- Feb 20, 2021
- 8
- 0
- First Name
- Amit
Hi,
I'm not a car dealer nor do I work for a dealership. I am, however, interested in conducting some research as part of effort to value CarGurus.com and Cars.com for different reasons.
1. I have read reports that CarGurus gets more web traffic than Cars.com. Logically, it would follow, that CarGurus would be more desirable from the dealership's perspective than Cars due to this higher reported traffic. Is this the case? Do you desire CarGurus more than Cars? Do you pay more to CarGurus than to Cars.com for access?
2. What's the long-term outlook for car dealership's expenditures on CarGurus, Cars.com, AutoTrader, and the constellation of other websites. Are car dealers going to pick one winner? Thus, will this be a winner-take-all situation? Or is there room for multiple such websites to continue existing alongside each other? Are you guys able to afford paying X to CarGurus, Y to Cars.com, and Z to AutoTrader, and various other amounts to other websites? Is X+Y+Z a sustainable spend?
3. Do you think CarGurus has pricing power? If, next year, they decided to jack up their costs by 15%, would you say no thanks?
4. Has the emergence of these websites been a net negative to your bottomline? It would seem that if there's a dealership 50 minutes away from your target suburb with a better deal for numerous makes/models, those customers would have to do a lot more legwork to learn of those deals before these websites came into existence. For example, such a customer would have to make multiple visits to multiple websites and manually price compare. These websites with their "within 100 mile radius" results minimizes this transaction cost, seemingly to the detriment of dealerships and to the benefit of the end customer. Were margins better before these websites?
I'm obviously trying to do some investment due diligence with all this. I'm not sure there's anything in it for you to answer all these questions. I'll take what I can get. I appreciate your time and attention.
Amit
I'm not a car dealer nor do I work for a dealership. I am, however, interested in conducting some research as part of effort to value CarGurus.com and Cars.com for different reasons.
1. I have read reports that CarGurus gets more web traffic than Cars.com. Logically, it would follow, that CarGurus would be more desirable from the dealership's perspective than Cars due to this higher reported traffic. Is this the case? Do you desire CarGurus more than Cars? Do you pay more to CarGurus than to Cars.com for access?
2. What's the long-term outlook for car dealership's expenditures on CarGurus, Cars.com, AutoTrader, and the constellation of other websites. Are car dealers going to pick one winner? Thus, will this be a winner-take-all situation? Or is there room for multiple such websites to continue existing alongside each other? Are you guys able to afford paying X to CarGurus, Y to Cars.com, and Z to AutoTrader, and various other amounts to other websites? Is X+Y+Z a sustainable spend?
3. Do you think CarGurus has pricing power? If, next year, they decided to jack up their costs by 15%, would you say no thanks?
4. Has the emergence of these websites been a net negative to your bottomline? It would seem that if there's a dealership 50 minutes away from your target suburb with a better deal for numerous makes/models, those customers would have to do a lot more legwork to learn of those deals before these websites came into existence. For example, such a customer would have to make multiple visits to multiple websites and manually price compare. These websites with their "within 100 mile radius" results minimizes this transaction cost, seemingly to the detriment of dealerships and to the benefit of the end customer. Were margins better before these websites?
I'm obviously trying to do some investment due diligence with all this. I'm not sure there's anything in it for you to answer all these questions. I'll take what I can get. I appreciate your time and attention.
Amit