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Uncle Joe's Makeover Diary 2.0

in the spirit of free-flowing brain dumps... I admire Shop Used Cars Online - Texas Direct Auto SRP filtering. Very 'seller-buyer' friendly.
Missed the mark in my opinion: they are checking IP to see if in US. Not a good way of doing it and no way to tell if perhaps i have a property etc. in the US and I'm looking for a car. They immediately redirect to the attached. Cant see why you wouldn't at least tell them its a US based site, but give the option to click through.
 

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Whilst I'm not opposed to the idea of eliminating web traffic from out of country, I do find it odd.

I don't think I've ever seen a website limit out of country web traffic without a domain redirect.
Leave it to vroom vroom, I suppose.
 
Whilst I'm not opposed to the idea of eliminating web traffic from out of country, I do find it odd.

I don't think I've ever seen a website limit out of country web traffic without a domain redirect.
Leave it to vroom vroom, I suppose.
Especially Canada -> US. Not unusual to buy US cars and visa versa. We've bought literally 100's just ourselves from US past couple years.
 
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Especially Canada -> US. Not unusual to buy US cars and visa versa. We've bought literally 100's just ourselves from US past couple years.
I agree, while I've never done a US to Canada consumer sale, I've been at dealerships that have stores in both countries and move vehicles around, or buy inventory from Canada import it to the states. I also didn't realize you were in Canada and that's how it looks for you. When I think about "who I would limit from viewing my dealership website", random countries like Somalia, Yemen and Moldova come to mind.
 

✨ AI Highlights

Joe Pistell launches a new initiative ("Uncle Joe's Makeover Diary 2.0") to test digital strategies at a Chevrolet dealership, starting with Google Analytics benchmarking, and uses the thread to crowdsource feedback on website UX best practices like SRP filtering and lead form optimization. The discussion reveals ongoing tension between third-party lead capture tools (like Capital One's financing button) that cannibalize dealership traffic and simple, transparent filtering options that improve the customer experience. A key insight emerges that dealerships often overlook basic UX improvements—clean filtering, simple URLs, transparent pricing—in favor of more complex vendor solutions, and that upcoming F&I regulations may further constrain these straightforward consumer-friendly features.

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