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Andrew_Compton
Guest

The three main goals for lead follow at most dealerships up are rather simple:
- Get them to the dealership.
- Get them to the dealership.
- Get them to the dealership.
- Get as much information as possible.
- As fast as possible.
- And stay out of the dealership as long as possible.
Is the Car Buying World Different Now?
It always feels safe to do what has always been done. In fact, its unlikely an Internet Manager or e-Commerce director will lose their position by doing what worked last year and the year before. But expectations that are too small are a waste. When those decisions were made, they were based on information we knew to be true at that time. How much has the landscape changed in the last 24 months?
Many dealer's will say, not enough to change our processes or technology. It's a position easy to defend by stating, "we're off to the best year we've ever had". Is this in fact proof dealers have optimized their processes and technology or simply enjoying a periodic fluctuation from pent-up demand due to improving economic conditions and loosing credit from lenders. Time will tell. But after I read this article in AutoNews about 3 guys who created an automotive start-up 30 months ago, and are now doing $70 million a month in vehicles sales, with a valuation of $1 billion, I believe this represents the size of the opportunity for those dealers that can figure it out. For startups that are "born digital" they are operate from different realities which makes it easier. In a sense dealership are suffering from the "Innovators Dilemma", because of their current success they miss out on a new wave of innovation.
Pulling the Rabbit Out of the Hat
One thing about about forecasting the future and the next wave of innovation is there are no right answers. What is possible is to follow trends and create probabilities. These trends stand out:
- Millennial behavior indicates mobile is key to the car-buying process.
- The Information Empowered Customer will take center stage.
- Technology is influencing buyer behavior.
- Car sales people will be a lonely bunch waiting outside for ups.
The question is, are consumers ready for a digital car buying experience?