http://www.dealerrefresh.com/why-your-used-cars-get-stuck-on-your-lot/
Bringing this article to the forum.
So I read this article 2-3 times (one of those may have been a skim) and what I failed to get out of it is how one comes to attain "Online Search Volume" easily. So I hope Chad takes a stab at this to help us out.
In light of what transpired in the Twitterverse, Ed and Joe went back and forth on VDPs and some other things like Ed's girlfriend.
Being a vAuto guy, the one metric that can be obtained (even outside of vAuto - just not as good of a number
) is Market Days Supply. The way vAuto calculates it is below:
Market Day’s Supply is calculated by dividing current market quantity of the vehicle at it’s year, make, model, trim level with its exact equipment configuration by the average daily retail sales rate over the past 45 days. In other words, if there’s 10 identically equipped vehicles for sale in the market and over the past 45 days they’ve been selling at 1 a day retail, then you divide 10 by 1 to derive a 10 market day’s supply of that vehicle.
Bringing this article to the forum.
So I read this article 2-3 times (one of those may have been a skim) and what I failed to get out of it is how one comes to attain "Online Search Volume" easily. So I hope Chad takes a stab at this to help us out.
In light of what transpired in the Twitterverse, Ed and Joe went back and forth on VDPs and some other things like Ed's girlfriend.
Being a vAuto guy, the one metric that can be obtained (even outside of vAuto - just not as good of a number
Market Day’s Supply is calculated by dividing current market quantity of the vehicle at it’s year, make, model, trim level with its exact equipment configuration by the average daily retail sales rate over the past 45 days. In other words, if there’s 10 identically equipped vehicles for sale in the market and over the past 45 days they’ve been selling at 1 a day retail, then you divide 10 by 1 to derive a 10 market day’s supply of that vehicle.