Newsprint, Direct Mail, Yellow Pages

New Media
Home Website,
Satellite Sites,
Email Campaigns,
CRM (and it’s 1,000 schedules),
3rd party PAID classified sites (‘trader, cars, etc…),
3rd party local classified sites (each market has at least one),
3rd party FREE classified lists (Base, vast, kiijii, and a zillion others),
Ebay, Craigs List, and on and on and on…
Then there are the social marketing sites to participate in. Don’t forget, You gotta post videos on YouTube so you can embed that content all over your marketing footprint. Hey! Don’t forget to police those potentially hostile dealer-rater sites and put the smack down on any manager who wants to flame the fire.

There’s a whole lot more who’s got time to write it all down! ;-)

Joe

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dpollak said in July 17th, 2008 at 3:49 pm

OK, Joe,
“Uncle.” This really emphasizes yet another dysfunction. Who in the world does this stuff at a normal single or small dealership? I would argue that each one of these tasks is equally as important to a small dealership as to a large one. Wow, these are really challenging times to be a dealer. I would like to hear from other managers, specifically who does this stuff in a typical store, or is it done at all and to what extent?

Dale

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ruggles said in July 20th, 2008 at 10:29 pm

To the consumer, the showroom is now the monitor of his/her PC, and our inventory is parked next to our competitor’s. This might even be a line from Dale’s book. As I visit dealer websites I am appalled by the lack of professional caliber inventory photos. Poor lighting, cluttered backgrounds, and on and on. The same Pre-Owned manager probably has his front row perfectly aligned.

As I attend one technology conference after another, I see evidence that the most advanced dealers will soon be using video for their inventory, with a trained spokesperson doing a walk around. U-Tube is revolutionizing the real estate business and the auto business won’t be far behind.

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Craig Belowski said in July 27th, 2008 at 5:19 pm

It takes as much of the staff as you can get on board with understanding how the internet can either grow your business or put you out of business. We have a dedicated internet team working on lots of these tasks, however it only becomes as effective as everyone’s beliefs. You can’t for example have great pictures but not reply to inquiries in a timely manner. You can’t have great prices with poor quality photos or descriptions…and so on. This takes having a commited staff, not only one “internet guy” and an old-school thinking used car manager fighting him the whole time. The capabilities of selling cars with the internet are huge, and the amount of commitment need to thrive is huge as well.

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