[My 1st post after long time lurking. Quick thank you to the Dealer Refresh admins for putting together this great resource - best automotive dealer+vendor forum on the web!]
The vast majority of automotive solutions providers that I've seen do not publish their prices on their websites. They usually just say "Call us for a quote" or something similar.
I can understand this approach for certain products where the final price is genuinely highly variable for each customer (e.g. due to potentially complex deployment services or custom web design requirements). However, this is becoming the exceptional case, especially with modern hosted products with minimal add-on services required. This happens in other B2B industries, it's not unique to automotive but I still don't totally understand it.
Obviously every product/vendor is unique, but I feel the benefits of transparent pricing outweigh the disadvantages, both for the vendor and the customer (the dealer). For example:
I would love to hear from other vendors around reasons for not publishing prices.
Do you think the customer (the dealership) will be put off by a high price before your sales guys have had a chance to talk to them to explain the full value?
Is there a fear of being undercut by a competitor?
Can your product not be sufficiently demo'd within your website such that customers will be able to determine it's value, and showing pricing up front will just scare them off?
Also, I would love to hear dealers' opinions on this. Would seeing a price (or a tiered pricing plan) up front make you more likely to trust/buy from that vendor? Many dealers are moving towards an upfront "no haggle" price with their inventory, so should vendors be doing the same?
The vast majority of automotive solutions providers that I've seen do not publish their prices on their websites. They usually just say "Call us for a quote" or something similar.
I can understand this approach for certain products where the final price is genuinely highly variable for each customer (e.g. due to potentially complex deployment services or custom web design requirements). However, this is becoming the exceptional case, especially with modern hosted products with minimal add-on services required. This happens in other B2B industries, it's not unique to automotive but I still don't totally understand it.
Obviously every product/vendor is unique, but I feel the benefits of transparent pricing outweigh the disadvantages, both for the vendor and the customer (the dealer). For example:
- It removes a barrier to entry for initial contact with new customers who are evaluating their options but are not yet quite ready to get into a sales discussion by calling for a quote
- It demonstrates openness and transparency
- It shows confidence in the value the product will offer the customer
- Published prices are becoming the standard for B2C software, and this expectation of readily accessible pricing will move to B2B
I would love to hear from other vendors around reasons for not publishing prices.
Do you think the customer (the dealership) will be put off by a high price before your sales guys have had a chance to talk to them to explain the full value?
Is there a fear of being undercut by a competitor?
Can your product not be sufficiently demo'd within your website such that customers will be able to determine it's value, and showing pricing up front will just scare them off?
Also, I would love to hear dealers' opinions on this. Would seeing a price (or a tiered pricing plan) up front make you more likely to trust/buy from that vendor? Many dealers are moving towards an upfront "no haggle" price with their inventory, so should vendors be doing the same?