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Dealers Slowly Warm Up to Digital Marketing

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Some very interesting reading. - Allan

By Steve Finlay

Car dealers spend a bundle on conventional advertising, yet balk at small allocations for Internet marketing efforts.

That baffles Todd Stainbrook, even though he says he understands the dealer “mindset” after spending much of his Ford Motor Co. career in the field.

“Same-brand auto dealers at regional marketing meetings will approve millions of dollars on co-operative TV ads,” he says. “But then, when there’s a proposal to spend $25,000 on digital advertising, you’ve never heard so many skeptical questions.”

His job as digital integration manager for Ford, Lincoln and Mercury brands is to nudge dealers into the brave new world of digital marketing and make it a foundation of their ad plans.

“We’ve made a lot of progress but we have a lot to do,” he says at ENG’s annual automotive customer relationship management conference here. “There’s a lot of room for improvement.”

Stainbrook adds: “The days are changing from dealers saying, ‘I must have a TV (ad) plan, I must be in newspapers, I must do direct mailing, and, oh yeah, what about digital?’”

Still, he adds, many dealers have a last in, first out mentality when it comes to such marketing that ranges from online banner ads to search-engine marketing.

Digital marketing has become a $28 billion part of the ad industry. But at 11.5%, it accounts for the lowest portion of automotive advertising, Stainbrook says.

Still, many dealers – some faster than others – are “getting it,” he says. “I’ve seen a whole new perspective. Dealers today are much more receptive. You can’t escape that huge online presence. In a few years, there will not be a digital discussion anymore.”

Because Ford reaches 70% of its buyers online, “we want to make sure we are relevant to them,” he says.

Relevance is essential when dealing with the younger generation of Internet-savvy car buyers, he says. “Their expectations are high, they are focused on themselves and they are shocked if they get something that’s not relevant.”

As Internet marketing evolves, “we’re beyond, ‘Why digital?’’ he says. “Today, there is no arguing with it. Now, it is a question of what to do next.”

Also evolving are opinions on the best way for dealerships to interact with Internet customers. Responding quickly to their emails once was – and largely is – considered a must.

“But it’s not all about speed,” Stainbrook says. “The mantra used to be: ‘I’ve got to respond to their emails within five minutes.’ That helps. But consumers are looking for information. If all you are interested in is speed, you are missing out on opportunities.

“If consumers, who’ve done their homework, email you with questions, and you quickly reply, ‘When can you come into the dealership? I’m here until 9,’ that speedy response isn’t going to impress them.”

He cites what dealerships should do online to enhance the chances of a sale. Some of those “key drivers” are:

  • Show real interest.
  • Give pricing. That remains an issue with some dealerships, but Stainbrook says 72% of Internet users who readily get prices online end up buying.
  • Confirm vehicle availability. When that’s done, 75% of customers buy vehicles.
  • Make multiple contacts, including long-term follow ups. “The reality is that people are in the market a long time, so you need a robust CRM (customer relationship management) application that will follow up for a long time,” Stainbrook says.

Additional articles at :

http://allanbirdseyeview.blogspot.com/

The 10 Commandments For Reps

Friday, September 19th, 2008

by Adam Broomfield-Strawn on September 13 2008, 04:52

The 10 commandments were given as a set of guidelines as to how we should live our lives. The following 10 commandments are given as a set of guidelines as to how sales reps should live their sales lives. Reps: print them off and live by them. Managers: give them to your sales team. Business owners: whenever you get a new rep, hand them a copy. These commandments are designed to promote hard work, perseverance, honesty, integrity, well earned results and a higher level of service and if followed will do so.

Want to learn more, click here

Exciting New Sales Tool for the Service Department !

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

If you are looking for new ideas to help get your business out of it’s funk, then click on the video to learn more ! If you have any questions email me at allan@allanbird.com or just give a ring to 415-717-5079. Enjoy the show !

Google’s Chrome Ups the Ante

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Google co-founder Sergey ...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Google doesn’t just want to grab market share with its new Web browser, Chrome. It wants to change the way we use computers

Browser wars? On steroids. When Google (GOOG) announced on Sept. 1 that it was releasing its own Web browser, Chrome, the immediate buzz was that the bruising battles over browser domination, played out between Netscape and Microsoft (MSFT) in the late 1990s, were back on.

Google, though, has much bigger ambitions. The goal, say Google execs, is not merely to win share of an existing market, but to change the very nature of Internet browsing—and the way we use computers. If Chrome works as planned, it will lead much of computing from the desktop—Microsoft’s domain—toward remote data centers. These, in Google’s lingo, are known as the “cloud.” Google runs the biggest and most efficient data centers on earth, and moving much of the world’s computing from desktops into its clouds is the heart of the company’s strategy. “Google really believes the future of the Web is running applications on the Web,” says Danny Sullivan, who runs Calafia Consulting, a Web consulting firm. “They want to be leading the charge.”

As this battle commences, Microsoft enjoys a towering head start. Its Internet Explorer dominates the browser market, with 75% share. And Microsoft is launching its latest upgrade, IE8, which is loaded with new features. Google’s Chrome, by contrast, appears bare-bones. Its power, say Google engineers, will come from its ability to run applications faster and more securely, especially those hosted outside the PC, on the cloud. Unlike Google’s top-secret search algorithms or the proprietary software it uses to carry out its searches, Chrome was born as an open-source system.

Asking More of Browsers

To understand what’s new, think of Netscape, the browsing sensation 14 years ago at the dawn of the World Wide Web. The goal back then was simply to open and read Web pages. This is still important, of course, whether Web surfers are reading a story in The New York Times or checking out a friend’s home page on MySpace. Most browsers today, including Mozilla Firefox and Apple’s (AAPL) Safari, have grown to provide that Web browsing service.

Google, though, wants people to use browsers to do much more, particularly to run software applications, like word processing, spreadsheets, video editing, and conferencing. In Google’s scheme, the browser is a gateway into the clouds, one that will eventually be tapped from anywhere—a PC, a mobile phone, perhaps even a television. And many of the applications available in the clouds, from calendars to e-mail, will likely compete directly with Microsoft’s dominant suite of Office applications, including Excel and Outlook. Says Google co-founder Sergey Brin: “What we have is a lightweight engine for running Web applications that doesn’t have the baggage of an operating system.” Investors on Sept. 2 drove up Google shares nearly 2%, to 465.25.

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