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Uncle Joe's Makeover Diary 2.0

I honestly prefer the before, but I have discovered there's something to be said about using ugly ads as a way to create a pattern interrupt and stop the scroll.

For example, I've been seeing better results from less polished facebook ads.

Ryan,
I am going to exaggerate the auto marketplace SRP as I see it:
1716226417254.png
I am a merchant. Every marketplace I look I see listings that look identical. Creative merchandiser's see this as an opportunity.

---Retailing is a zero sum game (i.e. my sale takes share away from my competitors)---

Merchandising is a weapon to take share, and, Merchandising is ART with a strategy and a desired outcome. How you define your "ART with a strategy and a desired outcome" is different than mine, and together we make a market filled with choices. :)
 
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Ryan,
I am going to exaggerate the auto marketplace SRP as I see it:
View attachment 8884
I am a merchant. Every marketplace I look I see listings that look identical. Creative merchandiser's see this as an opportunity.

---Retailing is a zero sum game (i.e. my sale takes share away from my competitors)---

Merchandising is a weapon to take share, and, Merchandising is ART with a strategy and a desired outcome. How you define your "ART with a strategy and a desired outcome" is different than mine, and together we make a market filled with choices. :)
There's no doubt about it, real photos with or without text overlays are always better than stock images.

PS: I'm saying even though I don't personally prefer the aesthetics of your art, I agree it works as a pattern interrupt to stand out and therefore generates results.
 
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real photos with or without text overlays are always better than stock images.

In the mock of Silverados (above), I used stock shots to represent the 'sameness' of SRP listings (from a shoppers POV).

This is what I am referring to:
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They all look alike, so the shopper scans price and miles. The car shopper has a small window of time and they 'pogo-stick' from SRP-to-VDP-to-SRP-to-VDP. Price & Deal Buckets drive CTR.

From my POV, Merchandising strategy is to differentiate the VIN and the Dealer ---AND-- create a UX that assists the shopper's task.


I spent 3 weeks completely immersed in the world of Youtube thumbnail strategy and best practices.
1716291179245.png
My intent was not to emulate this thumbnail work 1:1, but to understand its framework, then, map that back to auto-retail.


1716292271212.png
My Strategy: "differentiate the VIN and the Dealer ---AND-- create a UX that assists the shopper's task"
 
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✨ 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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